128 A.D. 210

Uvalde Asphalt Paving Company, Respondent, v. The City of New York, Appellant.

Second Department,

October 16, 1908.

Contract — municipal corporations — when sewer contracts divisible.

Where the plans, specifications and advertisement for bids for the construction of a municipal sewer and “sewage disposal plant in connection therewith” contain the word “ contracts ” and, in separate specifications, require separate bids on each job, an intention that the contract for each should be let to the lowest bidder is indicated, a single contract for both is severable, and the contractor may recover against the municipality for the construction of the sewer although the proceedings authorizing the disposal plant were void.

Appeal by the defendant, The City of New York, from a judgment of the Supreme Court, in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 17th day of June, 1907, upon the decision of the court rendered after a trial at the Kings County Trial Term, a jury having been waived.

Theodore Connoly [Terence Farley and Francis K. Pendleton with him on the brief], for the appellant.

Edward M. Grout [James F. McKinney with him on the brief], for the respondent.

Rich, J.:

The only question requiring our consideration is whether the contract upon'which the plaintiff has recovered is entire or divisible. The learned trial justice has held that the agreement upon which the action is brought contained two contracts, one for the construction of the sewer and its' appurtenances, and the other for the construction of a disposal plant, each of which was separate and distinct from the other ; that the former was valid and binding on the parties and the other void. The plaintiff has been permitted to recover the damages it has sustained through the breach of this contract by the defendant, and concedes, for the purposes of this appeal, that the contract for the disposal plant was illegal and void because of the failure of defendant’s. board of estimate and apportionment to comply with the requirements of its charter. It appears *211that in February, 1904, the local board of the Jamaica district adopted a resolution for the construction of a sewer extending through portions of four streets, and fourteen catch-basins connected therewith, and the erection of a sewerage disposal plant in connection therewith,” which resolution was approved by the president of the borough of Queens and the board of estimate and apportionment, who determined that the costs and expenses of the work should be charged against the property benefited. Plans and specifications for the construction of the sewer and catch-basins were duly prepared, and on August 11, 1905, the borough president advertised for sealed proposals for “ constructing sewer and appurtenances ” in the several streets named; “ also the erection of a. sewerage disposal plant in connection therewith.” Then follow statements of the time allowed for such work, the bond required, the engineer’s estimate of the quantity of sewer pipe and other materials required for and the estimated rock excavation connected with the construction of the sewer. Hext follows this sentence: And the erection of a sewerage disposal plant in connection therewith. The bidder will state the price of each item or article contained.in the specifications or schedules herein contained or hereto annexed, per yard or other unit of measure, by which the bids will be tested. The extension must be made and footed up, as bids will be read from the total. The bids will be compared and the contracts awarded at a lump or aggregate sum. Blank forms may bo obtained and the plans and drawings may be seen at the office of the president.” An employee of the plaintiff went to the office of the borough president and procured the plan, profile and specifications for the sewer and catch-basins and - was told: “ You know you will have to furnish your own plans.and specifications the same as they did in- the Elmhurst contract that was let by ns which you know all about.” . He was furnished some data and conditions under which it was purposed to construct the plant. Upon the printed forms and in conformity with the plans and specifications furnished, the plaintiff bid for the sewer, and upon the data furnished and in accordance with plans and specifications prepared by it and accompanying the proposal the plaintiff bid for the disposal plant. The first sheet of the blanks so furnished by defendant’s officers is termed a contract summary,” and refers *212first to the" sewer, then says “also the erection of a sewerage disposal plant in connection therewith.” This sheet is followed by a partly printed and partly written proposal, in which all material, labor and excavation connected with the construction of the sewer are itemized and prices carried out opposite each item, followed by the words: “ And the erection of a sewerage disposal plant in connection therewith as per plans and specifications furnished with the bid, sixty thousand ($60,000) dollars.” Three bids were received for both the construction of the sewer and the erection of the disposal plant, that of the plaintiff being the lowest for both. In each of the three proposals each item entering into the construction of the sewer was bid for separately at so much a unit price, and the disposal plant was bid for at a lump sum. The formal contract was signed November 25, 1905. It recites that it is for the construction of a sewer in specified streets, “ also the erection of a sewerage disposal plant in connection therewith.” Attached to it are specifications for the sewer, and separately the specifications for the disposal plant, prepared by the plaintiff. On December seventh following notice was served on plaintiff requiring the commencement of work within five days thereafter. It thereupon entered into, various contracts for labor and material, and commenced work within the time limited, which it continued for a period of about three months, when the municipal authorities notified it that-the contract was Aroid and rescinded the same. The plaintiff expressed its willingness to perform that portion of the contract connected with the sewer construction, and to waive that portion relating to the construction of the sewerage disposal plant.

I think the learned trial justice was right in holding that there were íavo separate and independent contracts, each complete in itself and not dependent upon the other; there is at least a single contract containing severable or divisible portions, one of which being invalid may be rejected and the other being valid may be asserted and enforced. It was the intention of the municipal authorities in all of its proceedings prior to the signing of the contract, to have the two proposed improvements separable so that it might, under the authority given by section 397 of the charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466), let the construction of the' sewer to the lowest bidder and the construction of the disposal plant to a different bid*213der, whose proposal therefor was the lowest. In the advertisement soliciting proposals it is stated that “ contracts ” for the same would be let. This phraseology must not be ignored, and there is no reasonable interpretation of it other than that a contract would be let for the construction of the sewer, and also for the construction of a disposal plant. Separate prices were required, as we have seen, for each item connected with the sewer and its catch-basins. When the bids were received the aggregate of each proposal for the sewer was made up and kept separate from the gross sum bid for constructing the disposal plant. The language of both the proposal and contract supports this construction. The fact that the plaintiff was the lowest bidder for each of the proposed improvements, and but one paper prepared, in no manner limited the power of the defendant to let the contract for the sewer to one. bidder and that for the disposal plant to another, nor is the plaintiff deprived of the right to have the. valid contract contained in the written instrument separated from the invalid one and enforced. There is nothing in the nature of the sewer improvement that made its completion in any manner dependent upon the construction of the disposal plant. If we were to strike out of the agreement everything pertaining to the construction of the disposal plant, there is left a perfect and complete contract in all its details for the construction of the sewer, and plaintiff’s recovery must be affirmed. (Silberman, v. Fretz, 16 Misc. Rep. 449; Central New York Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Averill, 58 id. 59; Knowles v. American Ins. Co. of Boston, 66 Hun, 220; affd., without opinion, 142 N. Y. 641; White v. Livingston, 69 App. Div. 361; affd., without opinion, 174 N. Y. 538; Merrill v. Agricultural Ins. Co., 73 id. 452; Pratt v. D. H. M. Fire Ins. Co., 130 id. 206 ; Ming v. Corbin, 142 id. 334; Gélpcke v. City of Dubuque, 68 U. S. [1 Wall.] 221; Treadwell v. Davis, 34 Cal. 602.) It appears, however, that the plaintiff is not entitled to the interest awarded to it, amounting to $3,321.53. The judgment must be modified by the deduction of this sum, and as so modified affirmed, with costs.

Woodward, Hooker, Gaynor and Miller, JJ., concurred.

Judgment modified by deducting $3,321.53, and as so modified affirmed, with costs.

Uvalde Asphalt Paving Co. v. City of New York
128 A.D. 210

Case Details

Name
Uvalde Asphalt Paving Co. v. City of New York
Decision Date
Oct 16, 1908
Citations

128 A.D. 210

Jurisdiction
New York

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