Early v. O'Brien

51 A.D. 569, 64 N.Y.S. 848
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 51 A.D. 569 (Early v. O'Brien) 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
Early v. O'Brien, 51 A.D. 569, 64 N.Y.S. 848 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

This action was commenced by one Benjamin Weeks to recover from Ellen O’Brien the amount unpaid under a contract by which the plaintiff was to erect a building upon certain premises belonging to the defendant. Upon the first trial the complaint was dismissed upon the ground that there was no allegation or proof that the certificate of the architect required by the contract had been given, and no allegation that such certificate had been demanded and unreasonably refused. This was reversed by the Court of Appeals upon the ground that, as it had been proven that the defendant had given notice under the 4th section of the contract and had proceeded thereunder to complete the contract, the provision requiring the architect’s.signature was rendered inapplicable; that when the owner .proceeds himself under the contract to complete the work he needs no architect’s signature to apprise him whether the contractor has performed his contract. (Weeks v. O'Brien, 141 N. Y. 204.) Subsequently the plaintiff was appointed receiver of Weeks in supplementary proceedings and was substituted as plaintiff in the action. The -original defendant died and her executor was substituted as defendant; and the complaint seems also to have been amended by alleging that the defendant had given the notice required by the 4th subdivision of the contract, and had taken such work out of the plaintiff’s hands and assumed to complete certain [571]*571portions thereof, and had excluded plaintiff from further connection therewith, and that subsequently the plaintiff demanded a certificate from the architect, which said architect unreasonably and wrongfully refused to give. By the contract, a copy of which was annexed to the complaint, the plaintiff agreed to erect a new building on the property described, agreeable to the drawings and specifications made by Charles Mettam, architect, for the sum of $17,058; and the defendant’s testatrix agreed that she would, “ in consideration of the covenants and agreements being strictly performed and kept by the.said party of the second part (plaintiff) as specified, well and truly pay, or cause to be paid unto the said party of the second part, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns the sum of Seventeen thousand & Fifty-eight ($17,058.00) Dollars,” as at the time specified in the agreement. It was further agreed that The specifications and the drawings are intended to co-operate, so that any works exhibited in the drawings, and not mentioned in the specifications, or vice versa, are to be executed the same as if it were mentioned in the specifications and set forth in the drawings, to the true meaning and intention of the said drawings and specifications, without any extra charge whatsoever; ” and it was also agreed that “ Should any dispute arise respecting the true construction or meaning óf the drawings or specifications, the same shall be decided by Chas. Mettam, and his decision shall be final and conclusive.” By the specifications it is provided: “ All the brick walls, etc., in the basement to be Portland Cement, of the best quality, and great care must be taken to render the walls perfectly watertight, in grouting and filling the walls with cement and plastering them on the outside. * * * The whole of the basement floor to be made perfectly watertight, with concrete or asphaltum, and must be warranted, and the floor to be laid on top in Portland cement, the fronts to be laid up with the quality selected, Philadelphia Front Bricks^ laid in white mortar, and neatly jointed and cleaned down and oiled at the completion with two coats of Linseed oil.”

The plaintiff testified that a complete set of the plans for this building was shown to him by the architect, both before and after the making of the contract, and that subsequently the architect delivered to him, from time to time, working drawings which were taken from the plans; and the witness produced a certain drawing [572]*572of the basement and. cellar showing a horizontal section of the basement, and another drawing showing the basement floor, piles, foundations, Avails above where they started, with the side Avails and sewer, being a vertical, section of the basement, and these, were introduced in evidence. . By this vertical section of the basement there appeared the cellar walls, with the piles "and concrete foundation upon which they were to be built, and a cellar floor. The concrete foundation which was shown on these plans as two feet in depth by two feet ten inches in width, rested upon the top of the piles, and across from the bottom of each of these concrete foundations extends a dotted line which Avould be two feet below the cellar floor. The plaintiff testified that this- Avas the only drawing of this basement "representing the cellar floor that was given to him by the architect. Counsel for the defendant stated: “ I have stated it, and wish to be understood as again saying, and it may be made a matter of record: We shall confine our defense to the question of the foundation and cellar of. this building. He did not furnish us with a AAatertight cellar, all that work upon the cellar and the AA^alls and foundations was incomplete. * * * Otherwise he performed.” The Avitness then testified that he drove the piles necessary under the direction of the architect; that after the piles were driven they were solid and firm and were cut off square at the tops, and on the top of the piles the concrete was placed, and upon that the cellar Avails were built; that subsequent to that time the plaintiff had a conversation with the architect about the thickness of the floor; that at that time he brought to the architect a contract which he was about to make with one Lumbye as a sub-contractor; that the architect said it Avas better to do it the way the sub-contractor proposed to.do.it; that the architect was then shown the contract with the sub-contractor, and was told by the plaintiff that that, was the way he was going to put it in ; that the architect said it Avas better to do it that way. By this sub-contract the contractor agreed to make a watertight cellar floor in the building in the following manner: “ Two inches of concrete and one layer of asphalt and pitch, and over that four to five inches concrete of Portland Cement, sand and gravel, with a smooth surface.”

In this contract there is nothing said about the depth of the layer of asphalt and pitch between the two inches of concrete and the [573]*573four to five inches of concrete of Portland cement which was to make the cellar floor; but the floor as laid by the sub-contractor was made up of two inches of concrete on the natural earth ; on the top of that concrete there was a coat of asphalt put on; on the top of that the balance of the concrete, made of the same materials, of the thickness required. The total thickness of the floor was seven inches.' The architect was present and saw this made and applied, gave directions in regard to the work as it went along and they were obeyed. One time the architect instructed that more stone be put into the concrete, and gave no other directions in regard to the concrete while the work of laying the floor was in progress. This cellar floor was laid a fe\V days before the 1st of May, 1882, and after it was put down the water split it right in the center and came flowing in to a depth of nine inches. After this cellar floor broke, the architect had an interview with the plaintiff at which the architect told the plaintiff that if' he (plaintiff) did not take up what had been put in the cellar floor and make it two feet at his own expense he would make the plaintiff fight for his money.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 A.D. 569, 64 N.Y.S. 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/early-v-obrien-nyappdiv-1900.