Morrison & Quinn, Inc. v. State

204 A.D. 623, 199 N.Y.S. 296, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9537
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 14, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 204 A.D. 623 (Morrison & Quinn, Inc. v. State) 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
Morrison & Quinn, Inc. v. State, 204 A.D. 623, 199 N.Y.S. 296, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9537 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Clark, J.:

Qn the 16th day of October, 1916, the appellant and the State of New York entered into a contract for the construction by claimant of a lock in the Erie canal about fifty feet from the junction of the. Erie and Barge canals near the village of Mohawk, N. Y. The purpose of this lock was to permit boats to pass into the Barge canal from the Erie canal, and from the latter into the Barge canal. At this point the level of the Barge canal is some nine feet lower than that of the Erie canal.

Appellant began work under this contract in December, 1916, and was prosecuting its work when the claim for damages arose which is hereinafter referred to.

This contract provided that the work was to be completed by May 1, 1917. The work was to be performed while the water necessary' for navigation purposes was out of the canal, leaving only a small quantity of water in the basin, and this was provided for by appellant by constructing two cofferdams, one at the" easterly end and one at the westerly end of its work with a box flume connecting them, so that this small quantity of water left in the canal, which flowed easterly, would be carried around the lock construction and emptied into the bed of the canal over the easterly cofferdam. The purpose of this easterly cofferdam was' to prevent the water which went through the flume backing up onto appellant’s work.

■ These cofferdams were sufficient for the purposes for which they were intended, but were not made to withstand the onward rush of the waters from the Mohawk river.

In the' latter part of February, 1917, one Baker, who had a contract to construct a portion of the Barge canal where it adjoined the Erie canal near, the point where claimant was working, constructed a north wall of the Barge canal one and a half miles east of appellant’s work-, which closed off drainage of thé Erie canal and backed water upon, appellant’s work, which delayed him several days and damaged his plant.

- On two other subsequent occasions appellant’s work was flooded, and it sustained damages by water being turned into the Barge canal from the Mohawk river.

: It appears that a short distance west of the junction of the two canals, and near where appellant was building the lock, the Barge canal opens out of the Mohawk river, and between the river [625]*625and the canal junction guard gates had been erected to prevent water from the river flowing into the Barge canal.

Contractor Baker’s dredge had become fast in the Barge canal, and to remove it he opened these gates under the direction and by authority of the State Superintendent of Public Works. This occurred on two occasions, with the result that water backed up against and onto appellant’s work causing damage, and for these three matters above referred to it filed a claim against the State.

The appellant had been personally notified by the Superintendent of Public Works that these Mohawk river gates would be opened, but no notice was evér given to him that the canal drainage was being or would be stopped, which occasioned the first claim for damages.

On the trial in the Court of Claims it was found that appellant’s cofferdams were insufficient. The contract required appellant to erect and maintain suitable cofferdams, and it was found that before any of the claims for damages filed by appellant had arisen, the Superintendent of Public Works had notified claimant on several occasions that its cofferdams were insufficient, and that it should heighten and strengthen them, but the claimant did nothing in that regard.

The Court of Claims dismissed the claim on the ground that appellant’s cofferdams were insufficient, and that it failed to follow the instructions of the State authorities with reference to raising and strengthening them, and that the damages to its work were due to its failure and neglect to follow the instructions of the officials and agents and servants of the State, and that the latter was free from negligence.

The contract between the appellant and the State provided, among other things, not only that claimant would build suitable cofferdams, but that the work under the contract shall be executed to his [the State Engineer’s] satisfaction and in conformity with his instructions.”

The evidence was to the effect that the cofferdams as built by appellant were sufficient to take care of the water remaining in the Erie canal if the conditions had remained as they were when the water was let out after the close of navigation. These cofferdams were made to take care of the small quantity of water that remained in the Erie canal after the water was drawn off in the fall. They were not intended to withstand such quantities of water as were let in the Barge canal from the Mohawk river under the authority of the State officials.

[626]*626When appellant entered into the contract it agreed to build suitable cofferdams and abide by the directions of the State Engineer, but it had a right to assume that conditions would remain substantially as they were at the time, and I think the law would imply as much, and that the directions of the State authorities would be reasonable.

It is urged by the State that appellant agreed to do the work in conformity with the instructions of the State Engineer, and to his satisfaction, but that meant to a reasonable satisfaction, and that his instructions would be reasonable. It would be unreasonable and not within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made, that the contractor should build cofferdams that would withstand the floods that were sent against them by authority of the Superintendent of Public Works, when they authorized the opening of the Mohawk river guard gates.

Appellant’s cofferdams were to take care of the waters in the Erie canal that remained after the season’s navigation had closed and the water had been drawn off. Appellant was not obliged under- a fair construction of the contract to assume the added burden and expense of building cofferdams high enough and strong enough to withstand any amount of water the State authorities might collect from the river, or by damming up and stopping drainage that was in operation when the contract was made, with the result of setting water back against and over the top of appellant’s lower cofferdam, and damaging his work and machinery. (Leahy v. City of New York, 192 N. Y. 42.)

That was a case where a contract had been let by the city for the construction of a main sewer, and it provided that the contractor should take care of and pump out of the sewer trench all surface water entering the same, together with the flow from all existing sewers, etc. After the letting of the contract the city made other contracts for the construction of other sewers, and in constructing them large quantities of water were discharged into the uncompleted main sewer. The court in reversing a judgment dismissing the contractor’s complaint said: Under the express provisions of the contract the plaintiff did undertake to take care of the flow from the existing sewers, drains and natural watercourses; but we think it was not within the contemplation of the parties to the contract, nor a reasonable inference to be drawn from its provisions, that he was also to take care of the flow of the water collected in the new lateral sewers contracted for and constructed after he had entered into his contract for the construction of the trunk sewer, and that the city had no right to subject him to such additional expense and labor.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 A.D. 623, 199 N.Y.S. 296, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-quinn-inc-v-state-nyappdiv-1923.