Stokes Brothers, Inc. v. Drefs

244 A.D. 524, 279 N.Y.S. 884, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5862
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 244 A.D. 524 (Stokes Brothers, Inc. v. Drefs) 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
Stokes Brothers, Inc. v. Drefs, 244 A.D. 524, 279 N.Y.S. 884, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5862 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien, demanding $4,842.50. Defendants counterclaimed for $9,500 for defective workmanship. The judgment, granted to plaintiff, was derived in the following manner:

Contract price of house........................... $30,054 00

Contract price of garage.......................... 2,600 00

Extras (twelve items undisputed by defendants)..... 1,061 10

Extras (forty items disputed but allowed)........... 3,418 36

$37,133 46

Less payments in cash by defendants... $33,300 00

Less allowance, by referee, for omissions

and defects in work................ 1,281 92

- 34,581 92

Amount of judgment......................... $2,551 54

Of the amount allowed to plaintiff $778.31 represents items for extras for which no written orders were given by defendants, although the contract provides for written orders for all extras. The complaint alleges full and complete performance of the contract, and says nothing about a waiver by defendants of the provision for written orders for extras.

Upon the trial plaintiff offered proof of fifty-two extra items of work and materials. As to twenty-five of these, defendants objected on the ground that they were not supported by written orders. Then the following colloquy occurred: Plaintiff’s counsel said: I think that written orders can be waived by the parties.” Counsel for defendants said: There is no waiver pleaded, if the [526]*526Court please.” The referee stated: “ I think we better take all the facts and then pass on them when I dispose of the entire case.” The referee further said to counsel for defendants: “You have the right to object to the allowance of anything on the ground there is no written order, if such is the fact, * * * I will take the evidence and get all of the facts in regard to the case, and then pass on the merits of the question when I dispose of the entire case.” Defendants duly took exception, and it was agreed that without further objections defendants were deemed to have taken exceptions to all evidence of oral waiver of the provision for written orders for extras.

It is doubtless true that defendants could orally waive the provision for written orders, and they would be estopped from taking the benefit of extras orally ordered by them, relying on the contract provision for written orders. (General Electric Co. v. National Contracting Co., 178 N. Y. 369; Dunn v. Steubing, 120 id. 232; Solomon v. Vallette, 152 id. 147; Beatty v. Guggenheim Exploration Co., 225 id. 380, 387.)

The error was in having permitted proof of such waiver under a complaint alleging performance of the contract according to its terms, not waiver of its provisions.

“ It is well settled that under an allegation of full and complete performance, evidence of waiver of performance of either covenants or conditions is inadmissible.” (Kelly v. St. Michael’s Roman Catholic Church, 148 App. Div. 767.) (See, also, Granger Co. v. Brown-Ketcham Iron Works, 204 N. Y. 218.)

To be sure, the trial court had a wide discretion to allow the complaint to be amended so as to plead waiver, although it has been said by this court: “ Such relief should be granted only when some reason for granting the application is made to appear, or some measure of excuse for failure to put the pleading in proper form within the time prescribed by the statute for that purpose is given.” (Quarantiello v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 145 App. Div. 138.)

The trial dragged through a period of about two years, and no attempt was made to amend the complaint, and then, shortly before the case was decided, plaintiff made a motion, unsupported by affidavits, to conform the complaint to the proofs in regard to oral waivers.

Defendants objected to the amendment, as they had a right to do. Amendment of a pleading should not be allowed to cure errors to which exceptions have been taken.

The following language is taken from the opinion in the case of Audley v. Townsend (126 App. Div. 431): “ A pleading cannot be conformed to the proof when there is objection taken in due [527]*527time to the sufficiency of the pleading, or to the admission of the evidence. * * * It is only when no objection is taken, or when at the end of the case, evidence having been received without objection, and the question is then raised, that the trial court is warranted in making an order amending the pleadings to conform to the proofs.”

And in Molloy v. Village of Briarcliff Manor (217 N. Y. 577, 580) it was said: Of course the decision of the question whether plaintiff’s laches in making a motion for an amendment of his pleadings should be overlooked and excused rested entirely in the discretion of the trial judge, but it is a rule superior to the exercise of discretion that a party shall not be thus allowed to have his pleading amended when the result will be to deprive his adversary of a valid objection to the admission of evidence under the pleading as it stood before amendment.” (See, also, New York Lubricating Oil Co. v. Mills Oil Co., 173 App. Div. 628, and Lumen Bearing Co. v. Mosle, 221 id. 572.)

Furthermore, defendants not only objected to the amendment of the complaint in a maimer to deprive them of the benefit of their valid objections, but asked that, if the amendment were allowed, they be permitted to offer further proof to show that no oral waivers were in fact given by them. And this request was refused, and the referee decided the case without making any ruling upon the objections taken.

We think these errors call for a reversal of the judgment and the granting of a new trial.

There were also some errors in the allowance of extras, regardless of the form of the complaint. A few of these errors will be noted.

Extra item No. 14 (reference being to plaintiff’s bill of particulars) was allowed at seventy-five dollars, although plaintiff’s own proof was that it was only thirty-five dollars.

Extra item No. 49, allowed at eighteen dollars and ninety cents, was for changing door hinges which plaintiff’s own witness admitted made a noise ” and were not in good adjustment, and they were replaced.”

Extra item No. 38 was allowed at nine dollars. This was for six hours’ time of a carpenter, at one dollar and fifty cents an hour, in setting two door checks.” Plaintiff’s only proof that it took six hours to do the work was that the carpenter “ turned in ” that much time. These door checks ” or stops are installed by fastening with a few screws. Plaintiff’s evidence is that defendants furnished them at their own expense and that plaintiff had one of its carpenters attach them. One of defendants swore that she saw the carpenter do the work and that it engaged his time for twenty [528]*528minutes. It is inconceivable that it required anything like six hours for such a trifling bit of work.

Furthermore, considering that plaintiff drew the contracts here involved, and prepared the plans and specifications, we think that several items of extras were allowed on insufficient evidence.

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244 A.D. 524, 279 N.Y.S. 884, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-brothers-inc-v-drefs-nyappdiv-1935.