Allen v. . City of Oneida

104 N.E. 920, 210 N.Y. 496, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1252
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 N.E. 920 (Allen v. . City of Oneida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. . City of Oneida, 104 N.E. 920, 210 N.Y. 496, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1252 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Hogan, J.

The city of Oneida owns and operates a municipal water supply. On July 14th, 1905, at a special election of the taxpayers of the city, it was voted to sell bonds of the municipality to the amount of $45,000 for the purpose of enlarging and improving the water supply and the water works plant. Under the charter of the city the board of public works was authorized to take charge and control of the water works plant, and to enlarge, improve and add to such plant as necessity required. On July llth, 1905, the board of public works duly published a notice to contractors inviting proposals for the work of enlargement and improvement of the water supply system of the city, according to plans, specifications and descriptions adopted by the board and filed in the office of the city clerk. Amongst other items of work was concrete masonry estimated in dam, gates and screen chamber at 2,580 cubic yards. The plaintiffs, contractors in the city of Oneida, presented a bid to the board of public works wherein they proposed to construct the estimated quantity, to wit, 2,580 cubic yards of concrete masonry for the sum of $5.90 per cubic yard. Included in the proposal was other work to be done, but the question of difference between the parties has reference alone to the item of concrete masonry.

The proposal of plaintiffs was accepted by the board of public works on the 8th day of August, 1905, and, pursuant to a resolution adopted by that body, the mayor of *500 the city and city clerk, on the 14th day of August, 1905, entered into a contract with the plaintiffs for the work contemplated in the notice published and specified in the bid made by plaintiffs which had been accepted by the city.

While the estimated yardage was specified in the contract the city reserved the right to increase or diminish the quantity. Whatever the amount of concrete furnished by the plaintiffs the same was to be paid for at the contract price of $5.90 per cubic yard.

For the purpose of preventing any dispute as to the quantity furnished it was mutually covenanted that upon completion of the work the city engineer should measure up the work, and the superintendent of public works should thereupon make a final estimate of the same in writing showing the whole amount of the work done under the contract, and thereupon the board of public works was to pay for the same within two weeks. The superintendent was also to determine any other disputes relative to the fulfillment of the contract, and his estimate and decision was, by the terms of the contract, made final and conclusive and a condition precedent to the receipt by the contractors of any money under the contract.

By other provisions of the contract the contractor agreed that he should have no claim for compensation for extra work unless the same was ordered in writing by the superintendent and that he should not be entitled to payment or receive any payments except in the manner set forth in the contract.

January 15th, 1907, a final estimate of the work under contract 34 was made by the superintendent of public works and the city engineer, and filed in the office of the board of public works. Such final estimate showed 3,180.7 cubic yards of concrete masonry, contract price, $5.90 — $18,766.13. The plaintiffs assigned said certifv cate to the Farmers and Merchants’ Bank and the city *501 paid the amount thus certified to the assignee. Thereafter and in June following the plaintiffs presented a claim against the city for 153.75 cubic yards of concrete at $5.90 —$907.12. This claim stated that the total amount of concrete furnished was 3,334.11 cubic yards while the claimants had been paid only for 3,180.70, as per your final estimate which leaves a balance of 153.75 cubic yards as per above bill,” amounting at prices stated to $907.12. This action was brought to recover that amount together with a claim arising out of a separate contract and hereinafter referred to.

It was the manifest intention of the parties when the contract was made that the officers of the city should determine the quantity of work performed, and that plaintiffs should, in the absence of fraud, be bound thereby; that plaintiffs should be entitled to demand or receive payment only in the manner provided in the contract.

The final estimate and certificate of the engineer and superintendent of public works having been made subsequent to the completion of the work by plaintiffs pursuant to the covenants of the parties contained in the contract, and plaintiffs having accepted the same by virtue of an assignment thereof made by them to the bank, which final estimate and certificate was subsequently paid by the city, the plaintiffs cannot thereafter repudiate covenants entered into by them and recover for the alleged quantity of work in excess of the amount shown by the final estimate, especially in view of the terms of the contract which provided that payment of the final amount due should release the city from any and all claims thereunder.

Contract No. 36.

The city having advertised for bids for work to grub, clear and clean the lands to be used as a site for the new storage reservoir, and to fence both the present and proposed reservoir sites, the plaintiffs presented a bid to the *502 board of public works wherein they proposed to grub, clear and clean 42 acres of land at $80.00 per acre.

The proposal of plaintiffs was accepted by the board of public works upon August 8th, 1905, and, by resolution of that body, the mayor of the city .and the city clerk were authorized to and thereafter did on the 14th day of .August, 1905, enter into a contract with the plaintiffs for the doing of said work. The contract, outside of the items referred to, was in general terms the same as the contract for the doing of work under contract number 34, and contained the same general provisions. So far as material to the contract number 36, the plaintiffs undertook thereunder to do the work of grubbing, cleaning and clearing 42 acres for $80.00 per acre. Under the head of Clearing ” in the contract it was provided:

Within the lines of the lands to be used by the city for the new reservoir site, the ground shall be cleared of brush, roots, stumps and dead or decayed vegetable matter of whatsoever nature. All bogs shall be cut and removed.”

Plaintiffs seek to recover under this contract damages by reason of alleged extra requirements imposed upon them, due as alleged to the fact that at the time when the bids were about to be delivered it was represented to them by the board of public works and city engineer that the trees and stumps above the water line would have to be cut off close to the ground, and that they would not be required to dig out the trees and stumps above the water line on the reservoir site, but subsequently, and under the contract, they were obliged to do so, and they sought to recover the sum of $2>850 by reason thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 N.E. 920, 210 N.Y. 496, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-city-of-oneida-ny-1914.