Long Island Contracting & Supply Co. v. City of New York

97 N.E. 483, 204 N.Y. 73, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 744
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 97 N.E. 483 (Long Island Contracting & Supply Co. v. City of New York) 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
Long Island Contracting & Supply Co. v. City of New York, 97 N.E. 483, 204 N.Y. 73, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 744 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Vann, J.

Among the specifications attached to the contract and made a part thereof were the following:

“ 4. All old material which will not be used in the work, excepting bridge stone and specification paving stone, shall become the property of the contractor and be removed by him * * *. ”

“ 8. All materials of every description, earth, rock, subsoil, vegetable or other matter, brick and stone masonry, overlying the sub-grade hereinafter described shall be removed. * * The cost of grubbing up and removing any trees, shrubbery, fences, timber, pipes, rubbish or filth shall be included in the price bid for excavation.

“ 9. Should any soft, spongy, vegetable or other objectionable matter be disclosed by the excavation thus made or be located where filling is to be done, such material shall be removed and replaced with coarse sand, gravel ox-other suitable matex-ial, which shall be thox-oughly compacted as hereinafter directed at the price hex-ein bid for eax-th excavation.

“11. Such excavated material as may be fit for the purpose and as may be necessary shall be used to fill in those parts of the street which are below the aforesaid grades or which have become so by the removal of rock or improper matex-ial in the manner hereafter provided, and the px-ice paid per cxxbic yax-d of excavation is to *77 include the cost of properly placing such excavated material as filling an embankment and the removal from the work of such as is not so utilized.

“12. No excavated or other material necessary to be disposed of shall be dumped or placed within the limits of any existing or projecting public street or road, nor shall any material be excavated and removed from such location without the written permission of the engineer.

“15. All filling shall be good, wholesome earth, free from all frozen materials, garbage, vegetable, spongy or unsuitable matter.

“ 52. All surplus materials, earth, sand, rubbish and stones, except such stones as are retained by order of the engineer, are to be removed from the line of the work, block by block, as rapidly as the work progresses. All material covering the pavement and sidewalks shall be swept into heaps and immediately removed from the line of the work.”

The main question presented for decision is, to whom, according to these provisions, would the “ surplus earth, ” including top soil, belong after it was excavated and ready for removal % Assuming, without deciding, that the old material mentioned in clause four does not include the excavation of virgin soil, there was no express provision that the surplus earth should belong to the contractor, but, even on this assumption, the requirement that the contractor should remove the surplus earth, with no reservation of title by the city, no stipulation that it should be removed to a specified place and no direction as to what should be done with it, except simply to remove it from the line of the work, implies that the contractor could do what he wished with it. He was bound to get rid of it and this was an abandonment or transfer by the city of its right thereto. It was part of his compensation for doing the work of excavation. ‘The city had acquired the land on which the street was to be constructed and it is not claimed that the surplus earth *78 belonged to the former owner of the fee. The duty to excavate and remove it, without any reservation or condition, made it the property of the contractor as soon at least as it was loaded upon carts or other vehicles for the purpose of removal. In this respect the contract is not unlike one to tear down a house and remove the materials. If nothing is said as to what is to be done with them after they are removed, by necessary implication they belong to the contractor.

It is insisted that according to the stipulation in the twelfth clause the surplus earth could not have been removed without the written permission of the engineer and that such permission might have been withheld. The duty to remove is as imperative as the duty to excavate and it would be strange if, after the work was in progress, it was necessary for the contractor to obtain permission at every step as the work proceeded to do what the contract expressly required to be done. If, however, as to part of the work there was a special reason for requiring permission in order to regulate methods and prescribe conditions, such a stipulation would be natural.

The words “such location” as they are used in the twelfth clause, do not mean the line of the work, but “existing or projecting” streets. The line of the work is not mentioned in said clause either directly or indirectly, and the word “ such ” carries the word “ location ” back to the last preceding word of the same class or meaning and hence to “ streets ” existing or projecting. The new street crossed existing streets and the ends of other streets which projected therein to some extent. In constructing crosswalks over the new street the pavement and grading of the existing streets would have to be taken up and interfered with more or less. So the projecting streets would have to be disturbed somewhat in order to construct the sidewalks on the margin of the new street. Some excavation would be required and there would be some material to be removed. The object of *79 the latter part of the clause was to prevent the excavation of completed work at a street crossing without the permission of the engineer. It was a judicious precaution to keep the contractor from excavating in a constructed street and removing the sound material without permission from the skilled man in charge of the work, who might properly attach to the permit conditions of great importance to the city and possibly without increasing the expense of the contractor. This, as we think, was the purpose of the stipulation under consideration, and the same result would follow even if “projecting” is a misprint for “ projected,” as the city would naturally intrust the method of intersection to the direction of the engineer rather than to the discretion of the contractor. The object of the entire clause was to prevent the deposit of excavated material upon transverse streets, whether wholly completed across the new street or merely projecting therein, and also to prevent the excavation or removal of material from that particular location without the consent of the engineer. Accordingly we hold that according to the contract the top soil belonged to the contractor as fast as it was excavated and loaded for removal.

The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that there would have been 8,950 cubic yards of soil which it would have been required to remove over and above that needed for fill and that part of it was top soil. It offered to show by appropriate questions that there was a market value for top soil and what such value was in excess of the cost of excavating and removing it. The court at first excluded all evidence upon the subject on the ground that it involved a collateral contract and the plaintiff excepted. Later in the trial the ruling was relaxed to the extent of receiving evidence that dealers would gladly remove the top soil for nothing if it was given to them. This was admitted simply to show that the cost of performing the contract would have been less than *80

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 N.E. 483, 204 N.Y. 73, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-island-contracting-supply-co-v-city-of-new-york-ny-1912.