Diontech Consulting, Inc. v. New York City Housing Authority
This text of 78 A.D.3d 527 (Diontech Consulting, Inc. v. New York City Housing Authority) 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.
Opinion
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Richard B. Lowe, III, J.), entered March 18, 2009, which granted the motions by defendants Housing Authority and PMS Construction Management to dismiss the complaint, unanimously affirmed, without costs.
After the Housing Authority, as owner, and defendant PMS, as construction manager, entered into a contract with respect to various capital construction projects, PMS entered into another contract with plaintiff herein, as trade contractor, agreeing to perform roofing and asbestos abatement work at a certain project. PMS subsequently directed plaintiff to proceed with the performance of its work, but later advised plaintiff that the job had to be temporarily suspended because funding had been delayed. When the funding then became available and PMS notified plaintiff it was about to resume work, plaintiff demanded payment of delay damages, and commenced this action when payment was not forthcoming.
We agree with the motion court’s determination that this ac[528]*528tion is barred by the releases that plaintiff signed. In that regard, plaintiff has conceded that the project in question was completed by May 10, 2007, but in September and November of that year, it executed two documents whereby it forever released, waived and discharged defendants from any and all causes of action, suits, debts, accounts, damages, encumbrances, judgments, claims and demands whatsoever.
Although a party may, by its conduct, implicitly recognize that a right to additional payment has not been extinguished by the releases in question (see Penava Mech. Corp. v Afgo Mech. Servs., Inc., 71 AD3d 493, 495 [2010]; E-J Elec. Installation Co. v Brooklyn Historical Socy., 43 AD3d 642 [2007]), there is simply no course of conduct here that could conceivably be construed as an acknowledgment by PMS or the Housing Authority of plaintiffs right to further payment, inasmuch as the second and third extremely broad releases were signed by plaintiff after PMS had endeavored to arrange for plaintiff to accept a change order, in August 2007, for work that had not been performed. Moreover, while the releases are themselves sufficient to require dismissal of this action, dismissal was also warranted by plaintiffs failure to comply with the contractual requirement for timely notice of its claim, which was a “condition[ ] precedent to suit or recovery” (A.H.A. Gen. Constr. v New York City Hous. Auth., 92 NY2d 20, 30-31 [1998]). The contract also prohibited, by its terms, the recovery of delay damages (see Corinno Civetta Constr. Corp. v City of New York, 67 NY2d 297, 309 [1986]), and contrary to plaintiffs argument that this matter falls within the exception to the rule favoring the enforceability of no-delay-damages clauses, the delay herein was caused solely by the Housing Authority’s lack of funding; it cannot be said that such delay was unforeseeable at the time the agree[529]*529ment was executed, or was so great or unreasonable as to be deemed equivalent to abandonment of the contract {id. at 312).
We have considered plaintiffs remaining arguments and find them unavailing. Concur — Tom, J.P., Andrias, Nardelli, Acosta and DeGrasse, JJ.
It should be noted that another such release was executed by plaintiff in January 2007.
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78 A.D.3d 527, 911 N.Y.S.2d 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diontech-consulting-inc-v-new-york-city-housing-authority-nyappdiv-2010.