Adirondack Core & Plug Co. v. New York Central Railroad

144 Misc. 558, 258 N.Y.S. 916, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1544
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 22, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 Misc. 558 (Adirondack Core & Plug Co. v. New York Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adirondack Core & Plug Co. v. New York Central Railroad, 144 Misc. 558, 258 N.Y.S. 916, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1544 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Smith, E. N., J.

The New York Central Railroad Company entered into a contract with the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company, a Massachusetts corporation, pursuant to the terms of which the latter agreed to construct a bridge for the purpose of ehminating the grade crossing of the Natural BridgoTIarrisville highway known as Rock Cut Crossing and the tracks of the New York Central Railroad Company in the town of Diana, county of Lewis, according to certain plans and specifications attached to the contract, furnished 'by the chief engineer of said railroad company, for a consideration stated in the schedule, a part of the contract, which sets forth fixed prices for certain parts of the work and unit prices for other parts of the work- — particularly with respect to excavations. The contract was executed by the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company on the 10th of October, 1929, and by the New York Central Railroad Company on the 4th of October, 1929. The contract was upon the general contract form of the New York Central Railroad Company. The contractor was to furnish, upon the execution and delivery of the contract, a good and sufficient bond of indemnity in an amount equal to the total contract price of the work provided for therein. The work was to be done under the supervision of the chief engineer of the railroad company. There is nothing in the contract which shows any public relationship or public character, excepting one sentence embodied near the end of Article 7 of the contract, as follows: u It is understood the work is to be done in accordance with the order of the Public Service Commission dated October 18,1928.” ■

Under date of October 10, 1929, the defendant Abbott-Connolly Construction Company and the defendant Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company (hereinafter called the bonding company ”) executed an indemnity bond, as required by the contract, under and pursuant to the terms of which said bonding company, as surety, was held and firmly bound unto the New York Central Railroad Company in the sum of $23,569.35; the condition was that said contractor would faithfully perform the contract entered into with said New York Central Railroad Company. No mention here of any public character of the transaction.

The work was commenced in the latter part of November, 1929. About the 30th of July, 1930, the contractor abandoned the work. The defendant bonding company promptly undertook the perform[560]*560anee of its duty under the indemnity bond and hired the Utica Construction Company to complete the work, which it did about the 18th of October, 1930.

The plaintiff furnished material consisting of lumber to the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company of the agreed value of $3,465.93, of which no part has been paid except the sum of $250, leaving unpaid and due from the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company to the plaintiff the sum of $3,215.93. All of this material consisted of lumber except an item of ten rolls of paper, $30, and an item of window-sash, $7.50, and all of the lumber excepting so much as was used for runways and for scaffolding, amounting to about four per cent of it, was used in making forms into which the concrete (of which, with steel, the bridge was constructed) was poured.

In making these forms the lumber had to be cut according to the requirements of the structure, and nailed and wired. When the concrete work was finished this form lumber, in this condition, having served its necessary purpose in the construction of the bridge, was removed from the bridge and was of such little value that, together with other lumber left there by the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company, it was sold by the Utica Construction Company, for the benefit of the bonding company, for the sum of $400.

While the estimated contract price was as stated in the bond, under the unit price the actual amount of the contract was $22,779.55. Of this sum the following payments were made: to the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company, before its abandonment of the contract, $6,633.53. This left an unpaid balance of $16,146.02, which was the amount due to the contractor upon the completion of the contract.

The record shows that the New York Central Railroad Company received from the Comptroller of the State of New York, in the manner and under conditions which will hereafter be considered, the total amount of the contract price, $22,779.55; of this amount, as above noted, it paid to the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company $6,633.53, and at the time of the completion of the contract had available, coming from the Comptroller’s office, the balance of $16,146.02, which, under conditions and circumstances to be considered later, it received; this included the money which was due for the work of the Abbott-Connolly Construction Company up to the time of its abandonment of the contract, less hens filed.

Of this amount the defendant bonding company, as surety, received on December 31, 1930, after satisfying all the hens filed excepting that of the plaintiff, and after bonding out the hen of the plaintiff, and after certain proper deductions by the New York [561]*561Central Bailroad Company, the sum of $15,655.96; it also received from the sale of the refuse lumber $400, making its total receipts $16,055.96; its disbursements on account of the satisfaction of liens and the completion of the contract itself were $16,326.73; it also had certain disbursements of its own by way of counsel fees made necessary by reason of the abandonment of the contract by its principal, in the sum of $235.08. So that it appears that there are no moneys remaining in the hands of the surety upon its completion of the contract, out of which to pay this plaintiff.

The contract here involved was for the purpose of doing the work and furnishing the materials for the elimination of a grade crossing. The work of elimination, undertaken in this case by the New York Central Bailroad Company, was, in respect of its fiscal features at least, undertaken under and pursuant to the provisions of the so-called Grade Crossing Elimination Act (Chap. 678 of the Laws of 1928). For the purpose of ehminating grade crossings the people of the state had voted a bond issue of three hundred millions of dollars, and the Grade Crossing Elimination Act was enacted to make effective the purpose of the people in voting this bond issue.

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Bluebook (online)
144 Misc. 558, 258 N.Y.S. 916, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adirondack-core-plug-co-v-new-york-central-railroad-nysupct-1932.