Fellows v. Mayor of New York

24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 249
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 249 (Fellows v. Mayor of New York) 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
Fellows v. Mayor of New York, 24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 249 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Brady, J.:

By the contract between the plaintiff Noonan and the defendants it was provided, that the former should not be entitled to demand or receive any payment for any portion of the work to be done or materials furnished until the same should be fully completed in the manner set forth in the agreement, and such completion should be duly certified, and the assessment to be laid therefor duly confirmed. Whereupon the defendants bound themselves to pay in one of two modes, excepting such sum or sums as might be lawfully retained under any provisions of the agreement contained for that purpose. It then contains the following condition: “But in case the amount payable under this contract be $5,000, or over, payments will be made to the said j>arty of the second part, by monthly installments of seventy per cent on the amount of work performed under and in accordance with the provisions and stipulations of this agreement, in conformity with, and subject to the terms and conditions of an ordinance of the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York, passed December 30, 1854, entitled ‘ An ordinance to authorize the issue of bonds upon contracts, payable by assessments, in pursuance of the act of the Legislature, passed April 16, 1852 ’ (ch. 397), as amended March 8, 1861, excepting such sum or sums as may be lawfully retained under any of the provisions of this agreement; provided that nothing herein contained be construed to affect the right hereby reserved, of the said board, to reject the whole or any portion of the aforesaid work, should the said certificates be found or known to be inconsistent with the terms of this agreement, or otherwise improperly given.”

The sections of the ordinance referred to and bearing upon the question to be discussed are as follows :

Section 1. Whenever any contract shall be made hereafter by any of the departments of the corporation, the amount whereof is to be afterward collected by' assessments from the property-benefited by the work to be done under said contract, it shall be [251]*251the duty of the head of the department making such contracts to cause to be inserted therein a clause that, as the work progresses, payments will be made to the contractors by monthly installments of seventy per cent on the work performed, provided, the amount of work done on'each installment shall amount to $1,500, and the head of the department making such contracts shall forthwith, file a copy thereof with the comptroller.

Section 2. The amount due contractors ■ on all contracts now confirmed by the common council, and on work now in progress, under contracts on account of regulating and paving streets, building sewers, and all other work ordered to be done by contract by virtue of ordinances of the common council, shall be paid by the comptroller from the proceeds of assessment bonds issued in accordance with the act of the Legislature, passed April 16, 1852 ; but no moneys shall be paid on account of said assessments or contracts until a copy of the original contracts has been filed with the comptroller of the city by the head of the department having such work in charge, with a certificate, in writing, from the head of such department, stating the amount of work that has been completed, and the amount due the contractor for such work, according to the terms of the original contract; upon the amount, thus certified and ascertained to be due to the contractor the comptroller shall pay seventy per cent, the remaining thirty per cent to be resolved until the final completion of the contract.

Section 3. For the purpose of providing for the payments contemplated under this ordinance it shall be the duty of the comptroller, from time to time, to borrow such sums as may be necessary, as provided in the act, entitled “ an act to authorize the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York to issue assessment bonds,” passed April 16, 1852, upon bonds to be known as assessment bonds, at a rate of interest not to- exceed, six per cent per annum; and the bonds so issued shall be paid from the collections made on the assessment lists, when confirmed by the common council, and which are hereby specifically pledged for such purpose; and the contractors to whom payments shall have been made, in accordance with the provisions of sections one and two of this ordinance, shall upon the final payment of the amount due upon their several contracts be charged at the rate of seven per cent. [252]*252por annum for all sums that may have been advanced to them, as provided in the foregoing sections of this ordinance ; and it shall be the duty of the comptroller to deduct from the amount due ■on each contract the interest money so charged.

It will be perceived on examination of the ordinance that its provisions relate to payments which may be made under certain circumstances, and does not in any way vary the contract in relation to the balance which may remain due after such payments made. The words “ the remaining thirty per cent to be reserved until the final completion of the contract ” is a sequitur merely, and necessarily follows from the payment of the seventy per cent. The provision of the contract which attaches the ordinance to the agreement relates to payments in advance only, and the terms and conditions' on which they may be made, and nothing more. It does not yield any of the covenants on the part of the contractor, and such was not the intention. All the rights and obligations imposed by the contract remain intact, and the quasi departure by payment on account is an advance on condition and on the supposition or assumption that the thirty per cent reserved will make up any deficiency, and cover any default of the contractor.

It does not, for example, in any way affect the covenant that the whole sum to be paid for the work and materials shall not become due or the contractor entitled to demand or receive payment for the same, until the assessments to be laid to pay for the work shall be duly confirmed; or the provision that when the work is completed a sum may be retained under any covenant contained in the agreement for that purpose. The payments of seventy per cent are for the benefit of the contractor, who is not obliged to wait until the work is completed before any compensation is made, .and as a penalty or quid pro quo he is required to pay the interest on the sums advanced to him. It will be perceived that in the clauses imposing interest the words “ for all sums that may have been advanced to them, as provided in the foregoing section to this ordinance,” are used, and it is quite clear that such was the intent of the common council in passing the ordinance. This is more apparent from the fact that the money out of which the payments are to be made is to be raised by bonds to be issued, and which are to be paid by collections from the assessment lists [253]*253when confirmed. (Section 3.) The money is borrowed, therefore, and at six per cent. The effect of these provisions of the contract aud ordinance seems to be this : The city agrees to pay the contractor when the work is completed, and the assessment laid to meet the expenses is duly confirmed, but it will pay the contractor under certain conditions, seventy per cent as an advance for which interest will be charged ; and as the whole sum to be paid for the. work is not due, or and part of it, until the assessment is duly confirmed, the interest must be paid until that time; the payment thus to be made relates to the terms of the contract providing-for completion before compensation can be exacted.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fellows-v-mayor-of-new-york-nysupct-1879.