Parr v. President & Trustees of the Greenbush

72 N.Y. 463, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 532
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 72 N.Y. 463 (Parr v. President & Trustees of the Greenbush) 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
Parr v. President & Trustees of the Greenbush, 72 N.Y. 463, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 532 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Earl, J.

It is not disputed that the board of trustees of the village of Greenbush had authority to make the alleged contract of December 20, 1870. Such authority was conferred by the village charter (Laws of 1854, chap. 383, §16). It could be made at any meeting of the board regularly convened. There is nothing in the charter which requires that it should be in writing, formally executed by the parties. A simple resolution of the board, accepting the proposition of the other party, could make a contract, or a resolution of the board specifying the terms of the contract assented to by the other party could make a contract; and a contract thus made would not be invalid because the clerk had not recorded the resolution in his book of minutes. The clerk is required to attend the meetings of the trustees and keep and record minutes of their proceedings ; but the proceedings are not invalidated because the clerk neglects his duty to record them.

On the 1st of November, 1870, the trustees passed a resolution to lay and flag a brick sidewalk on the west side of *467 East street, from Partition street to Second avenue. On the sixteenth day of December following, the plaintiff made to the defendants a written proposal, accompanied by a bond to do the work. On the twentieth day of December, at a special meeting of the board of trustees, held at their office, at which the clerk, president and all the trustees attended, the written contract of that date, which had before been drawn up by the president, xvas produced; and it was there signed by the plaintiff and the president and all the trustees but one, and was left in the hands of one of the trustees. The contract recited that it xvas made between the president and trustees of the corporation of Greenbush ” of the first part, and Bichard Parr, Jr., of the second part, and it provided for flagging, paving and curbing the xvest side of East street from Partition street to Second avenue in said village. It provided that the work was to be done under the direction of the street committee, and that the party of the first part xvas to furnish “ all the necessary sand and gravel, and to properly grade the street.” It closed by reciting “ in witness xvhereof the parties to these presents have hereunto set their hands and seals; and then followed the signatures of the president and all the trustees but one, and of Parr. The seals were the individual seals of the trustees, and no official designation or description was attached to any name but that of the president.

It is clear that this was intended to be a contract between Parr and the village. The form of the contract and the circumstances under which it was executed shoxv this. It xvas made at a regular meeting of the board, in pursuance of a previous proposal by Parr. It xvas reduced to xvriting and then signed, so that there should be no mistake as to its terms. It xvas perfectly good xvitkout any signatures. The signatures of the trustees are important only to show that at that meeting it was assented to by a majority of the trustees. It is not a case where the plaintiff has to rely upon a written contract, formally executed, to sustain his action. If this contract had been laid doxvn there, and the ayes and noes *468 hacl been called upon a resolution to adopt or accept it, it would have been just as valid. And when the names were called, if each trustee had signed his name as a witness of his assent, it would have been in the same condition it is now. From all that took place then and afterward, it was at least a question of fact whether that contract was then and there made between the plaintiff and the board of trustees by the official action of the board. And that question was submitted to the jury, and it cannot now be said that it was not made.

The contract, provided that the work should be commenced in May, 1871, and completed without unnecessary delay. The work was not, in fact, commenced until October, 1873, and it was completed, as claimed by plaintiff, in June, 1874. The long delay in the commencement of the work is not fully explained. There is no evidence that the plaintiff had abandoned the contract or that he was in default in its performance. He could do nothing until the village did the grading and furnished the sand and gravel. This the village never did or offered to do. But some months before he commenced the work he notified the defendants that they should furnish the grade, sand and gravel. Afterward, he notified them to give up his bond or perform, and permit him to perform, his contract. Finally, on the 30th day of September, 1873, at a regular meeting of the trustees, a copy of the contract was produced, and a resolution was adopted, requiring Parr to go on and perform his contract without delay ; and also a resolution “ that if the necessary sand and gravel are not furnished, and the proper grading is not done in season for the said Parr to commence the work, that the said Parr is authorized to furnish the sand and gravel and do such grading.”

After Parr had finished his work on the 13th day of January, 1874, he presented his bills for payment to the board of trustees, at a regular meeting; one bill for work, under the contract of December 20, 1870, amounting to $11,006; and three other bills for work, sand and gravel, under the *469 resolution of September 30, 1873, amounting to $6,283.25. These bills were then referred to the committee on accounts, and at the next meeting, held January 20, 1874, a majority of the committee having reported the bills correct, it was resolved that they be allowed and paid. This action was subsequently commenced.

As before stated there is no evidence that the contract of December 20, 1870, was at any time abandoned with the consent of Parr. But yet the question of abandonment was submitted to the jury, and of that the defendants cannot complain. Upon the trial the defendants claimed that the contract of December, 1870, and the resolution of September, 1873, were the result of fraud practiced by Parr, and of fraud and conspiracy between him and the trustees, or some of them in office at the dates named. It was also claimed that the contract was not fully performed, and that the work and material were very inferior, imperfect and insufficient, and that the trustees in office in January, 1874, accepted the work, and audited and allowed plaintiff's bills by some fraud practiced by plaintiff, or by some fraud and conspiracy between him and some of the trustees. The principal contention at the trial was as to the character of the work done and material furnished in the performance of the contract; and there was much evidence tending to show that the job was very imperfectly performed. Whether it was properly and honestly performed was the most important issue tried. Upon that issue, the plaintiff offered in evidence the following certificate of the street superintendent of the village:

“ I, the superintendent of streets of the village of Green-bush, do hereby certify that Richard Parr has completed his contract with the village in flagging and. curbing the west side of East street in said village, in accordance with the terms of his written contract, the work having been done in good and workmanlike manner, and all materials used are as called for. (Signed) WILLIAM F. RYAN.”

*470

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.Y. 463, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parr-v-president-trustees-of-the-greenbush-ny-1878.