178 A.D. 357 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
On July 29, 1913, the claimant entered into a contract with the State to furnish the material and labor necessary for cleaning, pointing and waterproofing the stone work of the exterior, and of the central and two western courts of the State Capitol building at Albany. The contract provided that the work should be commenced promptly and prosecuted with diligence, and that the claimant should be hable in specified liquidated damages for each day of delay beyond the date named for completion, and that “ no charges shall be made by the contractor for any delays or hindrances from any cause during the progress of any portion of the work embraced in his contract;” but that should a delay be caused by any act of the State authorities, the contractor would be allowed an extension of time for completion of the work sufficient to allow for the delay. The contract also contained the following clause: “By waterproofing is meant that all stone surfaces of the exterior of the building and the central court and two western courts shall be treated by a method to be proposed by the contractor that will waterproof and preserve the stone, without changing the appearance of the building, for a period of five years, and which the contractor shall guarantee by a surety company bond in amount to be stated in his proposal.”
The claimant entered upon the performance of the contract about one week after its execution and prosecuted the work with diligence. His method of operation was first to clean the stone work by means of a compressed air sand blast; next to do the pointing, that is, to fill the interstices between the stones with cement, which the workmen did standing upon a swinging scaffold suspended from the top of the building by means of pulleys and ropes, and lowered as the work progressed, thus in full descent pointing a strip about twenty feet wide extending from the top of the building to the ground; and lastly to do the waterproofing which consisted simply of applying a liquid to the surface of the stones by means of brushes. The plan of the claimant was to immediately follow the pointing of a strip of the building, with the waterproofing, thus avoiding making any change in the location of the pulleys and scaffold until the work of both pointing and waterproofing of the strip had been completed.
The second item is of $240 on account of suspensions of claimant’s work, between September seventeenth and October eighteenth, for periods of a few hours each aggregating six hundred hours, -made necessary by demands of the State authorities that the claimant temporarily cease operating the sand blast, the noise from which disturbed the hearings of the Sulzer impeachment trial being had in the Senate chamber. The claimant’s employees were day laborers, and claimant was compelled to pay them full day wages without the benefit of any deduction on account of short suspensions of work.
The Court of Claims allowed the claim in full, and from such determination this appeal has been taken. The items of the bill as to time lost are not seriously questioned by the State, and practically the only question to be considered by us is whether they constitute legal claims against the State.
As to the first item, the kind of waterproofing to be used was not fixed, but by the terms of the contract was to be proposed by the contractor, and to possess the qualities of preserving the stone and not changing the appearance of the building. Clearly the contract contemplated, as acknowledged by the claimant in its communication to the State Architect of August 13, 1913, that the material proposed by the con
It appears - from the letter of the representative of a waterproofing compound proposed by the claimant that time was necessary for the proofing to cure after being applied in order to determine the result of its use. The selection of the proper waterproofing was a matter of importance, and the State was entitled to take all the time necessary in which to investigate as to the merits of the various compounds and to reach an intelligent conclusion. I think that all reasonable and necessary delays incident to that purpose should be held to have been within the contemplation of the contract, and hence that under the clause before quoted the State should be held to be exempted from all liability on account thereof but that the claimant was entitled to a corresponding extension of time in which to complete its contract. This was apparently allowed it as no claim seems to have been made by the State for the stipulated penalty on account of the failure of the claimant to complete the contract within the stipulated period.
The second item of damages stands upon a different footing. The contract should be reasonably construed. (Curnan v. D. & O. R. R. Co., 138 N. Y. 480.) That there would be delay resulting from the holding of the impeachment trial necessitating temporary suspensions of the work was plainly not within the contemplation of the parties. These delays were caused by the active interference of the State authorities in the prosecution by claimant of its work which so far as appears was being properly conducted and making no more noise than was actually necessary. The contract had not in contemplation that compensation was to be made for such delays by mere extension of time for the performance of the contract. I think the allowance of the second item of the claim was proper.
The judgment appealed from should be modified by reducing the award to $240, and as so modified affirmed, without costs to either party in this court.
All concurred, except Kellogg, P. J., and Cochrane, J., who dissented, and voted for reversal.
Judgment modified by reducing the award to $240, and as so modified affirmed, without costs to either party in this court.