Glacius v. . Black

50 N.Y. 145, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 399
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 50 N.Y. 145 (Glacius v. . Black) 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
Glacius v. . Black, 50 N.Y. 145, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 399 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Church, Oh. J.

This is an action upon a claim filed under the mechanics’ lien law. The contractors are builders, and contracted to make certain alterations and repairs upon the defendant’s house for $1,326; one-half to be paid when the lath were on, and the balance when the work was done completely and accepted. The work consisted principally of taking off an old peak roof and substituting a French or Mansard roof and finishing off the upper story, and making other repairs in the interior of the house. The case was tried before a referee, and is very voluminous. The original report contains fifty-eight distinct findings of fact, besides the conclusions of law, and when the case was made the referee again stated the facts found by him in fifty-nine findings, which are followed by forty-one findings of law, to each of which an exception is taken. The learned .judge who delivered the opinion in the court below regarded these last fifty-nine findings of fact as additional to those stated in the original report, but it is ■ not very clear whether they were intended as additional findings or substitutes for those contained in the report. At the close of the first findings, the case states and hereupon the said owner, for the purpose of a review of the evidence appearing upon the trial, makes the foregoing case, and the said referee states the following as facts found by him.” ' From this it would appear that the last findings were revised substitutes for the first; but in the course of these findings the referee refers to certain findings contained in the original report, and it is probable that it was intended that all of them should go into the case. If the learned referee had been more concise and brief, and had incorporated less extraneous matter in his findings, his own labor and that of the court would have been greatly lessened. Meither evidence, argument nor comment has any legitimate place in findings of fact or law, They should be conclusions *148 of fact from the evidence and conclusions off law from the facts found, and both stated without repetition, and in the most concise and direct manner. The referee found for the plaintiffs the whole amount of the claim, less twenty-five dollars, which he found as damages for defective work and materials.

The findings of fact, if supported by any evidence, are conclusive upon this court, and we can only deal with the legal questions involved. A reference to some general principles of law will aid in elucidating the controlling points in the case. It is well settled in this State that where a party has entered into a contract to perform work and furnish materials of a specified character, and the other party agrees to pay for the same upon the performance of the contract, although the work may be performed and materials furnished, yet, if not done in the manner stipulated, no action will lie for compensation. When performance is a condition of payment the former must' be shown to entitle a party to recover unless it has been waived- or released. The case of Smith v. Brady (17 N. Y., 173), reviewing the principal authorities on the subject, is full and explicit on this point. This is a general rule, applying to contracts of this character as well as others. As was said in the above case, “ There is, in a just view of the question, no hardship in requiring builders to perform their contracts in order to entitle themselves to payment where the employer has agreed to pay only on that condition.” As, however, this class of contracts embrace many particulars which it is difficult, if not impracticable, to comply with, with entire exactness, the apparent rigor of the general rule has been so far relaxed as that a substantial compliance will be deemed sufficient. As was properly expressed by Allen, J., in Sinclair v. Talmadge (35 Barb., 602), “If there has been no willful departure from the terms of the contract, or omission in essential points, and the laborer has honestly and faithfully performed the contract in all its material and substantial particulars, he will not be held to have forfeited his right to remuneration by reason of mere *149 technical, inadvertent or unimportant omissions or defects. The law imposes no such liability, and enforces no such penalty.” The question in each case will, of course, be an open one, where defects exist, whether they are substantial or technical and unimportant. This is a question of fact. The referee has found that defects existed, but has not passed upon' the question whether they were substantial so as to defeat any right of action, or so trivial and unimportant as to require the application of the modified rule before stated; nor has he furnished any guide by which we can, as a question of law, determine that question, except that he finds that the plaintiffs intended in good faith to perform their contract. The referee finds, in the fiftieth clause of what are called special findings, That the work was never completed by the claimants according to the plans and specifications in the respects found by me in my report, or specially found by me herein.”

The defects thus found are quite numerous, and embrace defects in materials and workmanship, in the plastering, the walls were out of plumb, the windows were" too narrow, an omission to put sills under cross partitions; there was some leakage; folding doors were too narrow and too short; an omission to replace lightning-rods, torn down to perform the work; defective materials and workmanship in the mouldings and casings, and some other similar defects. As to some of the defects, the referee found that they had been waived, or should have been objected to while the work was progressing ; as to others, that there was no evidence of damages by reason of them; and, as to others, he allowed compensation in damages, but did not find whether they were of such a material character as to preclude a recovery or not; nor, upon the theory upon which he determined the case, was it essential that he should do so. That theory was that, by the terms of the contract, the architect had power to bind both parties by his acceptance of the work and materials so far as to enable the plaintiffs to maintain an action, that the architect superintended the work and accepted it after it was com *150 pleted, and that the defendant was bound thereby to pay for it, less the value of the defects proved.

After an examination of the case I do not think this proposition can be sustained. In the first place, the contract confers.no power upon the architect'to change or alter the plans and specifications; nor is there any provision, found in many such contracts, that the decision of the architect shall be final and conclusive upon the defendant. The contract pro!vides “ that the materials to be furnished shall be of the best quality, and the workmanship performed in the best manner, | subject to the acceptance or rejection of Edward Wall, archi- ! tect, and all to be in strict accordance with the plans and , specifications, which are signed by the parties of the second 1 part, and form part of this contract.” The architect also had i power to reject any particular work or materials; and in such | case the builders were to remedy the defects. This is all the authority which the architect had under this contract, and his authority was equally known to both parties.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y. 145, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glacius-v-black-ny-1872.