McSorley v. Prague

28 Jones & S. 351, 60 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 351
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 29, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Jones & S. 351 (McSorley v. Prague) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McSorley v. Prague, 28 Jones & S. 351, 60 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 351 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Hamilton Odell, Referee.

"In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $2,341.81 for a balance due on contracts for plumbing work, and for work done and moneys expended and goods sold and delivered at the defendant’s request between March 1, 1888, and October 1, 1889. The defendant denies the several allegations of the complaint, and then alleges, by way of counter-claim, that between July 1, 1887, and [352]*352April 1, 1890, the plaintiff performed certain work and furnished certain materials under certain written contracts ; that he also ‘ performed certain other work and furnished certain other materials, which last mentioned work and materials were additional or extra work to that contemplated by the said contracts ; ’ that the said contract and extra work and materials were worth, and the defendant agreed to pay therefor, only the sum of $66,903.38; that defendant has paid to plaintiff, for and on account thereof, the sum of $69,167.81, and that the excess, to wit, the sum of $2,264.43, is ‘ due and owing from plaintiff to defendant.’ At the beginning of the trial the defendant was permitted to amend his answer by alleging that the excess of payments made by him to the plaintiff was the sum of $3,592.43, and also to plead an expenditure of $257.81, made necessary by the defective work of the plaintiff ’ in some of the houses to which this controversy relates.

It is admitted that the contracts above referred to amounted to the sum of $61,200.00, and that the plaintiff has been paid by the defendant the sum of $69,167.-81. The hills—108 in number—rendered by the plaintiff for extra work and materials amounted to $8,741.91. The defendant concedes that they are correct to the extent of $7,606.28. Forty-nine of these 108 bills— amounting to $1,689.87—were produced by the plaintiff upon the trial, and he testified that they were accurate and true hills, and that they had not been paid. Twenty-five of them are not disputed by the defendant; to the remaining twenty-four he urges the following objections:

He objects that they include bills—amounting to $322.51—for services rendered upon houses belonging to D. Willis James. The defendant denies that these services, with the exception of a single item, were rendered at his request or at the request of any person authorized by him. They were charged to James in [353]*353the plaintiff’s hooks, and the plaintiff téstiñed : ' Originally I made out the bills against D. Willis James, knowing that he owned the houses; but Mr. Prague tokl me to make out the bills against him, that he would have to stand that.’ This Prague denied. The proofs show that Prague was the contractor for building the James houses ; that the work covered by these bills Avas done while the plaintiff’s men were engaged in the performance of the contracts for plumbing other buildings for the defendant in the immediate neighborhood; that the plaintiff was instructed by the defendant to do any work which he might be ordered to do by the defendant’s men in charge; and the plaintiff’s testimony is that he received orders to do the work from either Mr. Prague or his representatives. All of the bills were presented to Mr. Prague and were paid by him. He testified that he did not know at the time that they were for work done upon the houses of Mr. James ; but that was a fact of Avhich he could not have been ignorant, as each bill plainly specified the house upon which the services and materials charged for had been expended. There is no visible reason for sustaining this objection.

The defendant further objects that the said bills include charges—amounting to $221.85—for moneys expended :by the plaintiff without request or authority on the part of the defendant. This item was paid by the plaintiff to the department of public works for building purposes,’ or ‘ building permits,’ or permits for building purposes ’—by which I understand permits to connect the defendant’s premises on 86th and 87th streets with the croton mains. Mr. Prague testified that he ‘ did not order him (the plaintiff) to pay them; ’ that it must have been done by the mason for water purposes ; ’ that it was paid for the mason—lie used the water there; ’ that it is outside of me altogether; ’ and that I don’t know anything about it, except that he paid for the water for the mason, and there is a bill [354]*354rendered to me.’ The mason referred to had contracted with the defendant to do the mason-work of the building which the defendant was erecting upon the premises mentioned above. His testimony is that the permits were not procured by his. direction and that he had no knowledge whether the water taps were put in by plaintiff. The plaintiff testified that he procured and paid for the permits at Mr. Prague’s request. Mr. Prague admits that the plaintiff’s contract to do the plumbing in said buildings did not provide that he (the plaintiff) should pay those items for building purposes/ and that the bill was rendered to him before the buildings were completed and before the mason had Heft the job.’ The weight of testimony is against the defendant’s claim.

“ Another objection is that the defendant is charged with the sum of $110 for work, materials and expenditures which the plaintiff was bound to do and furnish by the terms of his contract. Included in this is an item of forty dollars paid by McSorley for sewer permits. He says that he obtained these permits at the request of the defendant, who promised to repay him the money expended. This is not denied by the defendant, and he admits that the permits related to buildings on the Ninth avenue mentioned in the contract of June 25, 1888, and were obtained by the plaintiff prior to the making of that contract. His claim, stated in his own language, is as follows: ‘ He (the plaintiff) was on the ground there and had commenced this work. If he hadn’t got the job, he would have been paid for that work outside of any contract; but as long as he took the job it flowed on and was included in the' contract. We always do that.’ He was asked—‘Will you state how the $40 comes to be included in the contract of June 25, 1888, that appears to have been paid two months prior to that time, and before you had ever entered into a contract with McSorley' for plumbing [355]*355those nineteen houses ? ’ His answer was—‘ Because, if the same plumber that originally starts the work finally makes a contract, it is covered in his contract.’ This, doubtless, was Mr. Prague’s understanding, but it does not appear that it was assented to by McSorley, or that he had any knowledge of any general custom applicable to or governing such cases, and there is nothing in the written contract to show thatMcSorley’s claim for the money expended for these permits, based upon both the defendant’s prior request and his subsequent promise, was in any respect waived or released by the provisions of that instrument. These views dispose, also, of the objection to the items for water taps and paving in plaintiff’s exhibit 28.

The last objection to the plaintiff’s claim, under the bills put in evidence by him, is an alleged over-charge of $6.50 in exhibit number 13. The proof does not sustain it.

The plaintiff’s alleged cause of action is, therefore, in my opinion, established to the extent of the sum of $1,689.87, the amount of the said forty-nine bills for extra work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Jones & S. 351, 60 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcsorley-v-prague-nysuperctnyc-1892.