DeKay v. Bliss

4 N.Y. St. Rep. 728
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 728 (DeKay v. Bliss) 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
DeKay v. Bliss, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 728 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The action was brought mainly to vacate and cancel a deed of premises situated on the southwest corner of Broadway and Fifty-seventh street, in the city of New York, known as the Rutland. The building upon the land is eight stories in height, erected as an apartment house, and designed to be occupied by forty-eight different families, in addition to their domestic servants. It was divided into three principal apartments, each forming a part of the entire building. The deed in question was made for the nominal consideration of $810,000, for the purpose of performing an agreement made between the defendant Bliss, and Sidney DeKay, acting for the plaintiff, in the purchase of the property. At the time when the contract was entered into, which was the 23d of January, 1884, the building was in an unfinished condition. By its terms the deed was to be executed and delivered to the defendant Stephen H. Olin, as trustee, and the consideration for it was a mortgage already upon the property for the sum of $410,000, and $250,000 by the execution and delivery to the defendant Bliss, of a warranty deed of premises situated on Broadway and Greenwich streets, in the city of New York, and $75,000 in three mortgages executed upon the Rutland to secure the bonds of Sidney DeKay, and plaintiff’s husband. The residue of the purchase price was payable in cash at the time of the execution of the contract, and afterward according to the stipulations contained therein. At the time when the deed was executed and delivered, as it was to the trustee, the sum of $35,000 was left unpaid, as that had been provided for in the agreement, placing the right of the defendant Bliss to the money upon his performance of the agreement, by the completion of the building. This, it was contemplated, would be done by the 1st of May, 1884, but if not, then this sum of money was made payable when the building should, in fact, be completed.

What was to be done to complete the building according to the contract was specified and declared only in the most general manner in the agreement, but it was clearly the intention of the parties that the building- should be finished and completed before the right of the defendant Bliss should accrue to the payment of this final sum of $35,000. And as the event of finishing the building was to precede the right to receive the money, it was a condition precedent to the performance of the obligation to make the payment by the purchaser.

In the conclusions of fact upon which the judgment has been entered, it has been found and stated that the building was substantially completed on or about the 15th of June, 1884, and was then ready for occupancy by tenants, [730]*730and on or before the first of the following September it was fully and in all respects completed. To these conclusions exceptions have been taken on the ground that they were not warranted by the evidence given upon the trial. In support of these exceptions reliance has been chiefly placed upon the omission of the defendant Bliss to provide the building with fire escapes, and it is conceded, as the evidence proves the fact to be, that no fire-escapes were provided for, or attached to, the building. And the evidence further tended to establish the fact that these fire-escapes could not be constructed and placed upon the building for an expenditure of less than the sum of $4,800. If, therefore, the builder was obligated to place fire-escapes upon the building, to finish or complete it, then he had not, as a matter of fact, performed his contract at the time when the action was heard and decided, but was in default under this part of his agreement.

In the application and specifications of the defendant Bliss to the bureau of buildings of the city of Mew York, it was not stated that fire escapes were to form a part of the structure, but they contained an agreement or statement adopted as a part of them, by the defendant Bliss, agreeing ‘ ‘that the provisions of the building law will be complied with in the construction of the buildings herein described, whether the same are specified herein or not” And in the notice issued as a part of the proceedings to owners, architects and builders, it was stated that “outside fire escapes are required on all tenement, flat and apartment houses, office buildings, lodge bouses and factories, and the balconies of such fire escapes must take in one window of each suite of apartments, all to be constructed as follows,” etc. The architect, as a witness upon the trial, testified that he did not see that fire escapes were marked on any part of the papers, as they turned out in fact to have been. But this was not important, as he himself had subscribed the agreement adopted by the defendant Bliss to comply with the provisions of the building law. The making of this agreement required them to consult that law, and to ascertain from it what its obligations were in the case, and if they did not do so they could not disregard its provisions by reason of such neglect on the part of one or both of them. The obligation still remained to observe and comply with the provisions of the building law. And as that was at that time in force, it was contained in section 499 of chap. 410 of the Laws of 1882, providing that “any dwelling house now erected, or that may hereafter be erected, more than two stories in height, occupied by, or built to be occupied by, two or more families, on any floor above the first, and all buildings now erected, or that may be here[731]*731.after erected, more than four stories in height, occupied, or built to be occupied, by three or more families above the first story, and any building already erected, or that may hereafter be erected, more than three stories in height, occupied or used, or built to be occupied or used as a hotel, boarding or lodging house, * * * shall be provided with such fire escapes, alarms and doors as shall be provided by the fire department.” And what such fire escapes should be was specified in the notice to owners, etc., already mentioned. And the agreement to comply with the building law, notwithstanding the inside stairways, obligated the defendant Bliss to place such fire escapes upon the building, and in failing to do so, he failed to perform the obligations of the agreement entered into between himself and the plaintiff, through the agency of her husband, for the completion of the building. For while it may have been in a condition to be occupied by tenants, it was not in that condition which the law required it should be for that purpose at the time when this action was heard and determined. And so far as this failure to perform extended, the defendant Bliss was, as he has continued to be, in default under his agreement.

But the error in finding as a matter of fact that the building had been completed will not lead to a reversal of the judgment. For that part of the agreement which the defendant Bliss failed to perform in this manner was not an essential part of the agreement providing for the execution and delivery of the deed, or the bonds and mortgages, or the conveyance of the Broadway and Greenwich street property. These deeds were neither of them rendered subject to any condition in the contract which included this obligation of finishing and completing the building. Its condition was known and understood at the time by each of the parties, and it was not expected that the buildings would be finished by the 15th of February, 1884, the time designated for the completion of the contract, subject to the reservation by the purchaser of the sum of $35,000, already mentioned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 N.Y. St. Rep. 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dekay-v-bliss-nysupct-1886.