120 N.Y.S. 496 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Defendant appeals from a judgment for plaintiff entered upon a verdict, and from an order denying- a new trial.
The plaintiff made a contract with the firm of -John Maher & Son to furnish the labor and material necessary for the erection. of and to erect a building at the agreed pi'ice of $99,250. The contract provided that the price should be paid in installments of eighty per cent of each $10,000 worth of work done, the last payment to be-made thirty days after the full completion and acceptance of the building. It was further provided that in each case of payment a certificate should he obtained from and signed by the architect. The defendant became surety that Maher & Son, the contractors, Would faithfully perform their contract-. On January 16, 1904, the contractors abandoned the work. They had then done work worth about $53,000'at contract prices and had been paid $41,000. Plaintiff also paid out, after the default of the contractors, $1,226.05 to the laborers employed by the contractors for wages earned before the default but left unpaid by the contractors in consequence of their failure. The notices to the contractors and their surety, called for by the contract, were duly given, and the surety for a time appears to have considered completing the contract itself, but finally declined to do so. The plaintiff then went on and completed the work itself under the supervision of its own architect and superintendent. It did not make a new contract for the whole unfinished work, but employed labor and purchased material, dealing in the main with the same persons with whom Maher & Son had made contracts for material, etc. The jury found that-it cost plaintiff $18,355.02 over and above the original contract price to complete, the work, and for this sum a verdict was rendered. The defendant put in no evidence, and did not sum up, letting the verdict go practically by default, and relying upon its exceptions to obtain a reversal of the judgment and a new trial. The complaint did not contain any allegations of performance by plaintiff on its part of the conditions of the contract with defendant. This was corrected by amendment at the trial, the plaintiff being allowed to insert the general allegation of performance in the form permitted by section 533 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The defendant, however, goes further and
The case was a long one. and the record is voluminous. It was defended, as was the surety’s right, with the utmost technicality, and the case on appeal bristles with objections and exceptions. We have examined them With care and find nothing which requires reversal of the judgment. The trial took place some five years after the events testified to. Naturally the recollections of many of the witnesses had become dim and the court was obliged, from the necessities of the case, to freely permit the use of papers, bills and the like to refresh the recollection of the witnesses. Some 'testimony, no doubt, was admitted which, upon a strict - application of the rules, might well have been excluded, but in every such case, so far as our examination shows, the same facts have been proven by other unobjectionable evidence. The verdict appears to have been a just one and to have been well supported by the evidence, and we find no errors of sufficient importance to compel a reversal. Consequently the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham,. McLaughlin, Clarke and Houghton, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. .