Court Opinion

ID: 3608306
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:53:10.572749+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:59:24.452055
License: Public Domain

This suit was brought to recover a balance alleged to be due under a contract in writing whereby the plaintiff corporation agreed to sell and deliver and the defendant corporation agreed to purchase and receive certain vault linings to be placed in the Essex county court house at Newark, New Jersey. There is some dispute as to whether the contract was embodied in a single letter or in a series of letters, but *Page 221 
whichever be the fact, it is clear that it contained this provision: "Terms, net cash. Immediate payment after written acceptance by the Architect." The architect thus referred to was Mr. Cass Gilbert, who was employed by Essex county to supervise the erection of the court house.
The complaint made no mention of the provision respecting payment which I have quoted. It alleged that the plaintiff delivered the vault linings therein specified, and that they were accepted by the defendant and were used and incorporated in the work. The answer denied that they were accepted or were used or incorporated in the work, except after being repaired and altered; and there was a counterclaim for the expense of repair and alteration.
The plaintiff utterly failed to prove any written acceptance of any of the vault linings by the architect prior to the commencement of the action. Over the objection and exception of the defendant it was allowed to introduce in evidence a certificate by Mr. Cass Gilbert, dated August 16, 1906, eighteen months after the suit was brought, stating that the contractors for the construction of the Essex county court house were entitled to the forty-fourth payment on their contract. There was nothing on the face of this paper to show that it covered the vault linings which were the subject of the contract between the parties to this action. "As I understand the law," said the learned trial judge in charging the jury, "that certificate, although issued after the action was commenced but also after the work was completed, is competent evidence, and I, therefore, overruled the objections of the defendant and allowed it in evidence." To this instruction the defendant duly excepted. Although there was no allegation or suggestion of waiver in the complaint, the court also left it to the jury to say whether the proof did not establish a waiver of the requirement of the contract that a written acceptance or *Page 222 
certificate by the architect should be necessary to entitle the plaintiff to payment. The point that a written acceptance by the architect was a condition precedent to the right to any payment under the contract, and that a waiver of this condition was not provable because it had not been pleaded, was further brought distinctly to the attention of the trial judge by appropriate requests to charge and exceptions to his refusal to charge as requested.
It requires but little discussion to show that this point was well taken and should have been deemed fatal to any recovery by the plaintiff in the present form of the pleadings. The contract prescribed a condition precedent, to wit, a written acceptance of the vault linings by the architect of the Essex county court house, to entitle the plaintiff to payment therefor. No such written acceptance had been given up to the time of the commencement of the action. When the suit was begun, therefore, the plaintiff's case was fatally defective in an element essential to make out a cause of action under the contract. The contract did not obligate the defendant to pay until the written acceptance had been obtained; consequently there was no obligation to pay when the action was commenced. The subsequent acceptance or certificate, issued many months afterward, could not relate back so as to place the defendant in default. It was wholly irrelevant, and the court erred in receiving it and in instructing the jury that they might treat it as timely. In an action at law, the status of the parties is to be considered as it existed when the suit was begun, unless changed conditions have been brought before the court by means of supplemental pleadings, which was not the case here.
In the case of Weeks v. O'Brien (141 N.Y. 199, 202) the action was brought upon a building contract, which prescribed that the plaintiff should procure the certificate of the architect that the building had been completed to entitle him to receive the last installment. "To meet this condition," said the court, "and to show a right of *Page 223 
action it should have been averred in the complaint, either generally or specially, that the conditions precedent had been performed, or if the plaintiff relied upon a matter excusing him from procuring the certificate, the facts should have been stated. The complaint neither averred that the certificate had been procured nor that it was unreasonably withheld." So in the present case, the complaint neither alleged that there had been a written acceptance of the vault linings by the architect nor that the right of the defendant to insist upon such written acceptance had been waived.
The evidence which the trial judge allowed the jury to consider as establishing a waiver, notwithstanding that no waiver had been pleaded, was received over the objection and exception of the defendant; and appropriate exception was also taken to the instructions to the jury on this subject.
The errors which have been pointed out cannot be disregarded as immaterial. It is obvious that they not only affected but controlled the result. It follows that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, WERNER, HISCOCK, CHASE and COLLIN, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.