Woarms v. Becker

84 A.D. 491, 82 N.Y.S. 1086
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 A.D. 491 (Woarms v. Becker) 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
Woarms v. Becker, 84 A.D. 491, 82 N.Y.S. 1086 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

This action is brought to recover damages for the breach of a subcontract for the furnishing of bronze and other work in the construction of the Albany Savings Bank, , at the city of Albany, in this State. Both parties claimed a breach of the particular contract, and each party has brought an. action against the other, to recover damages therefor. The action in which the present, defendant is -plaintiff was previously tried and a verdict rendered therein by the jury, awarding damages in his favor. Upon appeal from the judgment entered thereon, this court reversed the same for errors committed-in the charge of the court to the jury. In reaching a conclusion therein considerable discussion was had, the court dividing in its opinion, a majority agreeing to reverse the judgment for errors committed in submitting the case to the jury, (Becker v. Woarms, 72 App. Div. 196.) The opinion of Mr. Justice Ingraham, delivered upon the former appeal, discusses in detail the terms of the respective contracts; that between the plaintiffs in this action and the Albany Savings Bank, and the sub-contract between the-plaintiffs herein and the defendant. They are the same contracts which appear in the present record and- are fully and completely [493]*493stated in the opinion. It is not, therefore, essential that we restate them now.

The record in the present case, in view of the former decision and the division of the court thereon, has been the subject of careful and deliberate examination, with a view of harmonizing so far as possible the variance in view which previously existed. The evidence "in the present case does not materially differ from the evidence which appeared in the former record, and does not differ at all as to the relations which existed between the parties themselves, their attitude towards the Albany Savings Bank and the control of the architect in passing upon the fulfillment of the contract.

The examination which has been had leads us to the conclusion that the following language contained in the opinion of Mr. Justice Ingraham expresses the correct rule of law to be applied to the present controversy and governs the respective parties in disposition of the same. Therein it was said: “ The plaintiff (Becker) knew the position in which the defendants stood, and he accepted the architect of the bank as the person who should have the power to determine whether or not the work that he did and the materials that he furnished were a compliance with his contract with the defendants (plaintiffs herein), and that without his approval such work and materials would not be used by the defendants. Over this architect the defendants (plaintiffs, herein) had no control. They were not in a position in which they could dispense with his services or accept work furnished for the building without his approval. This condition was the one in reference to which the parties contracted. * * * The plaintiff (Becker) was informed before he made this contract with the defendants that the defendants (plaintiffs herein) were erecting this building for the Albany Savings Bank, and that it was to comply with their contract with the bank that this sub-contract between the plaintiff and the defendants was made. The contract between the jfiaintiff and the defendants was, therefore, made in express reference to the contract between the defendants and the bank; and I think this contract was competent evidence to show that under their contract with the bank the defendants were prevented from using a portion of the materials furnished by the plaintiff in the performance of their work under their contract with the bank and that [494]*494the determination of the architect was made in good faith under that contract. When the plaintiff (Becker) refused to comply with the directions of the architect and furnish the bronze work according to his construction of the requirements of the contract and plans and specifications between the plaintiff and the defendants, the defendants were placed in the situation which this provision in the contract (requiring the work and materials furnished by the plaintiff to be approved by the architect, and providing, that in ease any of said work done or materials furnished- should be unsatisfactory to him, the plaintiff would remove such unsatisfactory work or materials and supply the place thereof with other work and materials satisfactory to the said architect) was designed to meet,, so that the defendants would not be required to accept a performance of the contract by the plaintiff which would not be accepted by the bank as a compliance by the defendants with it. There is no contradiction of the testimony of the architect that this work was not satisfactory to him and was not such as he would allow to be used in the erection of this building. ISTor is there anything to impugn the good faith of the architect in the determination to.which he had arrived, nor anything to show that that refusal was arbitrary or unreasonable. The plaintiff (Becker) has testified that in his opinion the work was such as was called for by the contract. The architect has determined that the work was not such as was- called for by the contract and that it was not satisfactory to’ him, and, by the agreement between the parties,, it was the determination of the architect that was to control in the absence of fraud or bad faith, and there is no allegation or evidence to justify a finding that there was any bad faith or fraud in the action of the architect in the determination at which he arrived.”

In the present case it appears that the defendant Understood the effect of his contract, as he stated when the dispute arose that he understood the architect was the arbiter; and when Remington,- his representative, refused to permit the bronze work to be put into the building, the defendant Becker acquiesced in samples of the work, which he had furnished, being sent by express to the architect for his approval; and it' is undisputed that the architect upon the reception of these samples approved of the cast work, and- disapproved of the drawn or hammer work and refused to permit it to be placed in [495]*495the building. Standing, therefore, upon the construction of the contract, the rights of the bank and the action of the architect, it necessarily follows that when the defendant Becker refused to proceed with the work after the architect had rejected the same, he was guilty of a breach of contract, and rendered himself liable to respond in damages for the consequence of such breach.

If this were the only question which the case presented, it is clear that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover in this action and that they were under no liability to Becker, as they had been guilty of no breach. The defendant, however, claims that the plaintiffs, in pursuance of an agreement and through their agents, directed him to construct the bronze work in the precise manner in which it was constructed; that he was bound to follow their direction, and so far as it departed from, the contract, the plaintiffs were responsible therefor, as the defendant had no alternative but to do as they told Mm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 A.D. 491, 82 N.Y.S. 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woarms-v-becker-nyappdiv-1903.