
    E. F. Keating Company, Plaintiff, v. The City of New York et al., Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    March, 1914.)
    Liens — foreclosure of —■ when entitled to recover difference between the sum expended in completion of contract and amount unpaid on contract price — contracts.
    Where in an action to foreclose a subcontractor’s lien for a public improvement it appears that after the principal contractor had been adjudicated a bankrupt the work was completed under a contract with the city for less than the original contract price, and the original contract did not provide as to what should be done with the excess after deducting the cost of completing the contract, the plaintiff in the action is entitled to recover the difference between the sum expended in the completion of the contract and the amount unpaid on the contract price.
    Action to foreclose a municipal lien.
    Phillips & Avery (Frank M. Avery and Henry W. Eaton, of counsel), for plaintiff.
    Archibald R. Watson, corporation counsel (John L. O’Brien, of counsel), for defendant.
   Giegerich, J.

The action is brought by a subcontractor to foreclose a lien for a public improvement. According to the stipulation of facts, the principal contractor, after doing a large part of the work contracted for, failed to complete, and on the 18th day of June, 1907, was adjudged a bankrupt and a trustee in bankruptcy was appointed. On the 2d day of July, 1907, the city authorities notified the bankrupt eon-tractor to discontinue all work under the contract and that the city would proceed to complete the work in tké manner provided by the terms thereof. The ground of this action by the city authorities stated in the notice was that the work' was unnecessarily and unreasonably delayed and that the contractor was wilfully violating the conditions of the contract. The provisions of the contract on the points evidently referred to in the notice served on behalf of the city are that if the work be unnecessarily or unreasonably delayed or the contractor wilfully violates any of the conditions of the contract, then the city authorities shall have the power to notify the contractor to discontinue all work under his contract and shall thereupon have power to complete or to contract for the completion of the work or such part thereof as they might deem necessary and to charge the expense thereof to the contractor, and that "the expense so charged shall be deducted and paid by the city out of such moneys as may be due or may at any time thereafter become due to the contractor, * * * and in case such expense shall exceed the said sum * * * then the contractor- shall pay the amount of such excess to the city.” The city authorities procured the work contracted for to be completed by another contractor. The original contract price was $22,300. The city had paid the original contractor $12,375 and paid to have the work completed $7,350, making a total expense of $19,725, which, deducted from the contract price, leaves $2,575. The chief question in the case is whether the city is entitled to retain this difference or whether it can be reached by the subcontractor under his lien, whose rights, of course, are measured by the rights of the principal contractor against the city. It will be observed that the contract under consideration does not expressly provide as to what shall be done with the excess after deducting the cost of completing the contract, in which respect it differs from most of the cases to which attention has been called in the briefs. In Herrmann & Grace v. Hillman, 203 N. Y. 435, and in Willard Co. v. City of New York, 81 Misc. Rep. 48, by the terms of the contract the contractor was not entitled to such excess. On the other hand, in Fraenkel v. Friedmann, 199 N. Y. 351, and Steiger v. London, 141 App. Div. 381, the contract expressly provided that the contractor should have such excess. The Court of Appeals in Fraenkel v. Friedmann, supra, points out the distinction between the owner’s terminating and canceling a contract and terminating the contractor’s employment under the contract. In this case it seems plain from the notice served by the city upon the principal contractor that there was not a cancellation of the contract, but a termination of the contractor’s employment. The contractor was notified ‘ ‘ to discontinue all work and that the city would proceed to complete the .work called for under the contract.” In Van Clief v. Van Vechten, 130 N. Y. 571, this same question arose under a contract which, like the present one, made no express provision as to whether the contractor should or should not be entitled to any excess after deducting the cost of completion from the balance of the contract price. In that case, although it appeared that the contractor wholly abandoned the work wilfully, the court held that, while the owner was under no obligation to do so, she nevertheless did go on and complete the building according to the contract, and that as her action was according to the contract it would be presumed, in support of the judgment, that it was under the contract, and that although she had threatened to cancel the contract she had not done so, and the lien of the subcontractor attached to the difference between the sum expended in completion of the contract and the amount .unpaid on the contract price. The court reached that result, although they expressly recognized that there was nothing due upon the contract when the lien was filed, and rested their conclusion upon the act of the owner in proceeding to complete the building according to the contract, which they held thus continued operative through her action. My conclusion is that in this case .the plaintiff is similarly entitled to such difference, amounting here, as above stated, to $2,575. Dennison Construction Co. v. Manneschmidt, 204 N. Y. 404, differs from the present case in that there was no evidence that the owner proceeded or intended to proceed under the article of the building contract which gave him liberty 'to terminate the employment of the contractors and to finish the work himself, the court pointing out that neither had an architect’s certificate been procured nor had the written notice provided in the article been given. In the present case there was such certificate and there was such notice. On behalf of the defendant it is also urged that the liquidated damages at the rate prescribed in the contract for delay amount to more than the excess above mentioned, but as no claim for such liquidated damages is set up in the answer it should not be allowed. There should be judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $2,575. Present, with proof of service, requests for findings within five days after the publication of this memorandum.

Judgment accordingly.  