194 N.Y. 437 | NY | 1909
The action was brought on a contract made between the plaintiff's assignor and the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York for the performance of certain work. On the part of the defendant the contract was executed by the aqueduct commissioners, who were appointed under the provisions of chapter 490, Laws of 1883. The contract concludes: "In witness whereof, the said aqueduct commissioners have hereunto set their hands and seals on behalf of the said parties of the first part, and the said party of the second part have also hereunto set their hands and seals; and the said commissioners, and party hereto of the second part, have executed the agreement in triplicate; one part of which to remain with said commissioners, one other to be filed with the Comptroller of the City of New York, and the third to be delivered to the said party hereto of the second part; the day and year herein first above written." It was in fact signed by the contractors and the *440 commissioners and the seals of the respective parties thereto attached.
Among other defenses, the defendant pleaded the six years' Statute of Limitations. For the purposes of the trial only, the defendant admitted the cause of action alleged against it, and the plaintiff admitted that the cause of action did not accrue within six years. Thereupon the trial court held that the plaintiff's claim was barred by lapse of time and dismissed the complaint. The judgment entered upon that decision has been affirmed by the Appellate Division.
That the contraction which the claim is based was in form a sealed contract is clear, and it is also clear that if such was its legal effect, the plaintiff's claim would not be barred by the six years' statute of limitations (Code Civil Procedure, sec. 382). It is insisted, however, by the defendant that the commissioners had no power to execute on behalf of the municipality a contract under seal, and hence, that the instrument should be treated as a mere written instrument, and not as a specialty. (Worrall v. Munn,
Section 25 of the statute referred to provides that the commissioner of public works shall submit to the aqueduct commissioners and the corporation counsel forms of contracts and of bonds for the work contemplated by the statute; that such forms shall be either approved or rejected by the commissioners, and if approved as to form by the counsel to the corporation, "The said aqueduct commissioners being hereby given the exclusive authority to determine what provisions shall be embodied in said contracts, in order, so far as may be possible, to save the city from loss, embarrassment and litigation by reason of any work done or supplies furnished thereunder." Thus the commissioners were given plenary power over the form of the contracts made by them when approved by the corporation counsel, and the commissioners have adopted and the corporation counsel has approved a contract under seal. To establish that the commissioners exceeded their authority in making such a contract, it seems to us necessary to show, either that the contract under seal was necessarily detrimental to the interests of the city, or that it was not of the usual character and form of municipal contracts. Neither fact appears in this case. Doubtless a sealed instrument extends the time for enforcing any liability under it from six to twenty years, and this may be considered advantageous to the party making a claim under the contract and detrimental to the party upon whom it is sought to impose liability. But it cannot be told in advance to the benefit of which party this extension of the Statute of Limitations will inure. There are other advantages or possible disadvantages, as the future alone can determine, in contracts under seal. Though in many respects the effect of a seal has by recent statutes and decisions been very much impaired, nevertheless a sealed instrument still retains in law certain characteristics peculiar to itself. It binds the parties, and only the parties. It is not permitted to show by parol that the apparent parties to it acted merely as agents for other parties. (Denike v. De Graaf, 87 Hun, 61; affd. on opinion below,
Whether on the whole such a form of contract would be more advantageous to the city than one not under seal was a matter as to which opinions might differ, and the determination of the question was conferred by the statute upon the commissioners and corporation counsel. It cannot be said that a sealed contract was necessarily more disadvantageous to the city than one unsealed.
In construing the power conferred upon an agent there will be implied the power to follow the usual and customary conduct adopted in the business. So an agent to sell either personal property or real estate has the power to convey with warranty where that is the common and usual mode of such transactions. (Schultz v. Griffin,
WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur; HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., dissent; VANN, J., absent.
Judgment reversed, etc.