98 N.Y.S. 251 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
This action was brought to foreclose a municipal lien filed by the plaintiff against the defendant Sullivan with the comptroller of the city of New York and the board of education, for labor alleged to have been performed by plaintiff for defendant Sullivan in plastering a certain schoolhouse which Sullivan was under contract with the board of education to erect and build. The dispute ■is between contractor and sub-contractor. The complaint alleges that on or about November 3, 1903, “plaintiff entered into a contract with the defendant contractor, Patrick Sullivan, * * * to plaster * * * the first part to be erected of * .* *
It will be seen, therefore, that this is not an action for damages for breach, of contract, hut for an amount claimed to be due for-work done under a contract. The learned court in his findings of fact found that the defendant Sullivan did not enter into the contract set up in the complaint, with the plaintiff. There is evidence to support this finding. He further found “ That the defendant Patrick Sullivan did not enter into any.contract with the plaintiff with respect to the plastering work in the first part to be erected of Public School Building No-. 106.” If by this is meant a. “ written ” contract' there is evidence to support the finding, and that-this is the meaning is evident from the next finding: “ That the plaintiff performed certain work, labor and services, consisting of plastering work in and-upon the building hereinbefore mentioned.”
The court having- found that there was no contract and that the
On the trial plaintiff conceded credits amounting to $1,019.19, having a balance claimed of $1,890.81. The plaintiff claims that he did 6,000 yards of scratching and browning at forty-six cents a yard, which would amount to $2,760, and 1,000 yards of scratching at fifteen -cents a yard, $150. There is no evidence in the case of the reasonable value of this work other than plaintiff’s. It was brought out by defendant on cross-examination and while an attempt by defendant in his case would show another amount per yard, the testimony was stricken out by the court — so that upon the theory of quantum meruit, which the court adopted, forty-six cents per yard for browning and scratching, or thirty-one cents for browning and fifteen for scratching, is established as the reasonable value thereof. The defendant claims that 4,000 yards of browning was done, which, at thirty-one cents, would be $1,240; 1,900 yards of scratching, $285, which would make a total of $1,525: and if credit is given to the defendant of a payment of $135 to laborers, which plaintiff claims should not have been charged against him, the full amount paid would be $1,154.19, which, accepting defendant’s figures, would leave $370.81 due. There is no way of reconciling the testimony with the findings of the court as to the amount earned, paid or due, and the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
O’Brien, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. Order filed.