38 A.D. 56 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action was brought to recover the contract price for furnishing to and equipping the defendant’s factory with the dry pipe system of the ■ automatic sprinkler. The agreement between the parties was in writing, and consisted of a proposal on the part of the plaintiff and acceptance by the defendant! The proposal provided that the system should be equipped in accordance with the rules and regulations of the New York board of fire underwriters, and that the contract price should be payable after a certificate of approval should have been issued by that board. The plaintiff failed to obtain the certificate of the underwriters, that board declining to issue the certificate for reasons relating to the water supply in Astoria where the defendant’s factory was situate, and also because there was no paid fire department in that vicinity. On the first trial
In our opinion an error was committed in the exclusion of certain '«evidence offered by the defendant,' which requires a new trial, regardless of the main' legal question decided by .the General Term ■ .«on the first appeal. The contract provided that the system should be so erected as to “ drain back to central points.” The plaintiff necessarily alleged a performance of the contract. The answer «denied this allegation. The defendant sought to introduce proof to the effect that the system did not and would not drain to central points, nor at alii This evidence was, on' the plaintiff’s objection, -excluded. We cannot see why it was not entirely competent under the pleadings as they stood, and without amendment to the answer, The requirement that the system should drain back to central points was an essential provision of the contract, or at least the jury might bave so found, As it was incumbent on the plaintiff to allege performance of its contract, and, upon denial in the answer, to prove srrch performance, it was equally open to the defendant, under his denial, to disprove such performance by affirmative proof of defects so serious or radical as to affect the whole character of the work. ln Milbank v. Jones (141 N. Y. 340) it was said: “ Under a general denial the defendant may controvert by evidence anything which -the plaintiff is bound to prove in the first instance to make out his -cause óf action, or anything that he is permitted to prove for that purpose under his complaint.” So in Chatfield v. Simonson (92 N. Y. 209), which was an action to recover for the professional services of an attorney", it was held that under a general denial the defend
We are also of opinion that the evidence of the negotiations and «conversations between the parties leading, up to the written contract was improperly excluded. Of course, such conversations were inadmissible to contradict or vary the written agreement, but they were ■offered for no such purpose. The defendant’s counsel stated that he offered them to show the situation of the parties with reference to the property, and the purpose for which the contract was made. For this purpose they were competent (West v. Smith, 101 U. S. .263; Stoops v. Smith, 100 Mass. 63; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 277), provided, of course, that the situation of the parties had any bearing •on the interpretation and construction of the contract. We think it had.
If it be assumed, iii accordance with the opinion of the learned ■Common Pleas, that on the face of the agreement the procurement of the certificate of the underwriters was not an essential feature of the contract or an indispensable prerequisite to the plaintiff’s Tecovery, we think it was permitted to the defendant to show by the situation of the parties and their negotiations that the certifioate was a substantial part of the thing contracted for. In a building contract, as a rule, the real thing required is the building erected in conformity with the plans and specifications, and the certificate' of the architect is of no value to the owner in itself, hut solely as proof to him that the contract has been complied with. The architect, too, is the agent or employee of the owner. It was on this .ground that the law, relieving the builder from obtaining the architect’s certificate where that certificate was unreasonably refused, was first established. In Thomas v. Fleury (26 N. Y. 26) it was said : The architect was the defendant’s agent, and if he unreasonably And in bad faith refused the certificate, the plaintiff is hot to be held responsible, but he may establish his right to recover by other evidence.” In the present case, however, the board of underwriters was not the agent or servant of the defendant, and if the excluded ■evidence had been admitted it might very well appear that the certificate was required, not merely as evidence that the plaintiff had ■done the stipulated work, but for an independent value of its own. If such a certificate enables an owner to secure insurance at less rates
The judgment and order "appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All "concurred, except Bartlett, J., absent.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs tú abide the event.