Logan v. Consolidated Gas Co.

107 A.D. 384, 95 N.Y.S. 163
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedAugust 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 A.D. 384 (Logan v. Consolidated Gas Co.) 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
Logan v. Consolidated Gas Co., 107 A.D. 384, 95 N.Y.S. 163 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Miller, J.:

On the 15th day of March, 1898, the plaintiffs as copartners and the defendant entered into an agreement, in writing, by which the plaintiffs, as contractors, agreed to “ well and sufficiently' erect and finish complete and in a good, workmanlike and substantial manner, under the direction of the Chief Engineer of the Owner and to the satisfaction of said Chief Engineer, to be evidenced by writing or certificate under his hand, and in accordance with the drawings and specifications signed by said parties and hereto annexed, a quadruple section gas holder with steel tank and guide frame and other appurtenances,” and to “ find and provide such good, proper and sufficient materials and labor of all kinds whatsoever, as well as sufficient apparatus, tools and machinery, for the completion of all the various parts of such Work mentioned in the drawings and specifications * * * within six months after the time when the foundation to be prepared by the Owner for the reception of the said tank and Gas-Holder is sufficiently advanced to allow the Contractor to commence, work.” The agreed contract price was $167,500, seventy-five per cent of which was to be paid upon the completion of the work and its acceptance by the chief engineer of the owner, or in installments of not less than $15,000 as the material was delivered and erected in position, such installments not to exceed seventy-five per cent of the cost of the work, to be estimated by the chief engineer of the owner, and the remaining twenty-five -per cent was to be paid when the holder and its appurtenances had been in satisfactory working order for sixty days. The contract also provided that the usual certificate of the • engineer of the owner should be obtained before any payments should become due, and that “the Contractor shall also bear and repair all loss or damage to the structure, which may have been caused by accident or otherwise, and on which payments have been made by the Owner,” and that “no certificate given or payment made under this contract shall be conclusive evidence of the performance of this contract, either wholly or in part, against any claim of the Owner to the contrary in any suits or proceedings whatever. Nor shall any certificate or payment in any way release the Contractor from the complete fulfillment of any portion of his work in the manner prescribed by the drawings, specifications and contracts.”

[388]*388The specifications which were attached to and made a part of the contract contained the following provisions: “ On completion of the 'tank, satisfactory test having been made, the Company will do all necessary grading. * "* * The tank will not be accepted until it has been proven water tight after' being filled with water to its full height and has so remained for thirty days. * * * The holder shall be properly tested, and a trial made by raising each section to its full height by air: pressure; the whole to be delivered to the Consolidated Gas Company in complete working order, perfectly gas tight. * * * The Contractor * * * shall repair "and make good any damage to the property of the Company * * * which may occur during the prosecution of the same, and deliver to the Consolidated Gas Company of the City of New York a gas holder, guide frame, and tank complete in- all. details in accoi'dance with the spirit and intent of these specifications and the drawings hereunto annexed.” .

Thereafter the plaintiffs entered upon the performance of the contract. As the work progressed payments were made upon certificates of the engineer, and bills of sale of the "materials used were given by the plaintiffs to the defendant, and on the 3d day of December, 18.98, the work had reached such a stage of completion that pursuant to an arrangement previously made, the plaintiffs notified an employee of the defendant that the tank was ready to be filled with water, whereupon the defendant began pumping water into the tank from the river and continued until the morning of the thirteenth of December, when the process of filling the tank was completed. -The only work called for by the contract that remained to be done on said third day of December consisted of certain tarring in the pit and painting of the holder, the remedying of any defects that might be discovered during the test, and the "adjustment of such parts of the apparatus as its operation should demonstrate needed further adjusting. Between the said third and thirteenth of December several of the plaintiffs’ employees were at work finishing the.work, caulking whatever small “sweats” appeared bn the tank, and taking out, shortening and replacing braces between the posts and girders of the guide frame which was required by the defendant’s engineer. ' The plaintiffs’ foreman and construction engineer were upon the work daily up to and includ[389]*389ing said thirteenth, and when the men quit work for the day at five o’clock on said day, the plaintiffs’ watchmen were left as usual to guard the entrances to the inclosure within which said structure was being erected. For several days prior to said thirteenth the defendant had men employed laying pipe and doing what was necessary to connect the tank and holder with its works when ready for operation, but it does not appear that such connections had been completed. Shortly after five o’clock on the afternoon of said thirteenth of December the entire structure was reduced to a scrap heap, either because of a collapse caused by the pressure of the 1,000,000 cubic feet of water stored in the tank, or because of an explosion produced by some cause not clearly explained. It is not claimed that the plans and specifications, for which, of course, the defendant was responsible, were inadequate, but, on the contrary, it appears to have been conceded that they were sufficient to have produced a structure able to withstand any pressure which its operation would produce and afford a factor of safety of three. After the destruction of the structure the defendant formally demanded of the plaintiffs that they furnish the tank and holder contracted for, while the plaintiffs, insisting that the contract had been performed, demanded of the engineer a certificate to that effect, which was refused, whereupon this action was brought by the plaintiffs alleging a substantial performance to recover the balance due upon the contract, and from the judgment in their favor the defendant appeals.

Upon the trial the respective parties sought to account for the destruction of the tank and holder upon two different theories, and each introduced evidence tending to support the theory advanced, to wit, on the part of the plaintiffs that the collapse resulted from an explosion caused by an electric spark igniting gas collected from the foul water pumped into the tank by the defendant from the river, and on the part of the defendant that the collapse was due to the weakness of the structure itself, produced by the plaintiffs’ failure to comply with the plans and specifications which required all punched rivet holes to be reamed. The trial court submitted two questions to the jury, first, whether the plaintiffs had performed their contract according to the plans and specifications, and, second, whether the defendant had taken possession on December [390]*390third, and on December thirteenth had possession and control of the structure, and was then applying it to the use for which it was intended as a gas holder and not merely submitting it to a test, and charged that if the jury found in the plaintiffs’ favor on both of said propositions they were entitled to a verdict; otherwise, that the ■ defendant was entitled to a verdict on its counterclaim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 A.D. 384, 95 N.Y.S. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-consolidated-gas-co-nyappdiv-1905.