This action is brought by the plaintiff to foreclose a lien for work and materials supplied in the erection of a building for the defendant. The building was erected under
Though the building is finished and in possession of the owner, still if the contractor, in erecting it, has materially departed from what was agreed upon—if he has failed substantially to do what was specified and stipulated for in the contract—he can recover nothing, and practically forfeits to the owner what is done. Smith v. Brady, 17 N. Y. R. 173. This is a stringent, but healthy and necessary rule, to secure the faithful performance of contracts; but as the penalty it imposes upon the defaulting contractor is a severe one—in this case involving a loss of labor and materials valued at over four thousand dollars—the court, in applying the rule, should be well satisfied that the case is one coming clearly within it, and that the contractor has utterly failed to show a substantial performance of his contract.
The evidence in this case is conflicting. Three witnesses on the part of the defendant, who have examined the building since it was erected, and compared it with the specifications, swear that it is not built according to the specifications, and, in connection with two other witnesses, have pointed out parts which they regard as defective, and as failing to compty with what was required by the contract. While eight witnesses on the part of the plaintiff, including himself—who were either engaged upon the building or supplied materials towards its erection—rebut this testimony. I should have found it difficult to determine between these two classes of witnesses; but there is a feature in
Judgment accordingly.
