Sundstrom v. . State of New York

106 N.E. 924, 213 N.Y. 68, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 730
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 106 N.E. 924 (Sundstrom v. . State of New York) 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
Sundstrom v. . State of New York, 106 N.E. 924, 213 N.Y. 68, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 730 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Cardozo, J.

The claimants are the contractors for the construction of a section of the barge canal. Their contract is identified as contract No. 3. They have filed a claim for damages against the State on the ground that through its fault they have been subjected to increased expense. Their claim was in part sustained and in part *70 rejected by the Board of Claims. Cross-appeals to the Appellate Division resulted. In that court the award was modified to the extent that it was appealed from by the State, and affirmed to the extent that it was appealed from by the claimants. The case as it comes here brings up for review both the modification arid the affirmance.

(1) The first question is whether-the State is liable to the claimants because of leakage and overflow from the old Champlain canal. The result was to saturate the soil where the-work was going on, and to occasion an additional expense of over $60,000. The Board of Claims held that for this loss to the claimants the State was liable. The Appellate Division held that the award was in that respect erroneous, and reversed it. The ground of the reversal was that it was the claimants’ duty to satisfy themselves as to the character of the work, and that they took the risk of unforeseen conditions which might render it more difficult or expensive.

The old Champlain canal was built by the State many years ago. At the section where the leaks, occurred, it is situated to the east of the site of contract No. 3 and at a higher elevation. The distance between the two canals varies from a maximum of about eight hundred feet to a minimum of twenty. The intervening space was used as a spoil bank. Before the contract was made, one of the claimants visited the site, and went over it from end to end. At that time, however, the water had been emptied out of the old canal. There was, therefore, no leakage then. There were, however, ditches that ran at right angles to the canal, and that were used to carry off its waters. There were also at a few points some signs of swampy ground. The Board of Claims found that there were no surface indications that water would or had come from the old Champlain canal, and that there was no way in which the claimants could have ascertained its defective condition through any reasonable examination. The Appellate Division reversed *71 these findings. In so doing, it held in effect that the defects could have been discovered. It did not find, however, that they were in fact discovered. When the season of navigation opened in the middle of Hay, and the water was let into the canal, the leaks at once began. They continued, whenever the canal was open, during all the years of the work. The Board of Claims found that the leaks “were due to lack of repair and defective condition.’’ This finding was not disturbed at the Appellate Division. The order of that court enumerates the findings disapproved, and affirms all others. In this court, therefore, we are required to assume that “lackof repair and defective condition ” brought about the damage.

With that assumption established, the question is whether the State must make good the loss to its contractors. In the argument of its counsel, as in the opinion of the Appellate Division, stress has been laid upon the close contiguity between the sites of the two canals. It is urged that at some points their lines almost overlap, and that nowhere is there any considerable interval of space between them. As we view the case, this element of contiguity is not controlling. The question is not so much “where did the leaks arise ?” The question is rather, “ who was responsible for their existence ? ” Undoubtedly the claimants assumed the risk of any unforeseen conditions not due to the fault of the State, but, in the absence of actual notice, we do not think they assumed the risk of unforeseen conditions due to the negligent omission of the State to repair and safeguard its own structures. If these leaks had come, not from a canal, but from a natural body of water, which had permeated the adjoining-ground, we do not doubt that any increased cost must have been borne by the claimants. If they had come from the State’s canal, but had not been due to the failure to use reasonable care in maintaining and preserving it, the loss must have fallen on the claimants. Leakage inseparable from a canal, even when constructed and used *72 with an adequate degree of prudence, ought not to make the State answerable in damages to its contractors. In view, however, of the decision of the Appellate Division, we have no right to examine the record and determine for ourselves whether the finding in respect of the cause of the leaks has support in the evidence. We must accept the findings as they are given to us. Accepting them, we think that liability to. the claimants follows. The State is liable to a neighboring proprietor for the failure to maintain in proper condition the walls and banks of its canals. (Reed v. State of N. Y., 108 N. Y. 407.) We do not say that its liability to its contractors goes so far as its liability to adjoining owners. There is certainly no liability to contractors in the absence of negligence. We think, however, that even toward contractors the State is under a duty to use reasonable care in maintaining its own property in safety, and that for failure to fulfill that duty it is answerable in damages. A contractor undertaking work of excavation near a sewer in a city street would have to bear the extra cost due to the proximity of the obstruction, but, unless by special contract, he would not assume the risk of the city’s flooding his work because of a negligent omission to keep its sewer in repair. Such a case does not differ in principle from the one before us. In these circumstances, we must apply against the state the principle applied against a municipal corporation in Horgan v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y. (160 N. Y. 516). The ruling there was that if such a corporation by its own act causes work to be done by a contractor to be more expensive than it otherwise would have been according to the terms of the original contract, it is liable for the increased cost.

We have thus far considered the defendant’s liability aside from special provisions of its contract with the claimants. Some of these provisions are relied on by the State in avoidance of the liability that the general rules of law would otherwise impose. We think they fail of that *73 effect. It is provided that “ the estimate of quantities is to be accepted as approximate only, proposers being required to form their own judgment as to quantity and character of the work, by personal examination upon the ground where the work is proposed to be done, and on the specifications and drawings relating thereto, or by such other means as they shall choose.” .The only purpose of this provision is to make it plain that the estimate of quantities is approximate. The direction to bidders to form their own judgment as to quantities and character of the work, merely points out to them the means by which the engineer’s estimate of quantities may be corrected. It is also provided that

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Bluebook (online)
106 N.E. 924, 213 N.Y. 68, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sundstrom-v-state-of-new-york-ny-1914.