Citation Numbers: 64 N.Y.S. 264, 51 A.D. 603
Filed Date: 4/14/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This action is brought to recover for work, labor, and services performed in the erection of a certain building owned by the defendant. The contract with the plaintiff was for tinning and galvanized iron work, to be performed agreeably to certain drawings and specifications made by an architect. The plaintiff claims to recover in this action, and the judgment has sustained his claim, for extra work, amounting in all to $190. The extra work consisted in changing a bay window and galvanized iron work on the tower of the building, for which is claimed $100, one bracket, $30, and the remainder of the bill is for labor and materials furnished. The evidence was sufficient from which the court could find that the item of the bracket, $30, was extra service; but as to the other items we are unable, from this record, to separate those for which a recovery might have been had, or to determine whether any recovery ought to have been allowed therefor. The specifications which were offered and received in evidence, and for which the contract provided, so far as they relate to the tower, are as follows:
“The main and store front cornices, on both streets, finial base, tower cornice, well covering, and the entire trim of tower to be made as per elevation of No. 26 galv. iron, shaped and ornamented as per design and detail, well riveted and soldered, braced with wrought iron every 6 ft., and anchored to the roofs and walls. All ornaments to be stamped or spun, and flat surfaces to be crimped or fine corrugated.”
It does not appear from the proof upon the part of the plaintiff whether the change from the details and drawings which was claimed to have been made in the bay window, assuming such change was ordered, required any more galvanized iron, or made the work more expensive. The only proof in this regard is that the plaintiff had put up some galvanized iron which he was required to take down, and the defendant promised to pay him therefor. The whole is embraced in the one item of the change in the bay window. The defendant denied plaintiff’s testimony in this regard, and, if this were all there was in the case, it would constitute a conflict of testimony upon which the court might find the whole item. But the defendant produced upon the trial the detailed plans and drawings, and testified that, while they were not the plans and details which the plaintiff had, yet they were the same thing upon which the plaintiff figured, and that they showed the work to be done as it was subsequently performed, and that the change was on account of the plaintiff not following the details and plans. The architect was also called, and he testified that the details and plans were the same as those upon which the plaintiff had figured, and they were then offered and received in evidence. Upon suggestion by the court that the defendant must show the actual plans which went into the possession of the plaintiff, motion was made to strike them from the record, which was granted, no objection being made by the defendant thereto. This motion
Judgment oí the municipal court reversed, and. new trial ordered; costs to abide the event.