Phœnix Iron Co. v. Metropole Construction Co.

125 A.D. 479, 109 N.Y.S. 858, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2809

This text of 125 A.D. 479 (Phœnix Iron Co. v. Metropole Construction Co.) 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
Phœnix Iron Co. v. Metropole Construction Co., 125 A.D. 479, 109 N.Y.S. 858, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2809 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien filed against premises at the southeasterly corner of Fifth avenue and Sixteenth street, in the borough of Manhattan, Hew York. The appellant ¡Rothschild was the owner of the premises, and he contracted with the appellant The Metropole Construction Company for the erection of a fifteen-story office building thereon. The plaintiff contracted with the Metropole Construction Company to furnish and erect the structural steel and iron work. Plaintiff was the only lienor.

The property was released from the lien on the application of the owner, who gave his bond, with the defendant the Fidelity and Casualty Company, as surety. The plaintiff alleged complete performance and demanded judgment for a balance of the contract price of the work, together with the agreed compensation to be made for extra work. The Fidelity and Casualty Company put in issue the material allegations of the complaint, but it offered no proof upon the trial, and although it took an appeal, it did not appear on the argument of the appeal. The plaintiff alleged that the Metropole Construction Company duly performed its contract with the owner and that at the time of filing the lien and prior to the commencement of the action, there was due to the Metropole Construction Company from the owner a sum in excess of the amount of the plaintiff’s claim herein.” The Metropole Construction Company and the owner served separate answers, but neither denied these allegations of the complaint. Both answers put in issue the allegations of the complaint concerning performance by the plaintiff and with respect to the amount claimed to be due and owing to it. The Metropole Construction Company interposed a counterclaim, demanding judgment against the plaintiff for $12,000 damages, alleged to have been caused by the plaintiff’s neglect to perform its contract work in time, whereby it claimed to have been obliged to do extra work and incur extra expense in getting the building ready for occupancy by the 1st day of February, 1906, in accordance with its contract with the owner. Upon the trial the Metropole Construction Company offered no evidence of any of the items of damage set up in its alleged counterclaim. The owner also interposed a counterclaim against the plaintiff and demanded [481]*481judgment against it for $80,000 damages, alleged to have been sustained through its failure to perform its contract work within the time therein limited therefor, whereby the owner claimed that he was delayed in renting the building, it being alleged that the plaintiff knew that the building was being erected for the purpose of letting the same. The sub-contract with the plaintiff was introduced in evidence but the general contract with the owner was not, and although its production was requested upon the trial by counsel for the plaintiff, the defendants failed to produce it. The record contains no evidence concerning the terms of this contract either with respect to the time of the completion of the work or otherwise.

The plaintiff could not proceed with its work until the foundation upon which the grillage beams were to rest was constructed. The contract between the plaintiff and the Metropole Construction Company which was dated June 27, 1904, contemplated that this foundation would be ready by the 15th day of August, 1904, for the plaintiff agreed to have the grillage beams upon the ground ready to be set on that day. The contract further provided that the plaintiff should have the columns and beams up to and including the basement floor beams in place by the 15th day of September, 1904, and that from that time on the plaintiff should set one tier of columns and two floors of beams ‘r every ten working days until completed.” The general contractor was delayed in constructing the foundation and did not have the same ready for the grillage beams until the month of April, 1905, or about eight months after it was contemplated that it should be ready. The plaintiff was to manufacture t íe iron and steel at its plant in Phcenixville, Penn. The contract provided that on the tenth day of each month, the plaintiff should receive eighty per cent of the value of the work “ furnished or put up at the building during the preceding month.” It was evidently understood that the plaintiff should not deliver any of the material at the building until the foundation was constructed and ready for the grillage beams. The plaintiff being thus deprived of a percentage of the value of the. material which it had prepared for the building and which it would have received, had it been permitted to proceed with the work in accordance with the contract, evidently opened negotiations with the construction company with a view to [482]*482obtaining some indemnity for this loss. Accordingly, on the 10th day of November, 1904, an agreement was made between them by which it was provided that payments will be made on material ready to ship at Phosnixville, Pa., and which cannot be shipped on account of the foundations not being sufficiently advanced, said payments to be 80% of the proportional value of the work under the contract,” and the plaintiff agreed to allow the construction company five per cent on such payments from the time made to the time when the material was delivered at the site of the building, the plaintiff, however, reserving the right to submit the question to arbitration under the arbitration clause of the sub-contract between the plaintiff and the Metropole Construction Company, and the agreement further contained a provision as follows : “That no rights under said contract are altered hereby.” This supplementary agreement evidently contemplated that the original contract should be carried out, except as to the time of performance; but otherwise it was intended to leave each party to his existing rights and remedies thereunder, and, as we view it, the modification of the contract has no material bearing on the questions presented for decision.

After the plaintiff was permitted to proceed in the month of April, 1905, it performed the work with due diligence and within the time required by the contract until thirteen stories of the structure were completed. At this time the preponderance of the evidence shows there was a delay of about one month, and for this delay the owner claims the'right to counterclaim against the plaintiff his damages for the loss of one month’s rental of the building and for rebates which he was obliged to allow to the tenants on account of his inability to give them possession on the 1st day of February, 1906, he having contracted with his tenants to give them possession at that time. Prior to the time the plaintiff commenced upon the building, negotiations had been had between the architect, who represented both the owner and the construction company, and the plaintiff, with a view to adding another story and making certain changes and alterations in the plans with respect to the structures to be erected on the roof and the incidental changes rendered necessary with respect - to the light shaft and support for the elevators. The compensation to be paid to the plaintiff for this extra [483]*483work was agreed upon April 3, 1905, and the plans for the change were approved by the building department on the twenty-fourth day of the same month.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A.D. 479, 109 N.Y.S. 858, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phnix-iron-co-v-metropole-construction-co-nyappdiv-1908.