145 N.Y.S. 201 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
Lead Opinion
Plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract by which plaintiff agreed to act as designing and “ contracting engi
In the course of the work covered by the contract one of plaintiff’s employees was seriously injured through plaintiff’s negligence, for which he recovered a verdict of $25,000,. of which $5,000 was paid by a casualty insurance company in which plaintiff held a policy, and the remainder, plus costs and expenses, was paid by plaintiff, who brought this action to recover the sum so paid. The meaning of the contract seems to me very clear, giving rise to no necessity for resorting to the rules of interpretation invoked by defendant. The contract was (so far as the construction part is concerned) what' is known as a “ percentage ” contract, by which the contractor supplies labor and material at cost and receives as his compensation a fixed percentage thereon in lieu of other profit. The plainly-expressed intent and meaning of the parties was that, excluding its overhead expenses, plaintiff was to be reimbursed for all cost and expense incurred in the performance of the work. On the face of the contract it is apparent that it involved a work of considerable magnitude, and required the employment of many artisans and laborers, and that in the distribution of the forces employed plaintiff
The judgment should be affirmed with costs.
McLaughlin, Laughlin and Dowling, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
The sole question involved in this case depends upon what was included in “the actual cost” that was incurred by the plaintiff in carrying out the contract with the defendant. The contract is in the form of a letter written by the plaintiff to the defendant, and accepted by the defendant. According to the settled rule in the construction of a contract of this kind, it is to be construed against the person preparing or proposing it rather than against the person who is invited to accept it, and any ambiguity in the instrument is to be determined in favor of the acceptor as against the proposer. (Gillet v. Bank of America, 160 N. Y. 549.) By the agreement the plaintiff was to act as engineer for the defendant, doing all the necessary work provided in the proposal in connection with and incident to the design and construction of the electrification of certain lines of the defendant. The plaintiff’s compensation was to be for designing, five per cent upon the estimated cost of the plant and the equipment therein, and for acting as contracting engineer for the whole or any part of the work that the defendant desired the plaintiff to do, by which the plaintiff was to furnish, install and house all the apparatus and material, and provide all labor and services necessary and incident to the completion of the plant ready for operation, the actual cost incurred, including the actual cost of the engineering work, with ten per cent added to such total cost. It was then provided that “ the ‘ actual cost ’ shall include * * * the cost of the time, traveling expenses, tools and supplies of engineers * * * and other employees to the extent that such services and expenses are applied specifically to this work, ” and also that ‘c it shall also include miscellaneous charges, such as fire and casualty insurance, freights, express, water,
It seems to me that a liability imposed upon the plaintiff by its own negligence as to one of its own employees was no included in the term “ the actual cost,” as stated in the proposal. To include it we would have to construe the instrument so that, if plaintiff by its own negligence caused injury to its employee, the plaintiff was not only to receive the amount it was compelled to pay as a result of such negligence, but a -premium of ten per cent as compensation to it for having negligently injured or killed its employee. The fact that plaintiff has not claimed this ten per cent seems to me immaterial, but by the construction adopted by this court the plaintiff would clearly be entitled to it. Certainly that could not have been the intention of the parties in making the proposal or in accepting it. The plaintiff was authorized to procure such casualty insurance as would protect it, and for the cost of such casualty insurance the defendant would have been liable. The fact that the plaintiff failed to procure sufficient insurance to protect it could not make the defendant an insurer against plaintiff’s
It seems to me that this decision about to be made extends the liability of the defendant beyond that which it undertook by any reasonable construction of the plaintiff’s proposal, and I think, therefore, the plaintiff should bear the expenses of its own negligence, and the judgment should be reversed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.