Brainard v. Ten Eyck

102 Misc. 20
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 102 Misc. 20 (Brainard v. Ten Eyck) 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
Brainard v. Ten Eyck, 102 Misc. 20 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Rudd, J.

The defendant alleges failure to perform and counterclaims damages by reason thereof of $1,000.

The contract price was $5,329. There have been made payments amounting to $4,140.80.

[22]*22The balance alleged to be due is $1,189.20, to which are added extras amounting to $87.75, making the amount here sought by the plaintiff $1,276.95.

The jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff of $1,000.

The defendant moves to set aside the verdict on the ground that it is not in accordance with the weight of the evidence.

The issues presented were tried at great length and with much detail. The defendant vigorously contended that it was the duty of the court to grant a nonsuit on the ground that under the law the plaintiff could not here recover because of certain omissions and defects in the structure of the building, including violations of the building code of the city of Albany and the Public Health Law. •

The questions at issue were presented over the exception of the defendant to the jury under directions concerning the law governing the questions here involved, to which no exception was entered.

It seems clearly to the court that the question to be submitted here is whether or not there has been a substantial performance of the contract.

A building contractor is not now held under the law to a complete and specific performance of a contract in each and every detail. The more equitable rule prevails.

That rule this court endeavored to present to the jury and upon the motion to set aside the verdict each party stated that the direction of the court in that regard was correct.

Because of the length of the trial and the rather complicated conditions which were developed by the testimony, and more particularly for the reason that the court was then of the opinion and still thinks that the questions involved were really questions of fact, assuming that the jury was properly advised as to the law, this court hesitates to disturb the verdict. All [23]*23courts should thus hesitate, but at the same time a duty is imposed, and this duty cannot be avoided.

The court distinctly told the jury that the contract consisted not only of the particular instrument signed between the parties, but that it included the plans, specifications, building code of the city of Albany and Public Health Law; that so far as the provisions of the building code and Public Health Law of the city are concerned neither party could waive any provision thereof; a contractor assuming to build in accordance with such laws must in that regard specifically perform.

The plaintiff does not claim that he performed the contract in every respect; there were variations, changes and omissions, some of which the plaintiff admits; concerning others he claims a waiver on the part of defendant.

In the charge the court advised the jury concerning the effect of a waiver, defining it, referred to the necessity of the plaintiff showing by a greater weight of evidence the good faith of the contractor; calling the jury’s attention to the examination as to whether the alleged defects extended generally throughout the building; mentioning the fact that sometimes an omission is an inadvertence and unintentional; that no contractor can perform substantially a building contract unless there is in his work an element of good faith, and that substantial performance permits only of such concessions, changes or modifications as are inadvertent and unintentional and are not due to bad faith; that they do not impair the structure as a whole, are remediable, can be corrected without doing material damages to other parts of the building in tearing out and reconstructing, and may without injustice be compensated for by deductions from the contract price; that„where the defects are substantial the owner cannot be required to accept damages by way of deductions [24]*24from the contract price; that in such a case the owner’s agreement was to pay upon performance and not otherwise; and if the evidence shows that the alleged defects, omissions and changes ran throughout the structure, here and there and everywhere, that that would justify a finding that there had not been a substantial compliance.

The jury was also advised that in considering whether a substantial performance was had they might take into account the percentage of defective or omitted work; that the theory of the law was that the contractor would be permitted a recovery where the omission to perform has been the result of an oversight, misunderstanding or excusable neglect, and the ' same may be adequately indemnified by an allowance; that the performance must be substantial; that the omissions anfi defects must be unsubstantial.

There were defects, changes and modifications in the structure of this building.

The plaintiff gave evidence that assuming the defects and changes existed as claimed by the defendant the same could be cured at an expense of $88. Of course the plaintiff denied that many of these defects existed.

The defendant’s evidence shows the cost of curing the alleged defects was $1,344.

If defects existed to the extent of even the lesser amount of the two, namely, $882, required to repair the building, then the plaintiff cannot here recover. Witt v. Gilmour, 172 App. Div. 110.

The plaintiff contends upon this motion that because an inspector of the building department of" the city of Albany passed this structure while in process of erection, as did the inspector in the bureau of health, that therefore there can be here considered no violation of the building code or of the health laws.

With this theory the court cannot agree. It can [25]*25hardly he said that the contractor had executed his work in accordance with the provisions of the law, irrespective of what the fact was, because some official charged with the responsibility saw fit to give a certificate to the effect that the contract met the requirements of the statute.

Whether there was a failure or a compliance with the laws governing such matters depends upon the fact, not upon somebody’s certificate.

The inspector from the bureau of buildings in the city of Albany stated that upon his first inspection there were no double timbers sustaining partitions as required by the law and by the contract; that five days thereafter upon a second inspection the double timbers were there; that eighteen months thereafter, when the building was supposed to be complete, an inspection was had, just before the trial of this issue, the floor boards having been removed for that purpose, and that at that time the double timbers were not there.

So we have this witness testifying that the double timbers were not in, that they were in, and again that they were not in.

The proof in the case is that they are not there now, and this is the fact, irrespective of the testimony of the inspector that at one time he saw them there. It must be remembered that that was the time when he passed the building.

Many of the alleged defects, concerning which there is practically no dispute, are structural in their character. Many of them are easily corrected.

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Related

Witt v. Gilmour
172 A.D. 110 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 Misc. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brainard-v-ten-eyck-nysupct-1917.