
    The Nason Manufacturing Co., Resp’t, v. Benjamin F. Stephens, App’lt.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals, Second Division,
    
    
      Filed October 6, 1891.)
    
    Contract—Extra work—Damages.
    Plaintiff - contracted to build for defendant an extension to bis water tower, defendant agreeing to keep the water at such height as might be desired for convenience of the workmen. The work was not completed at the time specified, but was afterward done, but defendant refused to. keep the water at the height required by plaintiff. If that had been done the work could have been done on a raft; as it was not, plaintiff was obliged to construct scaffolding. In an action to recover on the _ contract and for such extra work, Held, that it was incumbent upon plaintiff to prove that the deviation increased the expense of doing the work, and that in ihe absence of evidence as to the cost of constructing the raft, it was error to allow a recovery of the entire expense of constructing the scaffolding.
    Appeal from judgment entered on order of the general term ■of the supreme court in the second judicial department, affirming judgment entered upon report of a referee in favor of the plaintiff.
    On about the 1st of July, 1883, the plaintiff entered into con"tract with the defendant to construct for the latter an extension to the stand pipe or water tower of the Coney Island Water Works at Gravesend on Long Island from the top of it, then seventy-two feet from the ground, to the additional height of forty feet, in the manner and of the dimensions particularly specified, and complete it by the 1st day of August then next, for the sum •of $1,240; and the defendant undertook to maintain the water level in the pipe at such height as might be desired by the plaintiff for the convenience of its workmen. The plaintiff did not within that time proceed to the performance of the work. But after-wards the plaintiff caused the addition to the tower to be constructed, and the work done upon it was completed about the 1st of November. 1883. The referee found that the agreement of the parties was modified and the time for the completion of the work extended; but that the defendant declined to maintain the water level in the tower at the height required by the plaintiff for its workmen; and that as the consequence the expense of $849.75 was incurred by the plaintiff in the construction of scaffolding on •the outside of the tower to enable the plaintiff to perform the work ; and for that sum with interest in addition to the contract price the referee directed judgment for the plaintiff, less $175 allowed to the defendant by way of counterclaim for partial default of the plaintiff in the performance of the contract
    
      Charles N. Morgan, for app’lt; Theodore F. Miller, for resp’t
    
      
       Reversing 21 N. Y. State Rep., 428.
    
   Bradley, J.

While the performance by the plaintiff of the contract was a condition precedent to the right of recovery, the conclusion of the referee that it was substantially performed had ■the support of evidence, and therefore must, for the purposes of this review, be deemed conclusive. Smith v. Brady, 17 N. Y., 173; Woodward v. Fuller, 80 id., 312.

The main question has relation to the claim allowed the plaintiff for the expense of the scaffolding constructed on the outside of the tower to support the workmen as they proceeded to and with the construction of the forty feet extension of it above the seventy-two feet tube upon which it was erected. The evidence tended to prove that the purpose of the maintenance of the water level, as provided by the contract, was to enable the workmen to stand upon a raft in performing the work; and the matter of the practicability of that method of supporting them for that purpose, questioned by some of the evidence, is not here for consideration. If that means had been made available, the expense of providing the float would have been incurred by the plaintiff; and as in the distance of ten feet upward the reduction of the diameter of the tube to be constructed was from twenty feet to six feet, the adaptation of the raft to the diminishing surface of the column of water for it to rest upon would, as the work proceeded for that, distance, have been necessary. It does not appear what the expense would have been of providing and suitably adapting this to the purposes of a platform for the workmen, nor was any allowance made for it by the referee as against the expense of the outer scaffolding. Upon the exception to his conclusion to that effect, arises the question whether the recovery for the full amount of the latter was properly permitted.

As the plaintiff had not proceeded with the work within the-time provided by the contract for its performance, the defendant was at liberty to treat the plaintiff’s default as terminating its rights under it. But there is evidence tending to prove that when called upon after the time for the completion of the work had expired, the defendant stated that he could not furnish the water level as before agreed; and that the plaintiff would have to provide and use an outside scaffolding; and when informed that the-expense of the work to the plaintiff by that means would be-greater than the method of an inner float would require, the defendant expressed his opinion that it would be no more, but nevertheless advised that the work of extension of the tower be performed.

There was no modification of the contract except such as resulted from the refusal of the defendant to maintain the water level in the tower and in the consequent necessity of the scaffolding recognized by the parties. Nor does it appear that the defendant would not, within the time stipulated for the performance of the contract, have maintained the requisite water level. The-plaintiff, however, upon the findings of the referee, having the-support of evidence, was entitled to recover the expense of the work and scaffolding in excess of that which would have been incurred by it if permitted to use the float. The price the defendant undertook to pay the plaintiff included the cost to the latter of the means to be provided by him for doing the work, aided so-far as it might be by the maintenance of the stipulated water level. And there was some evidence to the effect that the expense to the plaintiff of the work, if the inner support of the workmen had been permitted, would have been no greater than that required for it by the use of and including the outside scaffolding. The-plaintiff’s claim was governed by the contract so far as the work performed could be traced by it, and beyond that the plaintiff was-entitled to the quantum meruit. Dubois v. Delaware & H. C. Co., 4 Wend., 285: Koon v. Greenman, 7 id., 121; Hollinsead v. Mactier, 13 id., 276; Clark v. Mayor, etc., 4 N. Y., 388. The contract, as first made, determined the price of the entire work. But by reason of the deviation from the method originally contemplated by the parties to render the work of construction of the extension of the tower accessible to the workmen, the contract did ■ not furnish any guide to the cost of that rendered necessary for such purpose, and the plaintiff necessarily had to resort to evidence of the cost of it if it sought, as it was entitled, to recover for any additional expense occasioned by such deviation. This increased expense was for the plaintiff to show by proving that the means it was required to adopt for the purpose were more, and how much more expensive than would have been those which it was contemplated when the contract was made could be provided for the men to work from upon the tower.

Upon this subject the court in Koon v. Greenman said': “ Where it does not appear that the work was rendered more expensive to the plaintiff than was contemplated when the contract was made, or than it otherwise would have been in consequence of the improper interference of the defendant or of his neglect or omission to perform what by the contract he was bound to do, the contract prices should be held conclusive between the parties.” This rule would not be applicable to extra work merely. There it would be sufficient to prove its cost or value with the facts entitling the person doing such work to charge for it. But in the present case there was a deviation authorized and pursued, and, as the consequence, the contract embraced work which the plaintiff was not required to perform. It was for the plaintiff to prove that the deviation to which he consented rendered the work done more expensive, and if found to be so, the plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of the difference. ■ But the rule applied was otherwise, and by allowing to the plaintiff the full amount of the contract price in addition to the cost of the substituted work it was permitted to recover for work not performed. How much does not appear, nor can it here be determined. For that reason the exception before referred to was well taken. And the plaintiff must take a new trial, unless it elects to abate the recovery in an amount equal to that allowed on account of the expense of the scaffolding. The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event, unless the plaintiff stipulate to deduct from the recovery $849.75, with interest on that sum from August 1, 1883, and in that event the judgment be so modified, and as modified affirmed, without costs in this court to either party.

All concur.  