Freeman v. Rothschild

63 N.Y.S. 118, 49 A.D. 643

This text of 63 N.Y.S. 118 (Freeman v. Rothschild) 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
Freeman v. Rothschild, 63 N.Y.S. 118, 49 A.D. 643 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

PATTERSON, J.

This action was brought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien filed by the plaintiff upon property situate in the city of New York, and known as the “Hotel Majestic.” The defendant Rothschild was the owner of the property. Associated with him as a defendant is Charles L. Eidlitz, who had also filed a lien against the same property. The defendant Eidlitz, in his answer, set up his lien and claimed the right to enforce it. Rothschild resisted that lien, .and an issue was duly framed between him and Eidlitz by cross service of their answers. That issue was separately tried, and a referee, to whom the action was referred, reported in favor of Eidlitz. From the judgment entered upon the decision of the referee, the defendant Rothschild appeals, and the case is before us as one simply involving a contest between Rothschild as owner and Eidlitz as lienor.

The defendant Eidlitz entered into a written contract with Rothschild to furnish and put up in the Hotel Majestic all the electrical plant and apparatus for lighting that hotel. The agreement was made on the 25th day of October, 1893. No time is mentioned in the contract for the completion of the work. It provided that Eidlitz should well and sufficiently erect and finish the electrical light plant in the building known as the “Hotel Majestic,” in the city of New York, agreeably to drawings and specifications made by a supervising engineer and signed by the parties, — such work to be done in a good, workmanlike, and substantial manner, to the satisfaction and under the direction of the supervising engineer. The compensation to be paid to Eidlitz was' the sum of $35,500, — 75 per cent, of the amount to be paid in a manner provided for in the contract, and “the remaining 25 per cent, to be paid when the entire plant shall have been completed, tested, and lighted to the satisfaction of the owner and supervising engineer.” Specifications and drawings were annexed to the contract and signed by the parties. The contract also provided that, should the owner at any time during the progress of the building request any alteration, deviation, omission, or omissions from the contract, he should be at liberty to do so, and the same should in no way affect or make void the contract, but be added to or be deducted from the amount of the contract as the case might be, on a fair and reasonable valuation. It was then stipulated as follows:

[120]*120“Should the contractor, at any time during the progress of the said work, refuse or neglect to supply a sufficiency of materials or workmen, the owner shall have the power to provide materials and workmen, after three days’ notice in writing being given to finish the said work, and the expense should be deducted from the amount of the contract.”

And also:

“Should any dispute arise respecting the true construction or meaning of the drawings or specifications, the same shall be decided by the superintending engineer, and his decision shall be final.”

A supervising engineer was employed, but by subsequent agreement between the parties he was dismissed during the early stages of the work, and the provisions relating to a “supervising engineer” became inoperative. Payments were made under the 75 per cent, provision of the contract from time to time; such payments amounting to the sum of $25,550. On the 28th of September, 1894, Eidlitz filed a lien for a balance he claimed of $9,950 unpaid on the contract. The lien also included an item of $529 as the reasonable value of extra work done and materials furnished, not included in the contract. Rothschild, in his answer, denied any liability upon the Eidlitz contract, and set up that Eidlitz failed to perform it, and that he did not do the work provided for in the contract in a workmanlike and substantial manner, or in accordance with the plans and specifications annexed to the agreement, and that the materials furnished were not of proper quality, and that by reason of delays and insufficient performance he was obliged to avail himself of the privilege reserved to him under that provision of the contract which authorized him, on three days’ notice in writing, to finish the work at the expense of Eidlitz, the contractor.

It is shown in the proofs that Rothschild took possession of the work on the 27th of September, 1894, and excluded Eidlitz from the premises. It is also in the proofs that, with the work done by Rothschild after the 27th of September, in connection with all that had been done by Eidlitz theretofore, the electric lighting plant of the hotel was in operation on the 1st of October, 1894. As said before, no time was fixed at which the work undertaken by Eidlitz should be completed, nor was there any time fixed in the contract at which it should be begun. It is evident, however, that it was intended that the work of putting in this electric plant should keep pace in some way with the general construction of the building. Nothing was done in the way of performance of the Eidlitz contract until December, 1893, and from that time differences between Mr. Rothschild and Eidlitz arose respecting the manner in which the work should be done. It seems that until February, 1894, Davis, the supervising engineer, insisted upon a literal adherence to the terms of the specifications, and that Eidlitz was strenuous in asserting that those specifications were in many ways impracticable, and proper and sufficient work could not be done under them. In February, 1894, Davis was dismissed, and an arrangement seems to have been made by which Eidlitz was to be subjected to no supervision, except that of Rothschild himself; and it was agreed between the parties that omissions from the specifications might be had, but that an equiva[121]*121lent should be supplied in other parts of the work, or in apparatus or details of work, in connection with the electrical plant.

It is needless to refer specifically to the details of the multitude of subjects of difference or discussion between the owner and the contractor during the months that elapsed between the commencement of the work and the final expulsion of the contractor from it. The effect, however, of all that was done, is that Eidlitz continued in the performance of the contract up to the month of September, 1894, not only with the assent of the owner, but under his urgency to go on and complete the work. The real question involved in the controversy upon this branch of the case is whether Rothschild rightfully discharged Eidlitz from the work on the 27th of September, 1894. The referee has found that the discharge was wrongful; and in that connection he has substantially found that the objections taken by Mr. Rothschild to the work as it progressed were waived as grounds for terminating the contract, and that he was in effect insisting upon Eidlitz continuing the work. That there were delays, and serious ones, is quite apparent. Some of them were caused by Mr. Rothschild himself, others by necessary departures from the specifications, and still others by matters which seem to have been beyond the control of either Rothschild or Eidlitz. However this may be, and to whatever cause those delays may be attributable, it is perfectly plain, from the correspondence between Rothschild and the contractor, that the former was all along holding the latter to the performance of the contract, and that after the 21st of September, 1894, when Rothschild sought to avail himself of that clause which referred to the three-days notice, he still recognized the right of Eidlitz to continue the work, and insisted upon its continuance, and thus virtually withdrew any notice he may have given.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.Y.S. 118, 49 A.D. 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-rothschild-nyappdiv-1900.