Filed Date: 2/7/1908
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Plaintiff sued to recover a balance of $1,650, which he claimed was due him on a contract for the furnishing of trim and carpenter work on a building in the city of New York, and for $173.25 extra work. The extra work was included in the verdict, and the question of extra work is, therefore, of no moment here. In the contract between plaintiff and defendant, plaintiff agreed to provide the materials' and perform the work for the completion of the interior trim for building on the southeast corner of Riverside Drive and West 127th street, all window jambs and trims, kitchen dressers, butler’s pantry dressers, wardrobes and basin closet, etc., per plans and specifications. The specifications provided, under the heading “Wardrobes,” that plaintiff was to “furnish to each of the bedrooms and- chambers, of sizes directed, portable wardrobes, * * * wardrobes to be of same material as finish of room.” The-plans call for wardrobes only-in the servants’ rooms, and do not show wardrobes in any other room. Thereafter, and after the contract and specifications had been signed, the defendant wrote on the plans:
“No stair rails; no picture moldings, except in servants’ rooms, as marked; as to style of doors O. K. Oalvert Construction Co.”
Thereafter the defendant wrote on a sketch showing the doors:
“You need make no wardrobes for any rooms but the servants’ rooms, as shown on the plans.”
The building contained 105 bedrooms. The plaintiff did not furnish any portable wardrobes. Pie put wardrobes annexed to the wall in about 40 rooms. These rooms were the servants’ rooms. Defendant demanded portable wardrobes for the remaining bedrooms, and the plaintiff refused to furnish them. The defendant thereupon purchased elsewhere 65 portable wardrobes, for which he paid $15 each. No allowance on the contract was ever made by the plaintiff for this sum, or any sum paid by defendant for the wardrobes; nor does it seem that any abatement from the full contract price was made by plaintiff. The learned court below left to the jury the question of the value of the 65 wardrobes purchased by defendant, which they fixed-at $14 each, and thereupon the court directed a verdict for plaintiff of the amount claimed by plaintiff, less the value of the wardrobes, so. found by the jury.
Plaintiff claimed the contract and specifications were ambiguous, vague, and contradictory on their face, and, further, that plaintiff had performed the contract, or that the -defendant had excused full performance. It would seem that the court below properly construed
Plaintiff complains of the ruling of the learned trial judge excluding a letter written by plaintiff; but as neither the letter, nor any exception to its exclusion, appear in the record, it is impossible even to consider this point.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.