McMaster v. . the State of New York

15 N.E. 417, 108 N.Y. 542, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 674, 63 Sickels 542, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 616
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 15 N.E. 417 (McMaster v. . the State 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
McMaster v. . the State of New York, 15 N.E. 417, 108 N.Y. 542, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 674, 63 Sickels 542, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 616 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Eabl, J.

There is no contention on the part of the state-that the award in this case is excessive, provided it is free from the objections which it makes thereto. Its claim is that, there was no liability whatever on its part for any of the-damages embraced in the award. It will conduce to perspicuity and brevity to consider the various objections under-separate heads.

(1.) The furnishing contract required the contractors to-furnish the stone of the quality known as hard sandstone for the exterior facings of the walls of the asylum buildings, and the cutting contract required them to cut such stone. The* contracts contain no description of the buildings, and there is. nothing in either of them specifying that the whole exterior-facings of the walls were to be of sandstone, and hence it is. contended that there was no breach of the contracts in the-construction of the walls of some of the buildings of brick with sandstone trimmings. But it is fairly to be inferred from the language of the furnishing contract that the facings, of the walls were to be of sandstone. The contractors were to furnish all such stone required and necessary for the construction of the buildings. The stone was to come from quarries in Orleans county, and the contractors agreed to lease* *549 the quarries to the state to an amount in quantity sufficient for the completion of the buildings, and authorized the state to take possession of the same for the purpose of quarrying and delivering the stone, in case of default on their part to perform their contracts. While the plans and specifications do not appear in the record, they must have been put in evidence, as it appears to have been assumed on the trial that they did require all the walls to be built with sandstone facings, and such is the inference from all the facts in the case. The resolution of May 25, 18Y6, changing the plans of wards O, D and E, on both sides of the asylum building, permitted those wards “to be constructed of brick with sandstone trimmings instead of stone entirely,” and modified the previous plans accordingly. There was no objection or exception that pointed to the absence of the fundamental proof that the original plans required the exterior facings of all the walls to be constructed of sandstone. On the contrary, the requests to find submitted to the Board of Claims on behalf of the state assumed that the original plans required sandstone, and that there was a change from stone to brick, and when on the argument before us the original plans and specifications were produced, and it was asserted by the counsel for the claimant that they did so require, the counsel for the state made no denial. Therefore the finding of the Board that the original plans required sandstone facings for the walls of all the asylum buildings, and the conclusions based thereon cannot be assailed here.

(2.) In answer to the claim for damages on account of the change from stone facings to brick with stone trimmings, it is said by the learned counsel for the state that such change was authorized by the contracts, and that it was not, therefore, a breach thereof. It is not pretended that there is anything in the terms of the furnishing contract authorizing such a change. According to that contract the contractors were bound to furnish and the state was bound to take from them all the sandstone required for the completion of the buildings according to the plans and specifications. But the cutting *550 contract, made three months later, contained this clause “ The party of the second part reserves the right to make any change they shall deem proper in the plans and specifications of said buildings, and the work shall be performed by the party of the first part in accordance, for the prices and compensation above set forth, unless such change shall increase the expense of doing said work, in which case the party of the. first part shall be paid a reasonable compensation therefor, to-be certified by the supervising architect and superintendent.” It is claimed on the part of the state that the two contracts-must be read and construed together, and hence that this clause must have operation in the construction of both contracts, and that it authorized the change from stone to brick facings. But we do not perceive how this clause can be held to have any operation upon the first contract. It does not. appear that there was any actual intention to make such an important change in that contract, and the parties were not dealing with that contract. There was no consideration or inducement to the contractors to consent to such a change. The second contract was awarded to them after competative bids and they obtained it from the mere accident that they were the lowest bidders. It might have been awarded to some other party, and then no one would have contended that the clause quoted could have had any operation in the construction of the prior contract. The clause is a mere reservation to the state of rights which the contractors would otherwise have under the second contract, and it takes nothing from what they had or were entitled to under the first contract. It is something taken out of the general scope of the second contract, and can have no other effect. It is true that there is a general rule that written instruments executed at the same time, or about the same time, between the same parties and relating to the same subject-matter, may, for the purposes of construction and interpretation, and to arrive at the intention of the parties be read together. (Greenlf. on Ev. §§ 277, 283; 2 Pars, on Cont. [7th ed.] 501, 503; Wilson v. Randall, 67 N. Y. 338.) But here these *551 instruments were not executed at the same time, but three months apart. They do not relate to the same subject-matter. The one relates to material to be furnished, and the other to work to be done, and they were not voluntarily executed after negotiations as to their terms and provisions.. But they were awarded after competative bidding and came to the contractors by operation of law simply because they were the lowest bidders. Under such circumstances the rule above referred to can have no operation.

But if we should suppose that the rule could have operation and that this clause must be taken as controlling the construction of both contracts, as it certainly must be taken as controlling the construction of the contract in which it was inserted, yet we are of opinion that it cannot have the effect claimed for it and that it did not authorize the change made. What change did the state reserve the right to make ? It certainly had no right to omit entirely the construction of all or any of the buildings. The asylum buildings referred to in the contracts were the central or administration building, the five connecting wards on each side and the out-buildings. These were all to be built. The size and height of them were fixed and the material to be put in the walls was determined. The general character of the buildings could not be changed so that the buildings would not be the same contracted for; if it could be, then a public letting in such a case would not be a useful and might be an idle ceremony. Under such a reservation could a building planned for five stories be reduced to two ? Could a stone building let to a stone mason be changed to wood or brick? Could the five connecting wards be reduced to two or three or four ? We are clear that authority for such extensive changes could not be found in such language.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.E. 417, 108 N.Y. 542, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 674, 63 Sickels 542, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmaster-v-the-state-of-new-york-ny-1888.