248 A.D. 658 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1936
Appeal from judgment of the Court of Claims, denying claimant damages for extra work and materials, and on account of delays, made necessary by soil conditions encountered in the laying of building foundations. This proceeding is brought pursuant to a special act of the Legislature whereby the State consented to have its liability determined, provided claimant’s claim be founded in right and justice. By a contract entered into on May 9, 1927, claimant agreed to do the work and furnish the materials for twenty-five buildings for the Rockland State Hospital, in accordance with plans and specifications prepared by the State. The buildings were to be erected on wild land covered in the main with second growth timber. The contract provided that the contractor “ shall be held to have visited the site prior to the submission of his proposal for the work, and to have made all necessary investigations and measurements, and to have appraised the conditions under which the work is to be executed.” The claimant made no borings or tests to determine subsoil conditions. The specifications reserved to the State the right to inspect and approve the soil at the bottom of foundation