253 A.D. 784 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1937
Cross-appeals from a judgment of the Court of Claims in favor of claimant for $197,831.22 damages, with interest thereon from May 18, 1932, amounting in all to $255,136.30, entered in the office of the clerk of the Court of Claims on March 16, 1937. The State appeals from the entire judgment and the claimant appeals from so much of said judgment as disallowed certain items of the claim and awarded inadequate damages on other items. The claim arises out of a contract entered into on March 20, 1930, between the claimant and the State for the construction of twenty-two buildings at Pilgrim State Hospital for the sum of $6,384,200. The total amount claimed was $349,758.65 and consisted of the following items: 1. Damages due to being required to cut stretchers in the body of brick work on the exterior walls of nine buildings. 2. Damages due to being required to use special jointing tools and to form specifically shaped joints in all exterior brick work. 3. Damage on account of wrongful rejection of terra cotta tile. 4. Damages on account of wrongfully being required to furnish temporary heat during the winter of 1930-1931. 5. Damages on account of temporary heat and overhead expenses due to prolonging claimant’s work from January 15, 1931, to May, 1932. 6. Certain miscellaneous items of damage and wrongful deductions from contract price. The Court of Claims has found that the State’s inspectors were wholly unreasonable in requiring the contractor to cut a large number of brick in the body of the brick work on the exterior walls of nine buildings. The court below was fully justified in this finding. The requirement of the State’s inspectors was not authorized by the contract or specifications and was arbitrary. It made it necessary for the contractor to set up special cutting benches around the walls of these buildings and to have bricklayers cut a large number of these brick when substantially the same result and a result wholly within the contract could have been accomplished by following the method suggested by the contractor of using six-inch stretchers which could be obtained commercially. The claimant proved that its actual damages as the result of this breach of the contract by the State amounted to $158,143.19 and there is no proof in the record to contradict this figure. The court below should have allowed claimant the damages at this figure instead of at $100,000. The State’s inspectors also wrongfully required the use of a special jointer and the forming of special joints on the exterior brick work. These special jointers had to be specially fabricated and were not of the kind usually used in the trade. The specifications called for a concave joint. The special jointer, the use of which was required by the State, produced a V-shaped joint with a rounded point and not a concave point. Here again the inspectors required