103 N.Y.S. 521 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
Lead Opinion
I am Of the opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of -the formal amendment to the complaint made on the first trial. It only related to the date that the contract became of force. The contract bore date the day it was originally alleged to have been made. The amendment changed that date from November 20, 1901, to January 3, 1902, the day the. defendant mailed the contract signed by it to the plaintiff. The court would doubtless have directed the service of the pleading as amended had that been requested. . ....
The court by declining to instruct the jury that there could be no recovery unless the contract was made prior to the appointment of the receivers, in effect permitted a recovery even though the contract was made by the receivers. The general rule is that receivers are officers of the court, deriving their authority under the law .from the court, and that they are riot the agents of the party of whom they are appointed receivers in the sense, that they have authority to bind the party by any act' or omission on. their part (Ahern v. Steele, 115 N. Y. 203, 232; Lottimer v. Lord, 4 E. D. Smith, 183,191; Railroad Co. v. Soutter, 2 Wall. 510, 519; Chicago Union Bank v. Kansas City Bank, 136 U. S. 223, 236; Texas & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Rust, 17 Fed. Rep. 275, 282; Dow v. Memphis & L. R. R. Co., 20 id, 260,269; General Electric Co. v. Whitney,
This court on the former appeal (114 App. Div. 135) expressed the view that whether the company would be liable on the contract if made by it prior to the appointment 'of the receivers would depend upon whether the receivership was necessitated by the insolvency of the company, in which event the view was expressed that it would not be liable, but that the company would be liable if the receivership was brought about by it with a view to avoiding its obligations. On the last trial the question as to whether the com
■The court instructed■ the jury; as matter -of law; that if -plaintiff was entitled to recover, he was entitled to recover interest from , the 17th day of October, 1903, the date of the last payment made ' by him to Whitman & Oo., to whom he relet the work on defendant’s failure to perform the contract. Counsel for the defendant duly excepted to this instruction; The evidence shows - that plaintiff relet the work shortly prior to- the commencement of the action, but it does not appear that the defendant was aware of the fact or had knowledge of the contract price. ■ Ñor did the plaintiff in his complaint allege the fact that the work had. been relet or claim damages on the basis of the difference between the contract price for which defendant agreed to perform the work and the cost thereof which he agreed to,pay under the new contract. He alleged generally that hev sustained damages by defendant’s breach of the contract in the sum of $3,500, and demands judgment for that - amount, together with interest thereon. Upon the' trial he proved, without objection, that the additional cost of the work, instead of being $3,500, was $3,125, and this was not controverted. Under the instructions of the court the jury added to that .amount the sum of $565.62 as interest. I am of opinion that this was error. The damages were not liquidated. It is true that theré was' a market price for the various items of material, but it" cannot be said that there was a market price for the entire contract- workj which involved the furnishing of material and the performance of labor. The plaintiff did not know even approxiniately what it would cost him to have the work done. He was obliged to receive bids, which differed in amount, and he selected, the lowest, and did not even then assume-to fix his’damages on that basis or notify the defendant. Ñor did he recover the amount of damages' which he alleged in the complaint.-
The other points presented by the- appellant have been examined, -. but do not require special consideration in the opinion. - - .
It follows, therefore, that the judgment should be modified- by
Patterson, P. J., Houghton and Lambert, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent, as I do not think that there was a contract by which the defendant undertook to do the work, for a failure of which the plaintiff lias recovered a judgment. The defendant’s bid to do the work was'accepted, and the plaintiff forwarded to defendant a contract to be executed. That contract contemplated the giving of a bond by the defendant which would be satisfactory to the plaintiff before the contract became operative. The defendant executed the contract and forwarded the sanie with a bond to the plaintiff, but the plaintiff refused to accept the bond, prepared and forwarded to the defendant a new contract with a new bond to be executed by the defendant, and that bond was never executed, nor was the new contract ever executed. When the receivers were appointed, there being no binding contract in existence, the action of the receivers in obtaining authority to complete all the contracts made by the defendant cannot be considered as a formal execution of the new contract; nor do I understand from the record that the receivers-ever formally executed the new contract. They certainly never signed a new contract, or assumed to bind either themselves or the company to carry out the contract which had been executed by the defendant, but which had been rejected by the plaintiff. The acceptance by the company of the property transferred to it by the receivers when they were discharged was not assuming the obligation that the receivers had incurred as to executory, contracts which had never been formally entered into, and upon which no work had been done or obligation incurred by the receivers. The defendant asked the court to charge that the acts of the receivers were not the acts of the corporation; .and that if the jury found that the alleged contract was not entered into and accepted by both parties before the appointment of the receivers, their verdict must be for the defendant. The court refused these requests, and the defendant excepted. I think this was error. The complaint alleged the
I think the judgment slioujd be reversed.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs. ■ Settle order on notice.