135 N.Y.S. 1031 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1912
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff was employed by the defendant to lay a line of iron pipe from a reservoir to a house upon defendant’s country place. After the line was laid, water ran from the reservoir to the house for about a week, and then ceased running. Defendant notified the plaintiff of this fact, and plaintiff visited the country place with his
The plaintiff brought suit for the agreed price of the work. The defendant denied that the work was properly performed, and counterclaimed for the damages caused by the building of a new reservoir and by being forced to abandon his residence. The trial justice excluded evidence of these damages, and gave judgment for the plaintiff for the agreed price of his work, less the trifling costs of the actual repair of the break, upon the theory of substantial performance.
The judgment has established that the plaintiff has failed fully to perform his contract. If his failure to perform was substantial, he can, of course, not recover.
“ Defects must not prevade the whole, or be so essential as that the object which the parties intended to accomplish," to have a specified amount of work performed in a particular manner, is not accomplished.” Phillip v. Gallant, 62 N. Y. 256, 264.
In this case, the parties not only intended that- the pipe should be laid, but that-it should be laid in such a manner
Judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result, because I believe that the learned trial justice erroneously excluded all evidence tending to show the necessary resultant disuse of the house by the defendant and its rental value during the period of unavailability. I cannot, however, agree that the cost of bringing in an additional water supply is to be included in the proper measure of damages. That item appears to me to be altogether too remote and necessarily outside of the contemplation of the parties when the agreement was made. My view may well be illustrated by the hypothesis that the plaintiff, instead of committing a breach of the contract by insufficient work, had deliberately refused to do any part of the work, and had, simultaneously with such refusal, advised or suggested to the defendant that in any event the water supply at the reservoir was or would be insufficient, and that, therefore, defendant should install an additional supply. Would the expense of installing the new supply be within the measure of damage for plaintiff’s breach of contract, evidenced by his refusal to perform ?
Seabury, J., concurs.
Judgment- reversed and- new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.