Dunn v. . City of New York

98 N.E. 495, 205 N.Y. 342, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1224
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 30, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 495 (Dunn v. . City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. . City of New York, 98 N.E. 495, 205 N.Y. 342, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1224 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Gray, J.

I think that no cause of action was made out and, therefore, that the complaint should have been dismissed. The contracts, into which the plaintiff’s assignor entered with the city, were explicit in their terms and as complete in the expression of the respective agreements of the parties as language could well make them. The parts, which have been referred to in the foregoing statement, have been taken as exemplifying the fullness with which the municipal officers sought to have the obligations of the city and of the contractor defined and to guard against any claim for extra compensation. Following the command of the charter, they advertised for proposals to do the work and published the form of agreement to be executed; so that there might be no misunderstanding as to the results demanded by the city and the extent to which it might be bound to compensate. Indeed, the plaintiff, notwithstanding allegations in his complaint of misrepresentations with respect to the condition of the roadways, which were to be *349 paved, rests his right to recover damages, measured by the reasonable cost of the removal of the-rock found above the sub-grade line, upon the theory of a breach by the defendant of the paving contracts. This breach, he contends, arose “ from the wrongful direction of the defendant, its officers and agents, requiring the plaintiff’s assignor and the plaintiff to excavate rock, which was not included in the terms of the contracts.” Again, to be particular with respect to what he contends for, he asserts his claim to be that the contracts “made no reference, and had no relation whatsoever, to any grading work and that the City fairly represented to him and his agents that the grading work had been fully performed, and that from such representations, consisting in the app>earance of the roadways, which were to be paved, the terms of the proposals and contracts, and the plans therein referred to, and the public records of the City, exhibited to him, he was justified in assuming-that the rock had been theretofore excavated.” 'He admits that he was required by his agreement to remove certain rock; but insists that the rock removal required would he only such as is usually to be included by the terms of such paving contracts as his assignor hid upon, relating to a street, which has been already graded.” Thus, the question is made one whether, from the nature of the contract, the description of the work agreed to be performed and the conditions stated as to performance and as to compensation, any agreement was implied on the part of the city, (none is expressed), that the contractor should not be required to do any general rock excavation. Was it the intention of the parties, to be derived from these contracts, that the contractor should only remove what rock might be expected to he left upon a due performance of the prior grading contracts; that is, loose, and not native, rock, lying above sub-grade ? If this he the true reading of the contract, then, I think that our language must be deemed *350 inadequate to express the intentions and the agreements of parties. If the agreement is unnecessarily comprehensive in its terms for a contract to regulate and pave a street, already graded, it was, nevertheless, the one advertised for. It is too precise and minute in its requirements to be characterized as ambiguous. The proposals advertised for were to be made upon bidders satisfying themselves “by personal examination of the location of •the proposed work, and by such other means as they may prefer, as "to the accuracy of the estimates.” They were not to “assert that there was any misunderstanding in regard to the depth of the excavation to be made, or the nature, or amount, of the work to be done,” and the agreement, which was to be executed, contained a clause in, substantially, this language. The contractor was to agree that he would not demand “for the entire work any extra compensation; ” that, in the preparation of the roadbed, “the subsoil, or other matter, [be it earth, rock or other material), shall be excavated and removed to such depth that * * * it shall be sixteen inches below the broken stone when completed; ” that “ if rock be encountered, it shall be removed for at least three inches deeper ” and that “all loss or damage, arising out of the nature of the work to be done under this agreement, or from any unforeseen obstructions or difficulties, which may be encountered in the prosecution of the same * * * shall be sustained by the contractor.” Finally, the contractor was to agree to receive the prices specified per square yard of the new pavement and per square foot of the new bridge stones, “as full compensation for furnishing all the materials and performing all the labor, which may be required in the performance of the whole of the work to be done under this agreement.” It is difficult to perceive how, if such an agreement, as the one called for by the city, was entered into, there could be any loophole left for a claim for extra compensation, if “rock was encountered” between the surface *351 grade and the sub-grade, or “if unforeseen obstructions ” were encountered; or upon the basis of “ any misunderstanding in regard to * * * the work to he done.” If there is any virtue in a written contract, as the final repository of the intentions and agreements of the parties to it, then, I think we must hold that in these contracts nothing has been left for the work of interpretation. Certainly, so far as it might he claimed that the municipal authorities committed the city to any understanding, or obligation, with respect to the rock which might be found, it would seem to have been covered by these clauses. It might he assumed that, ordinarily, a “regulating and paving” agreement, in the absence of provisions for grading, technically, does not contemplate rock excavation, between the lines of sub-grade and of surface grade, of a graded street, hut the assumption is inefficacious, where the actual agreement is so framed as to cover all contingencies, which may arise in preparing a roadbed, as specified. However rigorous these agreements, they are not unjust and they were optional. If, in this case, we should, as we, probably, must, assume that the contractor was deceived by appearances; that is to say, by the appearance of the roadway and by his comparisons of the old plans on file, relating to the prior grading contracts, with those of the contracts he was to estimate upon, he has but himself to blame. He had the opportunity to physically examine the location of the work to be done and if that called for extensive tests, by way of borings and soundings, that fact, however troublesome, was one he must take into consideration. He had presented to him an agreement, which was precise and strict in its requirements and which cast upon him the possible risk that all might not he as it appeared, or as estimated by the surveyor. Admittedly, borings and soundings would have revealed the imperfect performance of the previous grading contract, in the leaving of native rock under the *352 surface of the roadway. The municipal authorities were, equally, deceived, presumably; but, in complying with the statute, by advertising for proposals, they made no representations and they guarded against all misunderstandings and contingencies through the proposed agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 495, 205 N.Y. 342, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-city-of-new-york-ny-1912.