Brady v. Mayor of New York

2 Bosw. 173
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 28, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2 Bosw. 173 (Brady v. Mayor of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brady v. Mayor of New York, 2 Bosw. 173 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

By the Court. Woodruff, J.—

The referee has found, as a conclusion of law from the facts proved, that it was the duty of the street commissioner, (in his notice inviting proposals for the work directed to be done by the Common Council) to state the probable amount of rock excavation required, and to include that among the data by which the bids or proposals would be tested, and had no power, after excluding that part of the work from such data, to still go on and contract for its performance; and that the contract, made by the street commissioner with the plaintiff, was illegal and void as regards rock excavation; and that the plaintiff cannot, by virtue of his contract, recover the stipulated price for rock excavation.

These conclusions are obviously fatal to the plaintiff’s claim to recover, as such claim is alleged in his complaint.' He has alleged a special contract, and the performance thereof, and claims to recover the stipulated price. The contract proved is found to be illegal and void, and it cannot, therefore, be the ground of recovery.

The referee, however, concludes that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the unpaid balance of the contract price, and upon several distinct grounds, viz.:—

[179]*179That the plaintiff, having done the work, was entitled to receive what the work performed in making such rock excavation was reasonably worth; and that the defendants have legal power to pay for work, on the basis of a quantum meruit, though it was done without contract, or under an illegal and void contract.

That, notwithstanding the contract under which the work was done was illegal and void, the confirmation of the assessment, made to provide for the expense thereof, amounted to a valid agreement, by the defendants, that the plaintiff should be paid the contract price.

That such confirmation was, in legal effect, an accord, and that satisfaction should be enforced.

And finally, that the plaintiff’s claim was a disputed claim which the defendants had power to settle, and that their acts amount to a valid binding settlement, which the plaintiff is entitled to enforce.

It is obvious to observe, that there are no issues in this action adapted to raise' the questions, upon the consideration of which the referee has decided in favor of the plaintiff.

The ground of claim set forth in the complaint is, simply, a special contract made with the defendants, duly performed by the plaintiff and his work accepted.

But assuming that the state of the pleadings may be disregarded, and that the plaintiff could be permitted to claim payment as upon a quantum meruit, and might recover for the rock excavation what the work of making the same was reasonably worth; then, so far as the judgment proceeds upon this ground, it is subject to what we deem these fatal errors: The referee awards to the plaintiff the whole contract 'price, and disregarded such evidence, as appeared in the case, tending to show that the rock excavation was not worth twenty-five dollars per yard, (the contract price,) when,'in truth, proposals were made to do it at five dollars; and further, the referee refused to receive evidence, offered by the defendants of the actual value of the work, which evidence, so far as the plaintiff’s claim was a title to recover what the labor was reasonably worth, was clearly, we think, admissible. It was, perhaps, rejected under the idea that the contract itself fixed the value, by stipulating the price to be paid, and that the value so fixed is conclusive.

[180]*180Where parties have, by a valid binding agreement, fixed the price to be paid for work and labor, such agreement is of course conclusive, and even though, by reason of departures from the strict terms of such an agreement, by mutual consent, the claimant finds it necessary to claim payment according to the fair value of his work, the agreement may still bind both, as to the rate of compensation, in particulars conforming to such agreement.

But this rule has no application to an agreement which is itself illegal and void. An illegal and void agreement no more bound the defendants to pay the price stipulated, if the work was done, than it bound them in any other aspect. If it was void, it could neither form the basis of recovery, nor bind the defendants to the measure of liability.

To hold this contract conclusive in respect of price, would be indirectly to sustain it in the very particular out of which the illegality arises. It was not a contract with the lowest bidder; and yet to hold it conclusive as to price, is to bind the Corporation to pay the highest price bidden, without any valid contract or legal consent to any price. The requirement, binding the Corporation to give contracts to the lowest bidder,, has especial reference to the price which they may become bound to pay, and the manner in which that price shall be ascertained; and to hold a contract not so awarded, conclusive on that point, is not only subversive of the law, but wholly inconsistent with the conclusion, that the contract is itself illegal.

If the plaintiff claimed the value of his work, he should have proved its value; and the defendants were at liberty to give such evidence, relevant to that point, as they might be able. If the instrument alleged to be a contract was entered into by the defendants’ officers, in a manner not authorized by law—in a manner in which they had no power to bind the Corporation—then the stipulations in that contract did not bind the defendants for any purpose.

And, once more, there was some evidence bearing on the value of rock excavation in the testimony, showing that one of the proposals offered the performance of that part of the work at five dollars per yard. It may be true, (doubtless it is,) that even this is much more than the fair value; but if so, the defendants were not permitted, on the trial, to prove it. How, it is obvious, that [181]*181if this rate had been taken as the fair value, the plaintiff would not, upon the basis of a quantum, meruit, have been entitled to recover any thing. He had, upon this basis, been already overpaid.

We are, therefore, for these reasons, of opinion, that even if any claim, in the nature of an assumpsit for the value of the work, could be sustained, a new trial must be ordered.

The suggestion, that the confirmation of the assessment, laid upon the lands adjacent to the work, amounted to an agreement with the plaintiff, that he should be paid, appears to us unwarranted.

By the terms of the contract, which is held illegal and void, payment to the plaintiff was to be made on the confirmation of the assessment; and, had the contract been valid, such confirmation would have been material as respects him, because the time of payment was thereby made definite.

But, in every other aspect, the act of confirmation was, as respects the plaintiff, a purely ex parte proceeding, operating between the Corporation and those whose lands were to be charged, but, in no sense, constituting an agreement with the plaintiff; and, notwithstanding such confirmation, the inquiry, whether the plaintiff is entitled to be paid, is, we think, clearly open to investigation.

The remark of Mr. Justice Strong, in Brady v. The Mayor, etc., of Brooklyn, (1 Barb. Rep.

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2 Bosw. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-mayor-of-new-york-nysuperctnyc-1867.