New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Board of Water Commissioners

129 A. 384, 102 Conn. 488, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 A. 384 (New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Board of Water Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Board of Water Commissioners, 129 A. 384, 102 Conn. 488, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 66 (Colo. 1925).

Opinion

Keeler, J.

The first reason of appeal assigns error in sustaining the plaintiff's demurrer to paragraphs six to eleven of the answer. These paragraphs in themselves attempt to allege a complete and independent defense to the complaint and were evidently treated as such by the trial court, and properly so. As a preliminary question defendant invokes the rule that a demurrer interposed at any stage of the case searches the record and judgment is awarded against the party who first advances a defective pleading, and specifically urges that the complaint is defective in that it supplies no allegation “that plaintiff’s expenditures for supporting its track during the performance of defendant's work was due to any cause specified in the contract of indemnity.” The second paragraph of the *495 complaint pleads the written contract between the parties and annexes the same as an exhibit, making it part of the paragraph; the third paragraph counts upon the part of the contract as providing for indemnification for any expense incurred by plaintiff by reason of work done in connection with the construction of the pipes; the fourth alleges work performed by plaintiff pursuant to the contract, and the fifth pleads the value of the work. The trial court held correctly that this was pleading sufficient in form and substance to permit a recovery by plaintiff. Whether it was so in substance depends upon the construction*to be given to the license contract, Exhibit A, and this is considered at large in the latter part of this opinion. The paragraphs of the answer to which the demurrer is addressed are not singly or collectively a defense to the action. The sixth and seventh paragraphs, alleging execution of the contract, Exhibit A, and the employment of the contracting company by defendant, are merely introductory. The mere fact that in the general execution of the pipe-laying a. contractor was employed is immaterial and of no significance; the contract, Exhibit A, is an unqualified undertaking to indemnify plaintiff against expenses incurred by it in connection with the laying of the pipe. It is of no consequence whether the agent or contractor was an independent contractor. As soon as the plaintiff was at any expense connected with defendant’s construction, the provisions of the contract applied thereto. And for the same reasons it is equally immaterial to say that defendant’did not make a special contract with plaintiff to do the work actually performed, or that this work was within the terms of the contract between defendant and the contracting company, for which the latter was paid in full by the defendant, as alleged in paragraphs eight and nine of the answer. The evident *496 purpose of the defendant, in paragraph ten of the answer, is to claim that by reason of the facts therein set up, as heretofore stated, the plaintiff had waived its rights to be indemnified by way of reimbursement for expenses incurred by attempting to collect its bill from the contractor, and that it had no notice of plaintiff’s claim until the contractor had completed its work. Such a fact, if true, shows no intent to relinquish any right it might have under the contract. Paragraph eleven, alleging that at the date of settlement with its contractor defendant had sufficient funds in its hands due to the contractor to have paid plaintiff’s claim, had the latter used due diligence and given notice of its claim, is apparently an attempt to plead an estoppel. There is here plead no misrepresentation or concealment on the part of the plaintiff, which induced the defendant, in reliance thereon, to forego some right or advantage. Plaintiff was under no obligation to inform defendant that it intended to enforce the provisions of the contract between them. If it had a right of action against defendant, it could enforce it at any time within the period of limitation. The allegations of these paragraphs are immaterial, although in some respects evidentially available under the earlier allegations of the answer. There is nothing set forth in these paragraphs which would not be available in evidence under the prior allegations of the answer and, in fact, the finding of the) court shows that substantially all of them were raised at the trial, and had the attention of the court. This last consideration is a sufficient answer to defendant’s claim that it had the right to inchide the paragraphs in question, as emphasizing and elaborating its specific denials made earlier in the answer, even if they were not available as a complete or partial defense. This last consideration also removes the rulings on demurrer.

*497 While technically remaining the subject of appeal, and not ipso facto removed from the case by reason of subsequent trial of the issues of fact, yet when the very questions raised on the demurrer are in fact afterward passed upon at the trial, the appellate tribunal will not review the questions upon the state of the record existing at the time the demurrer was filed and argued. Making such a review would be to decide a moot question. Mechanics Bank v. Woodward, 74 Conn. 689, 51 Atl. 1084; Neuschtat v. Rosenthal, 87 Conn. 400, 87 Atl. 741; Sutherland v. Brown, 85 Conn. 67, 81 Atl. 1033. Referring to the demurrer and all the claims raised thereby, we have to remark that the fundamental claim of defendant lies in the correctness of its construction of the contract, Exhibit A, which is not admitted as a fact by the demurrer (Woodruff v. New York & N. E. R. Co., 59 Conn. 63, 90, 20 Atl. 17), and the proper construction of this instrument is the fundamental consideration in the instant case, and so treated at the hearing upon the merits.

Passing to the other reasons of appeal, the second alleges error by the court in holding that Exhibit A did not authorize defendant to do all of the work necessary in the intended construction. The court did not so hold in terms, nor was such a holding necessary to sustain the judgment rendered. If it were granted that under the contract defendant might go ahead and do all the work pertaining to laying its mains, that does not negative the right of the plaintiff to be reimbursed for expenses incurred by it in connection with the construction carried on by defendant. The fourth reason of appeal assigns error of the court in holding that defendant agreed to guarantee payment for work done and materials furnished to the contracting company under an independent contract with the latter. The court did not so hold, but on the contrary found a *498 request to plaintiff to undertake the work done by it by defendant’s agent other than the contracting company.

The sixth reason of appeal assigns error in the trial court’s holding that plaintiff might recover for work done and materials furnished which did not directly arise under the contract. The court did not so hold.

The third and fifth reasons of appeal as given in full in the statement of facts, appropriately raise the real question at issue in the case, that is, stated briefly, do the terms of Exhibit A obligate the defendant to pay for the work done and materials furnished in the way and under the circumstances detailed in the finding.

The contract, Exhibit A, is one of indemnity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A. 384, 102 Conn. 488, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-v-board-of-water-commissioners-conn-1925.