Mott v. City of Utica

114 A.D. 736, 100 N.Y.S. 150, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2172

This text of 114 A.D. 736 (Mott v. City of Utica) 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
Mott v. City of Utica, 114 A.D. 736, 100 N.Y.S. 150, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2172 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Kruse, J.:

This action has been tried three times. Upon the first trial the court-submitted the case to the jury upon the first cause of action and plaintiff had a verdict thereon, and nonsuited as to the sécond cause of action. An appeal was taken to this court which reversed the judgment, ordering a "new trial, holding with the defendant that the work covered by the contract included only the street between curbs and did not cover the work for which the plaintiff sought, to recover profits, but that as to the second cause of action the plaintiff was improperly nonsuited, and that as to some of the material removed from the street it was not included in the contract and that evidence sought to be given to establish that cause of action had been improperly excluded. (Mott v. City of Utica, 96 App. Div. 495.)

Upon the second trial a nonsuit was granted as to the first cause of action and the case submitted to the jury upon the second cause of action and a verdict was found thereon in favor of the plaintiff. The trial court set aside the verdict, holding that the evidence regarding the quantity of material removed by the defendant, not covered by his contract, was insufficient to establish any basis for a recovery of more than nominal damages. Thereupon the action was again tried with a like result, a nonsuit upon the first cause of action and a verdict in favor of plaintiff upon the second cause of action. A motion was made by defendant upon the minutes to set aside the verdict, but was denied, and from the order denying that motion and the judgment entered upon that verdict, the defendant appeals. The plaintiff d.oes not appeal therefrom, but appeals from the order of nonsuit on the second trial. Mo judgment seems to have been entered on the nonsuit on the second trial, although an order was entered to that effect from which the plaintiff appeals; but the defendant stipulates that the order nonsuiting the plaintiff may be reviewed upon this appeal the same as though granted at the Trial Term which resulted in the judgment from which the defendant appeals.

As regards the second cause of action, as has already been stated, this court decided that the evidence offered to prove that claim was improperly excluded. So far as the work covered by the contract is concerned, it is quite clear that it must be done under [739]*739the superintendence and direction and subject to the approval of the city surveyor. By chapter 258 of the Laws of 1898 (adding to Laws of 1862, chap. 18, §§ 115a-115c) the authority for making the contract for cleaning streets is vested in the common council, and the question is now raised, and was on the former appeal, whether the city surveyor had authority to extend the work of cleaning streets beyond what was covered in the contract, and, further, it is contended on behalf of the defendant that he did not assume to do so. Aside from the question of the authority, the evidence relating to the city surveyor so assuming to act is not very satisfactory. It is true that he insisted that all the refuse should be removed from the streets, but there is no claim that he agreed to pay extra therefor. We have, however, concluded, under all the circumstances, to hold that he had the power as an incident to the subject-matter of the contract and that the evidence was sufficient at least to submit that question to the jury. We think such is the effect of our former decision.

The more serious question is the one which was raised upon the second trial, namely, the failure of proof as to the quantity of extra material removed and the amount of work done outside of that covered by the contract. The second cause of action seems to be based upon section 26 of the specifications forming a part of the contract, -which provides as follows: “ A^henever in doubt as to whether any material that may be found on the streets comes under the head of street dirt, the Contractor shall remove the same, provided the quantity thereof is less than half a cubic yard, and report the fact to the office of the City Surveyor.” The complaint so alleges it and states that in addition to the street sweepings and street dirt he was required to remove, other material from the paved streets brought from houses, lawns and yards and deposited in the street was so commingled with the street dirt, street sweepings and other material which the plaintiff was required to remove under his contract that it rendered it impossible to separate the same therefrom ; that he was requested to remove all of the material, and that there was doubt in the mind of the plaintiff as to whether the material referred to found on the street came under the head of street dirt under section 26 of the specifications, and so he removed the same, and as he alleges reported the same to the office of the city [740]*740surveyor, and that the material so found was less in amount than half of a cubic yard. This last allegation in reference to the quantity evidently refers to the different piles, the accumulation which was mixed with the street dirt. There is, however, no allegation in the complaint, nor does the plaintiff now contend, that the material so deposited in the streets not covered by his contract was so deposited and commingled by the defendant or any of its officers or agents, or with its permission or consent. The contract evidently intended that any accumulation of this character should be removed by the defendant where the given quantity was not more than half a cubic yard and that it should be reported to the office of the city surveyor very likely for the purpose of charging the expense of removing the same to the adjoining owner or other person so depositing it, but we think the evidence fails, to show that the plaintiff complied "with the contract in this regard. He stated verbally that he was removing all of the accumulation upon the streets, but he does not claim that he identified particular piles, nor reported the quantity in each pile or even in gross. Indeed, he was unable to do so upon the trial, and even assuming that this extra work was done entirely outside of the contract by the authority and direction of the proper officer of the city so as to bind it, and that the provision of this 26th subdivision in the specilications does not apply to the particular work for which the plaintiff now seeks to recover, still the evidence as to how much of the material removed was covered by the contract and what part was outside is so unsatisfactory that we think the verdict cannot be sustained.

The extra material which the defendant claims to have removed consisted largely of leaves which had fallen from the trees standing along the street and in the adjoining yard. He states that all of the street dirt and leaves that he removed from the paved area of the leaf-bearing districts during the leaf period from the last of September to the end of the season, November twenty-second, was 9,481 cubic yards, of which 6,160 he estimated would be doubtful, leaving 3,321 yards of what he called street dirt, and later stated that he considered it all doubtful, although it constituted the entire quantity of material removed. He considers the reasonable value forty cents per cubic yard to remove it, but charged the city on the basis of thirty cents per cubic yard, thus making the amount of [741]*741his claim $1,848. He frankly says that they were unable to tell whether those piles contained leaves coming from the yards or coming from the pavement. The manner of proving the quantity is well illustrated by the following question and answer: “Q.

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Related

Mott v. City of Utica
96 A.D. 495 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
114 A.D. 736, 100 N.Y.S. 150, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-city-of-utica-nyappdiv-1906.