Krause v. City of New York

162 A.D. 134, 147 N.Y.S. 294, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5974
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 1, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 A.D. 134 (Krause v. City of New York) 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
Krause v. City of New York, 162 A.D. 134, 147 N.Y.S. 294, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5974 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

The defendants, John T. Brady & Co. and National Surety Company, appeal from certain portions of a judgment entered in an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien for work done in connection with a municipal improvement, the erection of the Washington Irving High School in the city of New York. There is no question raised by this appeal as to the amount due the plaintiff under its contract, nor is its right to recover disputed. Three questions only require consideration.

First. Plaintiff sued to recover the sum of $9,600 as a balance due it under the contract for this work between the defendant John T. Brady & Co. and itself, and its right to recover such sum was finally admitted upon the trial. The plaintiff also claimed that after it entered upon the performance of its contract it performed additional work on said school at the special instance and request of John T. Brady & Co., all [136]*136of which was reasonably worth the sum' of $3,666.72; an itemized statement of which additional work was annexed to the complaint and made a part thereof. Reference to this itemized statement shows that every item thereon is claimed and charged to be additional work within the ordinary and accepted meaning of that term. There is no suggestion to be found either in the complaint or the itemized bill that the •plaintiff’s additional claim was based upon any other theory than that stated. When plaintiff was required to furnish a bill of particulars of its claim, it furnished an elaborate statement of all the items thereon, wherein the character of such claim as one for extra work or additional work was emphasized and repeated, and plaintiff stated that “ the names of the persons with whom the agreement was made waiving, abandoning and rescinding the requirements of plaintiff’s contract that no extra work or changes in the work or additional work, should be "made, except upon the written consent of this defendant, was John E. Dordan.” In the bill of particulars, when plaintiff proceeded to give the details of its various items of claim, forty in all, it commenced with the statement that “the following are the forty items of additional work referred to in the complaint.” The defendant Brady & Co. by its answer, had set up certain clauses of the contract between it and the plaintiff, one of which provided that “ no alterations shall be made in the work shown or described by the drawings or specifications, or extra work performed, except upon a written ordér of the general contractor.” Upon the trial of the action, after plaintiff • had established its right to recover for the balance unpaid under the contract, some colloquy occurred between counsel for plaintiff and defendant, from which it was made apparent to the court (and the record clearly shows that both counsel so understood) that plaintiff would be called upon to show compliance with the provision of the contract whereby all additional work was to be ordered in writing before any recovery could be made thereupon or to prove due waiver of such provision. Counsel for defendant conceded that plaintiff was entitled to recover for items 11 and 12 included in the claim for extra work, aggregating $76. Plaintiff’s counsel then asked certain questions as to the official capacity of Mr. Dordan, treasurer [137]*137of John T. Brady & Co., and offered a letter, produced by defendants, to the receipt of which in evidence objection was made by defendants’ counsel. After further colloquy plaintiff’s counsel stated: “The plaintiff desires to state on the record that it will give no evidence on items 1 to 40, except the two admitted, items 11 and 12. That is our case.” The trial proceeded thereafter, and at the close of the entire case the court said: “I suggest you gentlemen get together and prepare findings in accordance with my decision. There is no reason for any dispute. ” Plaintiff’s counsel suggested: ‘ ‘ Except I wish to put in the findings that we have here withdrawn our claim for extras.” The court replied: “You may state in your findings that no evidence was offered on that point. ” Previous to this colloquy the court had stated that the amount for which he would give judgment in favor of the plaintiff was $9,052.10.

With the record in this condition, showing that the plaintiff had consistently and steadily claimed from the inception of the action that its claim, over and above the balance of the contract price, was one solely for additional or extra work, and with its failure to offer any proof as to thirty-eight out of forty items thereof, emphasized and repeated upon the record, it nevertheless presented for signature findings and a judgment setting forth an entirely different and inconsistent state of facts, for which there is no warrant disclosed by the record. It is to the provisions thus embodied in the decision and judgment as finally made that objection is now taken. It was found by the court as a conclusion of law: “9. That upon the trial of this action no evidence was given as to any of the forty items claimed by plaintiff to be additional or extra work set forth in Exhibit A ’ annexed to the amended complaint, and plaintiff withdrew same from the consideration of the Court, and the Court did not pass on same (excepting, however, said two items Nos. 11 and 12 of $16.00 and $60.00 respectively, which said two items the defendant John T. Brady & Company expressly admitted in its answer and also upon the trial), for the reason that they were in the nature of damages for breach of contract, which could not be included in a municipal lien, or recovered in an equity action.” We find in the record no basis whatever for the conclusion that the plaintiff with[138]*138drew its claims for extra work from the consideration of the court, and that the court did not pass on same for the reason that they were in the nature of damages for breach of contract. Such a contention was not made at any time during the progress of the litigation or the course of the trial, and was not suggested during the trial as a reason for the failure to offer proof upon these items. This conclusion of law is without foundation and must be modified by striking therefrom the words “and plaintiff withdrew same from the consideration of the Court, and the Court did not pass on same,” and also “for the reason that they were in the nature of damages for breach of contract, which could not be included in a municipal lien, or recovered in an equity action.” The judgment contains a paragraph repeating this conclusion of law as a part thereof. Not only do we find no basis in fact for the portions to which reference is made here, but we find no authority in law for the inclusion of such a provision in a judgment, and, therefore, the entire final paragraph of the judgment beginning with the words, “ and it is further Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed, that upon the trial of this action no evidence was given as to any of the forty items claimed by plaintiff ” should be expunged therefrom.

Second. Objection is made to the date from which interest has been allowed, the last day of the trial. The court at the conclusion of the hearings announced that it did not think the defendant should be mulcted in interest, and plaintiff’s counsel replied that he was inclined to think the court was right, but that his client desired him to make the point, to which the court replying reiterated its view that no interest should he allowed.

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162 A.D. 134, 147 N.Y.S. 294, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krause-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1914.