Opinion
November Term, 1900.
Judgment of the County Court of Westchester county reversed and judgment of the Justice's Court of the city of Mount Vernon affirmed, with costs.
The plaintiff in this action sought to recover a balance of fifty-five dollars, alleged to be due under a contract whereby the plaintiff corporation undertook to furnish to the defendant and install in his house a hot-water heater, for the sum of two hundred and sixty dollars in all. The defendant pleaded a failure to perform the contract, and also set up a counterclaim of twenty-five dollars and seventy-five cents for services rendered to the plaintiff in procuring for it another contract from one W.H. Brodt. The principal matter litigated upon the trial was the omission of the plaintiff to furnish an automatic regulator for the heating apparatus. There was evidence in behalf of the defendant tending to show that the plaintiff corporation undertook to furnish such a regulator, and evidence in behalf of the plaintiff that it was not included within the terms of the contract. There was also proof to the effect that the pipes of the hot-water apparatus leaked, and that the plaintiff's work was otherwise defective. As to the counterclaim, there was sufficient evidence to warrant the justice in finding that the managing agent of the plaintiff had agreed to pay the defendant twenty-five dollars in case the plaintiff secured the Brodt contract. The justice rendered judgment in favor of the defendant for twenty-five dollars and fifteen cents. It seems plain that this amount was awarded on account of the counterclaim, the fifteen cents representing an item of interest. In other words, the justice decided that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover anything by way of the balance which it claimed to be due on the contract for the hot-water apparatus, and also decided that the defendant was entitled to recover almost the full amount of his counterclaim. When the case came before the County Court on appeal the learned county judge, as his opinion shows, treated the award in favor of the defendant as an assessment of damages for the plaintiff's failure to supply the regulator, and held that the justice had erred in refusing to compensate the corporation for the work done and at the same time compelling it to pay for the regulator. If the defendant received pay for the regulator, as the learned judge very properly observes, the plaintiff should receive pay for the work. It does not seem to me, however, that the reversal can be sustained on this ground, because, as already observed, it is apparent that the award to the defendant was on account of the counterclaim arising out of the Brodt contract, and not at all by way of damages for the omission to furnish the regulator. Indeed, if this were not as plain as it is, we should be bound to presume that such was the fact, as the party who prevails in a Justice's Court is entitled to have the judgment so construed on appeal as to sustain it if possible. ( Burnham v. Butler, 31 N.Y. 480.) The judgment of reversal in the County Court was rendered on January 13, 1900. At that time a County Court, under section 3063 of the Code of Civil Procedure, was not authorized to reverse a justice's judgment on the ground that such judgment was contrary to or against the weight of evidence. ( City of Brooklyn v. B.C. N.R.R. Co., 11 App. Div. 168.) That power has now been conferred upon the County Court by an amendment to the section cited, which took effect on September 1, 1900. (Laws of 1900, chap. 553.) If the amendment had been in force at the time when the appeal in this case was heard by the County Court, it may be that a reversal would have been justified on the ground that the weight of evidence tended strongly to establish a substantial performance of the contract on the part of the plaintiff, so that the omission to furnish the regulator should not have been deemed fatal to a recovery of some amount in addition to that which had already been paid on account of the contract. Inasmuch, however, as the County Court could not then interfere with the justice's determination as to the facts if there was any evidence to support it, and inasmuch as that judgment does not necessarily involve the error of law assumed in the opinion of the learned county judge, it follows that the decision of the Justice's Court must be allowed to stand. All concurred.