139 F. 248 | 2d Cir. | 1905
This is a writ of error by the defendants in the court below to review a judgment for the plaintiff entered upon
The only assignments of error that require notice are those which challenge the rulings of the trial judge that the plaintiff was entitled to maintain the action notwithstanding it had not fulfilled the terms of its special contract with the defendants; that the defendants were entitled by way of counterclaim only to the actual damages sustained by them by the delay in the completion of the contract, and not to the $100 per day mentioned in the contract; and that the plaintiff was entitled to interest upon any amount which the jury might find to have been owing by the defendants to the plaintiff from the time when the demand became payable. These assignments of error may be briefly disposed of.
1. It is entirely well settled that an action in quantum meruit can be maintained upon the facts which appeared upon the trial, and the proposition is so elementary that it seems quite surprising that it should be controverted. The plaintiff was not required to produce the contract in evidence, and did not do so, but relied upon the ordinary proof of the reasonable value of the materials and labor furnished. When the contract was produced by the defendants, its only effect was to reduce the amount of the plaintiff’s recovery by limiting it to the contract sum, less the amount of the defendant’s counterclaim for damages for delay; and, if the sum referred to in the contract as a “penalty of one hundred dollars per day” for delay in fulfilling entitled the defendants to damages at that rate, the amount of their counterclaim was fixed accordingly.
2. There was nothing apparent on the face of the contract, and
3. Notwithstanding the greater liberality of the more recent adjudications in allowing interest by way of damages for withholding the payment of money justly owing against the delinquent party, none to which we have been cited go- the length of allowing it in a case like the present. The sum owing from the defendants to the plaintiff was uncertain, and unascertainable by computation, at the time of the commencement of the action; it depended not only upon what should be found to be the reasonable value of the material and services furnished by the plaintiff, but also upon the amount which it should be found ought to be deducted from the plaintiff's claim, and this amount was likewise uncertain, and unascertainable. by computation. That interest is not allowable from the commencement of the action upon such a state of facts is very satisfactorily shown by the opinion in White v. Miller, 78 N. Y. 393, 34 Am Rep. 544. That it is not allowable at all was determined in Delafield v. Village of Westfield, 169 N. Y. 582, 62 N. E. 1095, which is a case exactly in point, and which was cited and unquestioned in the later case of Sweeny v. City of New York, 173 N. Y. 414, 66 N. E. 101, where the general question of allowance of interest upon unliquidated demands was carefully considered by the court. See, also, Carricarti v. Blanco-, 121 N. Y. 230, 24 N. E. 284. In the absence of controlling decisions in the federal courts, we are disposed to adopt as guides, in determining when interest should or should not be allowed, the rules deducible from the decisions in New York, where the question in all its phases has been so- frequently and so fully discussed. We are satisfied that interest should not have been allowed in the present case, and, the amount allowed being $1,295.-37, the recovery was to that extent excessive.
The judgment is reversed, unless the plaintiff stipulates to reduce it by deducting the amount of the interest; and, upon filing a stipulation to that effect in the court below, that court is instructed to modify the judgment accordingly.