The plaintiff, a civil engineer, skilled in designing and building municipal waterworks, sued the village of llaverstraw, New York, upon a contract made by its board of trustees employing him to design and supervise the construction of a system of waterworks for the village. Under the New York law (sections 520-529, N. Y. Conservation Law [Consol. Laws, c. 65]), the village must get the approvаl of the Water Power and Conlrol Commission of the state, and this the trustees started a proceeding to procure; but a succeeding board failed to press it and finally discontinued it, and repudiated the contract. The plaintiff, who had prepared the plans in full and had delivered them to the village, sued on the theory that the abandonment of the project was a breach entitling him to loss of profits. The village answered and moved to dismiss the complaint which the court denied. At the trial which followed, the judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff except as to damages, which the jury found in the sum of about $17,000. The defendant appealed from the judgment so entered.
The plaintiff promised to perform four different kinds of services; first, “to submit * * * complete working plans * * * required to place the construction of said water system under contract.” This meant to carry them so far with all incidental “surveys, investigations * * * plates, plans, profiles arid details,” that the contractors could directly estimate upon them. Some of this work, or similar work, had to be done, or at least it was reasonable to do, before the trustees decided whether to build new waterworks, or to keep on with the private system. They had to inform themselves about the chances of bettering the supply, the cost of the proposed work and so on. But some would seem to have bеen unnecessary until the new waterworks were finally approved by all necessary authorities; for instance, we do not see why, in order to enable the trustees to make up their minds, working plans and specifications need be prepared adequate “to place the construction of said system under contract.” Second, the plaintiff was “to prepare all necessary engineering papers” in the proceeding which the trustees must prosecute before the state commission in order to get its approval. Section 521, N. Y. Conservation Law. Not only was the plaintiff to do this, but he was to attend the hearings and help the village attorney, so far as an engineer could. Those services were of course to be rendered before the enterprise had been finally authorized; were indeed part of the effort to get authorization. Third, he was to do the usual work of supervision as the waterworks were being built; that is, “to locate * * * for the contractor * * * the various lines * * * to furnish all grades and engineering information * * * to inspect * * * all materials * * * and to submit estimates of the work done.” That of course must, all take place after the work was under way. Last, when the whole thing was completed, in order to help its operation he was “to prepare * * * a set of record plans show
The contract was executed on July 2, 1928, and two weeks later the trustees appointed a village water board to take over construction, with which on August 8, 1928, the plaintiff filed a full set of complete plans and estimates, presumably ready to be submitted to the contractors. On September twentieth the electors of the village ratified a resolution of the trustees, passed on September fourth, authorizing the construction of such a water supply at an expense of $450,000 to be raised by a bond issue; and on January 5, 1929, the trustees filed with the state commission their petition for approval, to which they attached the plans. One hearing was held on February 14, 1929, but the old board was superseded at an election on April first, and the whole enterprise'was abandoned by a resolution of the new board on December 15, 1930, which the voters ratified in the following month.
By section 128-a of the N. Y. Village Law (Consol. Lаws, „c. 64) “no contract shall be made involving an expenditure by the village unless the money therefor has previously-been estimated by the board of trustees as necessary to be raised during the then fiscal year, or unless a resolution to borrow money on bonds or other obligations of the village has been adopted by the board of trustees as рrovided in this chapter or if required by this chapter that the a.ction or resolution of the board of trustees be approved by the electors, then by such approval.” This was intended to forbid villages to contract obligations without providing the means of payment; the Court of Appeals in Kelly v. Merry,
However, after the electors had approved the trustees’ resolution of September fourth the project was authorized, if the villagе alone could authorize it; and the trustees might employ the plaintiff to help them in the proceeding before the state commission. But they could not even then contract for more, because under article 11 of the New York Conservation Law (section 520 et seq.), the final word as to the construction of any municipal water supply rested with the Water Power and Control Commission. Section 521 of the Conservation Law provides that “No municipal corporation * * * shall * * * have any power to acquire * * * a water supply * * * until such * * * corporation * * * has first submitted the maps, plans, and profiles therefor to the commission * * * and until the commission shall have approved thе same.” Section 523 prescribes in detail the procedure to be taken and the considerations which are to control the commission’s judgment. Thus, as to any services to be performed after the commission’s approval, the defendant’s obligation was necessarily contingent; as the commission never approved, primа facie no liability arose. If the plaintiff had been the party to procure the approval, he would have had to show that the village prevented or interfered with him; as the village alone could prosecute the proceeding, we may assume arguendo with him that the. trustees impliedly promised to do so. His argument is that this promisе-created an obligation and that when the village discontinued the proceeding, it was a breach. But the plaintiff did not show the loss due to the breach, for no one can tell whether the village would ever have secured the approval. If not, he lost nothing, and damages ordinarily do no more than put the promisee where performance would have put him. Some of our language in Oltarsh v. Bratter (C. C. A.)
We may leave the point оpen because to get the commission’s approval was not like getting the approval of a local chamber of commerce, for example. If performance had depended upon such an approval, a contract' would have been made at once,- and assuming that the village had by implicаtion promised to seek it, it would have been liable at least for nominal damages. But it is very doubtful in the first place whether a municipality can make a contract, ancillary and incidental to a public work, without the implied condition that it may abandon the work. Williamson v. City of N. Y.,
Therefore, the complaint was fatally defective and should have been dismissed. Whether it can be amended into a complaint on a quantum meruit, we do not decide; we leave the matter to the discretion of the District Court in the first instance. As to the merits of such a count we have also nothing to say."- Section 128-a may forbid any recovery even on a quantum meruit; in any event the recovery for any services rendered before September twentieth should be limited to the value of so much as was essential to enable the trustees to decide whether to take up the project. Since, as we have said, section 128-a did not apply after September 20, 1928, it may be that the plaintiff can also recover the value of his assistanсe in the proceeding before the state commission; we do not say as to this either.
This result is entirely just. The plaintiff was charged with notice of the limitations upon the powers of municipalities; indeed it is hard to suppose that with his experience he had not got some actual acquaintance with them in the past. In justice he should recover only the value to the village of what he gave to it.
Judgment reversed; cause remanded with instructions for further proceedings in accordance with the foregoing.
