Freidenrich v. Condict

124 A.D. 807, 109 N.Y.S. 526, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2201
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 124 A.D. 807 (Freidenrich v. Condict) 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
Freidenrich v. Condict, 124 A.D. 807, 109 N.Y.S. 526, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2201 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Houghton, J.:

The defendant Condict contracted to install a refrigerating plant for the defendant The Mount Sinai Hospital, and guaranteed that when installed it would produce three tons of ice every twenty-four hours and maintain a twenty-ton refrigerating capacity on live steam at eighty pounds pressure, or exhaust steam at one pound back pressure. This contract was claimed to have been assumed by the subsequently formed corporation, the defendant Steele & Con-dict. The plant was installed under the supervision of the hospital architect. Steam for the running of the plant and connections from the boilers were to be furnished by the hospital.

The plaintiff’s assignor supplied a certain portion of the plant under a sub-contract, and was given an order upon the hospital for the amount due, which it refused to pay. A mechanic’s lien was thereupon filed and this action was brought for its foreclosure.

The contention of the defendant hospital on the trial was that the plant when installed did not fulfill the guaranty as to capacity, and hence no final payment became due on the contract which could be applied to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s lien. Quite irrespective of their answers, however, but without any proper objection thereto, defendant sought to show that this failure resulted from improper installation insisted upon by the hospital agents.

From the. record it would seem the trial court did not give due weight to the facts proved showing the plant failed to do the work guaranteed because it was improperly installed under the . direction of the architect and engineer of the. hospital. Defendant' Hathan W. Condict, the original contractor, was a man of many years’ experience in. installing refrigerating machines, and was patentee of the machine to be installed, and had erected and put in operation upwards of one hundred plants, and had charge of the installing of the present one in behalf of the defendants. For its proper working the machine required a free circulation of steam. The hospital .architect and engineer each informed him that the plans of the building were such that pipes could not be run so that this could be accomplished, and insisted that another system would do just as well. Condict repeatedly and consistently protested against the form of construction which they insisted upon, and told them the machine was not built for any different conditions, and [809]*809that it would not work if installed in the manner they demanded. He finally yielded and put in the steam- pipes and connections as they directed, insisting that he would not be responsible for the working of the machine installed in that manner. After it was completed and he was asked to test it he declined to do so, saying it was no use to do it because he could tell as well beforehand as after that the machine would not work. Subsequent tests proved that he was correct and that the best production the hospital experts could obtain was a fifteen-ton refrigerating capacity. One of these experts testified that in his opinion the parts and pipes of the machine were too small for a twenty-ton capacity, and that under no circumstances could it be made to do that amount of work. It was tried under one pound exhaust steam back pressure and did not work. Ho one, however, tested it at eighty pounds live steam pressure as the contract provided. Oondict testified that if there had been the free circulation of steam which he had insisted was necessary the machine “ would have performed its duty ” specified by the contract. He was not asked directly his opinion as an expert whether or not the machine would have‘fulfilled the contract requirements if the pipes had been placed in the manner he described as proper. But throughout his testimony he explains why refrigerating power was lost from lack of circulation of steam and why it was necessary that it should circulate, and how circulation was prevented by the manner in which the architect and engineer had insisted upon the plant being installed; and the whole trend of his testimony is that the machine failed to work because it was installed improperly, and that it would have worked properly had he been permitted to install it in the manner in which he insisted it should be. There is nothing contradicting this evidence except the testimony of the experts employed by the hospital, who said that the machine did not do the work required, and that of the one witness who gave it as Ms opinion that the machine was not big enough in any event to do the amount of refrigerating work contracted for. The architect was not sworn: nor the engineer, and there was, therefore, no contradiction of Condict’s testimony that he continuously protested against installing the machine in the manner directed, and continually insisted that it would never do its work properly. Oondict did say that the machine pumped enough [810]*810brine to do the required work, but subsequently explained that from lack of proper circulation the far end of the pipes did not do its part of the work.

If the machine was installed in the manner dictated and insisted upon by the hospital, which manner turned out to.be wrong and the cause of its failure to work, then the contractor was relieved from his guaranty and the hospital should pay for the machine whether it met the guaranty or not. There is no pretense that the machine was not finally made complete notwithstanding the delay, which was caused by the hospital or was waived by it.

The court held there was nothing due the contractors and dismissed the complaint as against the hospital, but gave a money judgment to plaintiff against the contractors. They alone appeal, the plaintiff standing satisfied with the personal judgment which-he obtained against thein.

The court was right in determining that the order upon the hospital taken by the plaintiff’s assignor was not received in absolute payment whether the amount was collected from the hospitaler not.'

It was also right in giving, a personal judgment against the com tractors for the amount due the. sub-contractors. A lien in proper form had been filed' for material furnished in the improvement of ■real property as the installation of the ice plant was. The rights Under that lien having been assigned to plaintiff and he having brought his'action and made the contractors parties defendant, and a valid lien in form thus existing, it was proper for the court to render a personal judgment against the cont2'actors indebted for the material furnished. (Hawkins v. Mapes-Reeve Construction Co., 82 App. Div. 72; affd., 178 N. Y. 236; Clapper v. Strong, 41 Misc. Rep. 184; affd., 90 App. Div. 536.)

The court was also justified in finding that the defendant the Steele & Oondict corporation assumed to carry out the contract with the hospital, and that the plaintiff’s assignor, therefore, had a claim against it for materials furnished, as well as against' Oondict individually. The defenda2it Oondict by his answer admitted that plaintiff’s assignor furnished the refrigerators mentioned in the complaint and that they were installed in the Mount Sinai Hospital, and that the amount claimed by plaintiff had not been paid; and in addition asked the court to render a pei’sonal judgment against him for the [811]*811difference between the amount due and the amount of the order which he claimed was given in absolute payment. The plaintiff’s money judgment against the two defendants must, therefore, be affirmed.

It is suggested- that the contractors have no right of appeal as against the defendant hospital.

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Related

Smith v. State
65 Misc. 376 (New York Supreme Court, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
124 A.D. 807, 109 N.Y.S. 526, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freidenrich-v-condict-nyappdiv-1908.