
    DECHERT v. MUNICIPAL ELECTRIC LIGHT CO. (two cases).
    (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    February 15, 1895.)
    Pleading—Answer-Independent Contracts.
    In an action to recover damages for negligence of defendant in placing electric wires in plaintiff’s building, the answer alleged that defendant did the work “under the terms of certain written agreements, copies of which are hereto annexed” and made part of the answer. By one of the agreements defendant agreed to supply an electric current on the premises, which plaintiff agreed to use subject to certain terms, one of which was that defendant should be released from all claims of damages resulting from the electric current, when the wiring and equipments should be approved by the New York Board of Underwriters. The other agreement provided that defendant should wire the premises according to certain specifications. Neither agreement referred to the other. Held, that the subject-matter and terms of the agreements being different, and neither referring to the other, the answer was insufficient in not showing that they should be read as one instrument.
    Appeal from special term, New York county.
    Action by Yellott D. Dechert, as receiver, etc., against Municipal Electric Light Company, to recover damages for negligence of defend-
    
      ant in placing electric wires in plaintiff’s buildings, whereby the buildings and their contents were destroyed by fire. From an interlocutory judgment entered on a decision overruling a demurrer to the sixth paragraph of the answer, and sustaining it as to the seventh, eighth, and ninth paragraphs, both parties appeal. Reversed in part.
    Argued before VAN BRUNT, P. J., and O’BRIEN and PARKER, JJ.
    Louis Marshall, for plaintiff.
    Robert Payne, for defendant.
   PARKER, J.

The order appealed from, in so far as it overrules the demurrer to the alleged defense contained in paragraph 6 of the must be reversed. 6 reads as follows:

“(6) The defendant (alleging as hereinbefore alleged), for a second, further, and separate defense, alleges and avers that the placing of electrical apparatus by defendant in the premises occupied by said Joseph Ryan, and referred to in the complaint, and all the work done by defendant in and about the erection of said equipment, and the subsequent furnishing to said Joseph Ryan of electrical current, were done at the special instance of said Ryan, and upon and under the terms of certain written agreements, copies of which are hereto annexed, marked Exhibits ‘A’ and ‘B,’ respectively, and same are hereby made a part of this amended answer; that immediately after the installation of said electrical equipment, and long before the alleged loss and damage complained of, the New York Board of Fire Underwriters did duly approve the said wiring and electrical equipments upon the premises of said Ryan, and duly gave i written certificates of such approval, of all of which said Ryan had due notice.”

By the agreement marked ‘Exhibit A,” the defendant agreed to supply an electric current to Ryan upon his premises, and he agreed to use such electric current, subject to the terms “printed on the back hereof, which are hereby agreed to.” The printed terms upon the back of the contract, thus referred to, consisted of nine provisions, the eighth of which reads as follows:

“The company is hereby released from all claims for damages resulting from the use of electric current, when the wiring and electrical equipments on the premises of the consumer shall have been approved by the New York Board of Fire Underwriters or other proper authorities.”

By the other agreement the defendant agreed to wire Ryan’s premises for 275 sixteen candle power lamps, located and distributed about the building according to the specifications. The agreements bear the same date, but neither of them contain any reference to the other. The contention of the demurrant is that the defendant so unskillfully and negligently did the work called for by the contract marked ‘Exhibit B” that the premises were set on fire, and completely destroyed, together with the stock then belonging to Joseph Ryan, and that the eighth provision, quoted above as a part of the terms printed on the back of Exhibit A, cannot avail the defendant, because it is an entirely different contract. The ground on which the special term based its decision overruling the demurrer was that the writings Exhibits A and B constitute parts of one transaction, and should therefore be read and construed together as forming parts of one agreement. But this position is confronted with a difficulty which does not seem to have been brought to the attention of the special term. The subject-matter and terms of the contracts being different, and neither containing any reference to the other, it was necessary that the answer should contain allegations requiring an inference that the agreements should berread and construed together as one instrument. This the pleader did not do. On the contrary, the only inference presumable from the language employed is that there were two distinct agreements, instead of two separate writings constituting one agreement. The demurrer to the counterclaims set up in the seventh paragraph of the answer was, we think, rightly sustained.

So much of the interlocutory judgment as overrules the demurrer to the paragraph designated “First” should be reversed, and in all other respects it should be affirmed, with leave to the defendant to amend its answer within 20 days, on payment of the costs of the action; neither party to have costs of this appeal. All concur.  