192 A.D. 506 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
The amended complaint shows that the plaintiff claimed and filed a hen on the theory of an implied contract for the reasonable value of work, labor and services performed and materials furnished at the special instance and request of the defendant Peerless American Products Company, Inc., in the erection of two five-story apartment houses on certain premises at the southwest comer of Shakespeare avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-ninth street, in the borough of The Bronx, city of New York, of which it was the owner. The plaintiff alleged that at the special instance and request of the owner he performed certain work, labor and services, consisting of carpenter and framing work, and furnished certain materials, consisting of nails, on the buildings of the reasonable value of $2,870, no part of which, with the exception of $1,835, had been paid, and that at the time of the filing of the lien the amount due and owing to the plaintiff was the sum of $1,035, which is the amount for which the hen was filed. The complaint further showed that the appellant procured a discharge of the hen by depositing with the clerk of Bronx county the sum of $1,098.65, and was joined as a party defendant on its own petition claiming to be entitled to the fund. The appellant answered, admitting the payments, the deposit of the fund by it and that it claimed to be entitled thereto, and put in issue the other material allegations of the complaint, and alleged that the work was performed and the materials were furnished by the plaintiff under a contract in. writing made between him and the owner on the 9th day of September, 1916, and that the payments made constituted the reasonable value of all the work so performed and materials so furnished.
The plaintiff, having pleaded on quantum meruit only, in order to show that the work was performed and the materials furnished at the special instance and request of the owner, proved the contract referred to in the answer, and the commencement and the continuance of the work thereunder, and a breach of the contract by the owner in that the owner failed to reimburse the plaintiff as provided by the contract for loss sustained through the owner’s failure to have other work performed so that the plaintiff might not be delayed in the performance of his contract, and that thereafter, on account
The only point presented on the appeal which we deem of sufficient merit to require the -writing of an opinion, arises on the objections and exceptions of the appellant to the evidence showing a breach of the original contract by the owner and a modification of the contract and a breach of it as so modified, and on the appellant’s claim with respect thereto that such evidence was inadmissible inasmuch as the plaintiff did not allege the making of the express contract, the breach and modification thereof, and the breach of the contract as modified. It is well settled by authority that the plaintiff had the right of election, on the breach of the original contract by the owner or on the breach of the contract as modified to maintain an action on the contract for the work performed and the material furnished and for his damages flowing from the failure of the owner to permit him to complete the contract or, as he did in this case, to abandon any claim on or under the contract and sue on quantum meruit for the work, labor and services performed and materials furnished. (Atlantic, Gulf & Pacific Co. v. Woodmere Realty Co., 156 App. Div. 351; Borup v. Von Kokeritz, 162 id. 394, 396; Wright v. Reusens, 133 N. Y. 298; Lawrence Brothers, Inc., v. Heylman, 89 App. Div. 620; Boyd v. Vale, 84 id. 416.) It is likewise the settled rule that where an express contract has been fully performed the contractor may elect to sue either on the express contract or on quantum meruit on the contract implied by law and that in such case the provisions of the contract govern with respect to the amount of the recovery. (Jones v. Judd, 4 N. Y. 411;
It follows that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Page and Merrell, JJ., concpur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.