Cody v. City of New York

71 A.D. 54, 75 N.Y.S. 648

This text of 71 A.D. 54 (Cody v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cody v. City of New York, 71 A.D. 54, 75 N.Y.S. 648 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

On the 19th day of May, 1897, a contract was made between the plaintiffs and the city of Brooklyn whereby the plaintiffs were to grade, regulate and macadamize the main driveway of. the Ocean Parkway between Prospect Park and Twenty-second avenue, as shown upon a map attached to the contract, the plaintiffs to receive as compensation for doing the work a specific price per square yard. The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs proceeded to duly perform the same and have ever since been willing and able to carry out and perform the same, but, while the plaintiffs were proceeding in good faith under the contract, they were hindered, delayed and prevented by the city of Brooklyn from completing the contract, and that, on or about the 25th day of August, 1897, the city of Brooklyn, its officers and agents, entirely stopped and completely prevented the perf[56]*56ormarme and completion of the said contract, and would not permit the plaintiffs, although ready and willing so to do, to- do any further work thereunder, and thereafter, proceeded to cause said contract to be carried o.ut and completed by other parties; that the amount and value of the work actually performed at the time of the said prevention was $4,275.25, and that the profits which the plaintiffs would have made in the performance of the said contract but for the breach thereof on the part of the city of Brooklyn was $31,666.74, for which two sums'the plaintiffs demand judgment.

The answer admitted the execution of the contract, denied the allegations as to the breach by the city of Brooklyn, and alleged that the. plaintiffs had failed to comply with the contract and proceed with the work as required therebyj that the commissioner of the. department of parks ordered the discontinuance of the said work by the plaintiffs because the work was not performed according to his satisfaction, and- that said contract, by its terms and by the covenants, stipulations and agreements of the plaintiffs, thereby became violated and broken, and all liability thereunder on the- part of the defendant or its predecessor in liability ceased.

By the specifications referred to in the contract and. made a part thereof, it- was provided that the plaintiffs should, begin their work at the-Bay Parkway and work in the direction of Prospect Park; that “they shall not disturb more than 1,000 lineal feet of the roadway at. any one time, and shall complete- the 1,000 feet to- the satisface tion of the Commissioner of the Department of Parks before beginning an additional 1,000 feet, and it is agreed that if the- work upon any particular 1,000 feet is not performed to the satisfaction -of the Commissioner of Parks then the terms of this agreement shall be considered to have been violated and the contract broken, and -the said Commissioner of the Department of Parks is hereby authorized to order in writing the discontinuance of the work by the. parties of the second part upon three days’ notice and to employ such -other contractor as he may elect to complete the work at the expense of the parties of the second part, out of the balance remaining to the credit of, this contract.” It was-further provided that “ the-work must be completed within four months of the date of written notice givqn by the Commissioner to begin work, and each 1,000 feet must be completed within one-tenth of the total number of working days [57]*57in the four months, under a penalty of fifty (50) dollars per day for every day in excess of the time stipulated.”

The contract seems to have been executed on the 19th day of May, 1897, and on the 7th day of August, 1897, the plaintiffs received a notice to commence work under the contract on the ninth day of August. It appeared that on the ninth day of August, when they commenced work, certain other contractors were putting down a patent gutter or curb on the first 1,000 feet of the avenue, and that other contractors were putting in conduits for electric lights; that the .plaintiffs went to work upon this portion of the avenue on ■ the ninth of August and remained at work until the twenty-fifth of August; that during that time no lines and grades were furnished to the plaintiffs by the park department, or the engineer in charge, notwithstanding a provision in the contract that lines and grades should be furnished by the park department, or its engineer in charge, and although the plaintiffs had demanded of the commissioner of parks that such lines and grades should be fur nished, the answer of the commissioner being that the engineer was away; that on the 25th day of August, 1897, the commissioner of parks of the city of Brooklyn served upon the plaintiffs a notice that as they had not carried out the terms of their contract for the improvement of the Ocean Parkway, they were notified under the provisions of paragraph 8 of the contract to discontinue all work under it, as it had been broken and violated by its. terms; that thereafter the plaintiffs were not allowed to do any further work under their contract.

The contract is not divided into clauses that are numbered, and it does not appear under what particular clause of the contract this notice was given. It was stated, however, by counsel upon the argument that the notice was given under the provisions of that clause of the • specifications which provides that “ if the work upon any particular 1,000 feet is not performed to the satisfaction of the Commissioner of Parks then the terms of this agreement shall be considered to have been violated and the contract broken, and the said Commissioner of the Department of Parks, is hereby authorized to order in writing the discontinuance of the work by the parties of the second part upon three days’ notice; ” but it would seem that this clause of the contract did not justify the notice given by [58]*58the commissioner of parks. That referred solely to a 'failure to complete any 1,000 feet of the roadway to the satisfaction of the commissioner of parks, but the 1,000 feet had not. been completed at the time the notice was given. On the contrary, at that time the plaintiffs were at work upon the first 1,000 feet. The right to give the notice as prescribed in this clause of the specifications depended upon a failure of the contractors to complete any particular 1,000 feet of the work to the satisfaction of the commissioner of parks, and it was only in case . a particular 1,000 feet of the work was not completed to his satisfaction that he had a right under this clause of the specifications to terminate the contract. The provision as to the time for the completion of the work contained in a subsequent clause of the specifications had no relation to a termination of the contract. A penalty was therein prescribed for a failure to complete any particular 1,000 feet of the roadway, but this was not a forfeiture of the contract, but a penalty of fifty dollars per day for every day in excess of the time stipulated. .By" this clause of the contract the plaintiffs agreed to compíete each 1,000 feet of the' parkway within one-tenth of the total number of working days in the four months from the date of the written notice given by the commissioner to begin work. Under this provision the plaintiffs would be required to complete the first 1.000 feet within about ten or twelve working days. It did appear that the plaintiffs had already consumed fourteen working days upon the first 1,000 feet, and that 1,000 feet had not been finished.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 A.D. 54, 75 N.Y.S. 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cody-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1902.