80 N.Y. 312 | NY | 1880
This is an action to recover the unpaid part of the price agreed upon in a builder's contract for the altering of a dwelling-house, and the price agreed upon in another contract for building a piazza thereto, and the value of work done not named in those contracts. Part of the compensation reserved by the principal contract was to be made as the work progressed under it, in board of plaintiff and his workmen, and fodder for his horse. Part of the compensation in money — which was $550 in all — was to *314 be paid as the work progressed or when it was done. That part was $200 or $300. Part was to be paid in money at the end of the work, or by something in lieu thereof that the plaintiff could use. In effect, if the defendant so chose, there was no money to be paid by her until the plaintiff had performed his contract; and in that respect the contract is to be treated as one, the price whereof was not to be paid until completion. The time of payment for the piazza was not named; and was therefore due when the work was done. The extra work was in the nature of things to be paid for when it was done, and in money to the amount of the worth of the work. The plaintiff entered upon the work named in the contract and brought his work to an end. The defendant made him the compensation which was not reserved in money, and paid him upon the contract in cash and otherwise, as the work was going on, $82.96. The piazza was built as agreed. The extra work was done well enough, and to the satisfaction of the defendant, and was worth $90.50. The defendant has always been in the possession of the work done by the plaintiff under the principal contract.
That contract was not fully performed by the plaintiff in some particulars; but he undertook it, intending in good faith to do it, and did substantially perform all the conditions of it; yet failed in some particulars to fully perform some of the specifications as his duty and the fair intent and meaning of the contract asked of him; which failure was caused by his inadvertence and that of his workmen, and by the want of skill and judgment of some of the latter. Such are the findings of the referee. He has also found the particulars, in which he says that the plaintiff failed of performance; and that finding will be spoken of further on. The referee found that the defendant was damaged by the failure of the plaintiff in the sum of $100.
Nothing has been paid upon the price of the piazza, nor for the extra work.
The plaintiff had judgment upon the report of the referee for the amount of the two contracts and the value of the *315 extra work, less the sum paid to him and the amount of the defendant's damages.
Can this judgment be upheld? It can be for the price of the piazza and for the value of the extra work. These were distinct from the principal contract, and the performance of the plaintiff was complete therein. The money paid by the defendant upon the principal contract went upon that alone, and cannot be set off or applied elsewhere. Nor can the damages from the defects in the work done under the principal contract be set off or applied to them. If the plaintiff may recover for what he did under that contract, then those damages, as they are less than the amount that must in such case be allowed to him, will apply there. If he may not recover thereon for lack of full performance, then the defendant may not have those damages of him at all. (Walker v.Millard,
As to the principal contract, the plaintiff did not fully perform it. As the defendant was not bound to pay the contract price, so far as it was to be paid in money, until the contract was fully performed by the plaintiff, full performance by him was therefore a condition precedent to his right to have payment, unless she has accepted the work or waived such a performance. (Pullman v. Corning,
There is no finding that the defendant waived such a performance, or that she accepted the work as complying with the contract. If the plaintiff is to be held strictly to the terms of his contract, he must fail to recover thereon, and that he should be, is the effect of the earlier cases in this state: (See those cited in the opinion of COMSTOCK, J., in 17 N.Y. [supra], 185.) But there has been a relaxation of that rule, and now on such a contract there may be a recovery without a literal or exact performance of it. It is now the rule, that where a builder has in good faith intended to comply with the contract, and has substantially complied with it, although there may be slight defects caused by inadvertence or unintentional omissions, he may recover the contract *316
price, less the damage on account of such defects: (Sinclair v.Tallmadge, 35 Barb., 602; Johnson v. De Peyster,
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur, except RAPALLO, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed.