Schultze v. . Goodstein

73 N.E. 21, 180 N.Y. 248, 18 Bedell 248, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 1073
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 73 N.E. 21 (Schultze v. . Goodstein) 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
Schultze v. . Goodstein, 73 N.E. 21, 180 N.Y. 248, 18 Bedell 248, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 1073 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinion

Vann, J.

This action was brought by the assignee of a contractor to foreclose a mechanic’s lien filed by him, and the main issues raised by the answer of the owner were that the contractor failed to perform his contract for the plumbing work and materials in a block of five dwellings, and that he procured the certificate of the architect required thereby through misrepresentation and fraud. A counterclaim was also set forth for the expense of necessary repairs made by the owner. The defendant Deng, as the assignee of a subcontractor who had filed a notice of lien, admitted the allegations of the complaint and sought a foreclosure of his lien through service of his answer upon the owner as well as upon the plaintiff. The contract ¡Drice for the plumbing was $11,500, but before the action was commenced payments had been made, so that the amount involved was about $1,375.

Upon the trial evidence was given tending to support the claims of the respective parties, so that questions of fact were presented in relation to which reasonable minds might differ. The trial judge decided that the complaint should be dismissed and in giving his reasons for this decision, which was in the short form as permitted by the practice then prevailing, he found in substance that the contractor failed to perform ln"s *251 contract in that he furnished earthen sewer pi¡)cs, flush pipes of “E” thickness and waste pipes one and one-half inches in diameter, instead of iron sewer pipes, flush pipes of “D ” thickness and waste pipes two inches in diameter as required by the contract. He found that these deviations “ were not caused by inadvertent or unintentional omission of the said contractor ” and that he was “ guilty of a wilful and intentional departure from his contract,” in the particulars mentioned, without the authority of the owner or architect. He further found that the notice of claim tiled by the contractor under the Mechanics’ Lien Law was “ false and untrue,” to his knowledge, “in the three respects hereinbefore specified.” No finding was made or conclusion announced in relation to the counterclaim. The judgment entered upon this decision was reversed by the Appellate Division, two of the justices dissenting, and a new trial was ordered. From the order of reversal, which did not disturb the facts found by the trial judge, the owner appealed to this court.

As the order appealed from does not state that the judgment was reversed upon a question of fact, we are required to presume that the reversal was based upon questions of law-only. (Code Civ. Pro. § 1338.) If the record discloses a reversible error of law, the action of the Appellate Division must be sustained, otherwise it is our duty to reverse their order and reinstate the judgment of the-trial court.

No essential fact was found without evidence to support it and the facts found sustain the judgment rendered. (Van Clief v. Van Vechten, 130 N. Y. 571, 579 ; Spence v. Ham, 163 N. Y. 220, 225 ; Aeschlimann v. Presbyterian Hospital, 165 N. Y. 296.) The only question remaining, therefore, is whether a material error was committed in receiving or rejecting evidence. (National Harrow Co. v. Bement & Sons, 163 N. Y. 505.)

The specifications, which were part of the contract, required the contractor “ to warrant all the plumbing and gas-fitting to remain in perfect working order for one year after the completion thereof, during which time he will have to make all *252 necessary repairs free of charge.” The owner introduced evidence tending to show that lie was compelled at various times during the first year to expend over $300 for temporary repairs to the plumbing, after due notice to the contractor, who neglected to remedy the.defects. The following questions were asked of the contractor, when called as a witness for the plaintiff, each of which was excluded on the objection of the owner that it was immaterial and incompetent, and an exception was taken : “ What would be the true and reasonable value to keep the plumbing in such a house in good .repair for one year ? What would be the proper cost to keep in repair the plumbing work which was done by you in those 62nd Street houses for one year after completion by yóu ? What is the true cost to keep all the plumbing and gas fixtures put in by you in these houses in perfect working order for one year after they were completed by you ? ”

These questions were unfortunate in form and defective in substance. They did not call for any fact relating to the actual cost of the repairs, nor for an opinion as to how much it was reasonably worth to make them as they were made, or to make such as were necessary. Ho safe opinion could be given upon the subject by the most skillful and intelligent expert, unless the defects were described or in some wav' included in the question. The expense of making the repairs depended upon what they were and what there was to be done, which was not submitted to the witness. So far as appeared he did not know their nature or extent, nor how much labor and material were necessary to make them. He had seen the houses but once after they were completed and that was very early in the year to which the covenant to repair- related. The actual cost ivas a fact and the reasonable expense was a fact, and evidence bearing upon either of these facts could not be met by an opinion as to what the fact should be, without anything to base it on. The expense necessarily depended upon the condition of the plumbing and the defects which appeared as time passed. It would be less if the materials and workmanship were good when the plumb *253 ing was first put in than if they were bad. There might be few defects or many, depending on circumstances, and an opinion as to what the expense would be or should be without describing what was needed was abstract and incompetent. (Smith v. Brady, 17 N. Y. 173, 177.)

An expert plumber called by the plaintiff was asked the following questions, which were excluded as incompetent upon the objection of the owner: “ In your estimation is a pipe of the diameter of one and one-half inches preferable under laundry tubs to one of two inches, where the drain is two inches in diameter? Do you know of any case where earthen sewer pipes would be preferred over sewer pipes made of iron ? ” By these questions the plaintiff sought to show that the materials used by the contractor would answer the purpose as well as those called for by the contract, although they were of a different kind and cost less. A contractor may not deliberately violate his contract by the use of earthen construction instead of iron and small pipes instead of large ones, and yet claim that he has done as he agreed because the result is just as good. Unless the owner had the right to contract for what he wanted and to get what he contracted for, there was no use in making a contract. A building contract, like any other, is to be fairly performed according to its terms, and any substantial change, unless authorized by the owner or architect, is made at'the risk of the contractor. In order to avoid injustice the law tolerates unsubstantial deviations made in good faith, but it exacts full compensation therefor and permits a recovery on the theory of substantial performance, only after the proper deductions have been made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.E. 21, 180 N.Y. 248, 18 Bedell 248, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 1073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultze-v-goodstein-ny-1905.