2 Denio 224 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1845
The only question necessary for the decision of the cause arises upon the construction of the act of 1836. If we resort to the letter of the statute, those contractors only who entered into the contracts and who completed their jobs are entitled to the extra compensation. In this case Lewis & Weed entered into the contract. The plaintiff completed it. Neither consequently fulfilled all the conditions of the law.
In determining the rights of these parties, we must therefore resort to the equity of the statute; and upon that it seems to me there cannot be the slightest difficulty. The object of the law was not a gratuity, but rather to provide an equitable compensation, for the unexpected advance in the price of labor, forage and provisions. In a word, the extra compensation was intended to cover extra expenses. It is hardly necessary to say, that “ the rise in the prices and value of forage, provisions and. labor,” could affect those only rvho were bound to fulfil the contract, not those who were indemnified against it. The enhanced expense thus incurred (and which was the sole ground of legislative interposition) was paid by those who did the work, not those who signed the contract.
The learned judge who delivered the opinion of the supreme court, sustains the nonsuit by quoting the first clause of the statute. The other parts of it he seems to have overlooked. In the same way he makes the legislature exercise the very questionable power of drawing money from the public treasury for the purpose of gratuitous distribution. With all deference, I think the legislature has neither claimed nor exercised any such authority. They have said that the contractors who complete their jobs, and who, from circumstances not in the contemplation of either of the parties to the contract, have incurred extra expenses, shall be entitled to receive such further sum beyond the contract prices, as the canal board shall deem just and equitable.
According to the act there must be a contract. There was one in this case; the whole equitable interest in which we are informed by the supreme court, was transferred to the plaintiff. The joS must becompleted. That was done, and by the plaintiff:
I do not so construe the statute; and I think for the reasons assigned that the judgment of the supreme court should be reversed.
Porter, Senator. In the spring of 1836 the legislature passed a law authorizing extra allowances to the contractors on the Chenango canal. Under that law a certain sum was awarded to Lewis & Weed, one half of which Lewis had received; and this the plaintiff claims to recover in this suit. He makes the claim on the ground that he is entitled to all the advantages derived from the contract of Lewis & Weed with the canal commissioners. He must sustain his claim upon the contract he made with Lewis & Weed, and his performance of it. Beyond that he cannot go, for the obvious reason that that instrument shows to the court precisely what the parties meant when they entered into it. His rights must be measured by it; and if the money in question is embraced in it, he should recover, and not otherwise.
In order to apprehend more accurately the meaning off the parties in the terms they use in framing their agreement, we are entitled to look at the situation in which they then stood. The contract of Lewis & Weed with the canal commissioners was made in November, 1834, and from that time to January, 1836, the work on that contract had been progressing, but to what extent is not stated. They then sub-let the job to the plaintiff; and he agreed to finish it; to take the materials they had on hand, pay them for their tools and certain other expenses, and for his compensation to receive the sum then unpaid on the contract of Lewis & Weed with’ the commissioners. The language of their agreement is this, “ Munsell is t04 receive the
But it is said that owing .to the rise in the price of labqr and provisions, the contracts made on that canal, were generally esteemed hard and losing ones, and it cannot be supposed that the. plaintiff with a full knowledge of that fact, would take the contract from Lewis <fc.Weed at the. price stipulated to be received by them. To this the answer, is, that, there is no proof that he did-so, upon the construction that I have given to the agreement. There, is nothing in the case to show how much had been expended upon the, contract by Lewis & Weed, nor what the cost of the materials was which they had furnished, and which passed to the.plaintiff. If Lewis & Weed considered it a hard contract, and thought it an. object to sub-let it, they may have thrown in, and for aught we know did throw in, some. part, of their expenditures, and the price of their materials, to induce the plaintiff .to make the bargain. It appears that previous to the making of this agreement,, an application had been, made to the . legislature by some of,the contractors upon, this .canal, for. extra allowances; and it- is. hardly to be supposed that these parties were ignorant of ,that application. The application was referred, to the, acting, canal commissioners, and their report to the, assembly is dated on the same .day with this,-¡agreement. It is. but reasonable to suppose that if the
But the plaintiff insists that by his agreement with Lewis & Weed, he became substituted in their place as the contractor in fact with the canal commissioners; and" entitled to all the fights and benefits which subsequent legislative bounty-gave to the Chenango canal contractors. Iffthe plaintiff, instead of making an independent agreement as he did with Lewis & Weed, to fulfil their contract, had taken an assignment of their contract with the commissioners, and claimed the bounty under that assignment,'he could not have succeeded; for he would not have come within the "terms of the act. Nor if Lewis & Weed had abandoned their contract, and it had been again let to the plaintiff at the time'that he made his agreement with Lewis & Weed, would he then have been embraced Within the act. For it was only certain of the contractors, those who had “ entered into contracts at either of'the three first lettings,” who were entitled to the benefits of that act.
To authorize the plaintiff to recover this money from the defendant, I think he should produce an express and absolute promise and agreement to aócount to him for all the money and prdfits which he should 'receive or derive under the contract made by Lewis & Weed with the canal commissioners. I cannot perceive any ground for believing that there was any agreement of that nature.
I think the circuit judge was right in nonsuiting the plaintiff, and that the judgment of the supreme court should be affirmed.
Lott, Senator. The question presented in this case is, whether Munsell, the plaintiff" in error, "is entitled to the extra allowance Made to the contractors on the Chenango canal under the act of April 1G, 1835. That act provided that “ those contractors who entered into contracts for any part of the Chenango canal at either of the three first lettings thereof, should be entitled to receive, on the completion of their respective jobs,- such further sum or sums beyond the contract -prices as the canal bos’*?
Munsell was not a contractor with the canal commissioners. There was therefore no privity of contract between him and them. Their contract was with Lewis, the defendant in error, and Stephen Weed, and was entered into on the 29th November, 1834. • On the 29th day of January, 1836, Munsell entered into an agreement with Lewis and Weed, by virtue of which he claims to be entitled to the extra allowance made by the act of 1836, above mentioned. This was an agreement on his part to fulfil the contract of the original contractors, and he was in consideration thereof to receive from the canal commissioners the price stipulated to be paid in their contract, with the exception of two small sums previously received by the contractors which they were to retain as a compensation for some timber specified in the contract. Compensation was also to be made by him for “ such expenditures as they had made in tools and quarrying stone on John A. Collier’s land,” and he was “ to have the benefit of what was done.” This agreement was made prior to the passage of the act providing for the extra compensation and subsequent to “ the rise in the prices and value of forage, prov^ions and labor” therein referred to. The plaintiff in error therefore when he entered into his obligation to perform the contract of Lewis & Weed and save them harmless, did it with reference to the state of things existing at that time'; and it is not to be presumed that the compensation which he was to receive was inadequate to the obligations assumed by him.
The relation of Lewis & Weed to the canal commissioners was not however changed by this arrangement. They still remained responsible for the fulfilment of their contract, and for ano-ht that appears were alone recognized during the completion 3 job. If their agreement with the plaintiff in error had to pay him six hundred dollars beyond the original contract no one, I apprehend, would contend that he was entitled
It may be true that Lewis & Weed were not, in the fair construction of that act, honestly entitled to the extra allowance made them; but that does not give the plaintiff in error any legal or equitable claims on them. I am therefore of opinion that the judgment below should be affirmed.
On the question being put, “ Shall this judgment be reversed 1" the members of the court voted as follows:
For reversal: The President, and Senators Beekman, Beers, Deyo, Emmons, Faulkner, Folsom, Hard, Johnson, Mitchell, Sedgwick, Smith, Yarney—13.
For affirmance: Senators Backus, Bockee, Denniston, Lott, Porter—5.
Judgment reversed.