[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 392 It appears by the extract from the report of the commissioners, set forth in the petition of the respondent, that the sum of $10,675, now in controversy, was ascertained and determined as the compensation which ought justly to be made by the mayor, etc., of New York, to the New York, *Page 393 Boston and Montreal Railroad Company, for the expense of raising the bed of their road, widening the embankment across the contemplated reservoir, raising and relaying the track of the railroad, and doing other work specified in the report, a detailed estimate of the cost of which work is also contained in the report. This work is, by the report, found to be rendered necessary by reason of the construction of the reservoir, and the precise amount of the estimate of its cost is awarded in full satisfaction and discharge of all claims and damages of the railroad company.
Among the papers read by the appellant in opposition to the application of the respondent, is what purports to be a further extract or recital from the report of the commissioners, which states that they found that the comptroller of the city of New York should pay the sum so estimated, to William D. Warren, the contractor for doing the work, upon the certificate of the chief engineer of the railroad, from time to time, as the work should progress.
The appellant, Mr. Warren, states in his opposing affidavit, that when the award was made he was the contractor for building the road, and as such contractor had already graded the road at the point in question, at an expense of several thousand dollars, and that the company was indebted to him in the sum of about $80,000, and had turned the road and property over to him as security for the indebtedness due to him, and he held possession of the same, and that the direction that he should receive the award was founded upon an agreement made by the railroad company and the Croton department in the presence of the appraisers.
It is to be observed, however, that the award was not made to Mr. Warren for any interest he then had in the premises, but was to cover the expense of work which he was thereafter to do as contractor. The award was, in fact, to the railroad company, to indemnify it for the expenses which were rendered necessary by the construction of the reservoir, and it was made payable to Mr. Warren solely in his capacity as contractor, and *Page 394 to secure to him payment for the work which he should thereafter do. This direction of the commissioners was subject to the control of the court, who might confirm or disapprove it. It never was confirmed by the court in the terms in which it was originally made, but on the 25th of November, 1876, an order was made confirming the report of the commissioners, except as to this clause, which was modified by making the award payable, not to Mr. Warren by name, but to the contractor who should do the work, whoever it might be. Mr. Warren complains that this order was made without notice to him; but the subsequent order being the one now appealed from, which amends the order of November 25, 1876, and directs the payment to be made to Mr. Roberts, the respondent, was made upon notice to Mr. Warren, and after hearing him through counsel.
It further appears that after the making of the award, and before its confirmation, Mr. Warren moved his machinery and tools on to the work, and with his men did several hundred dollars' worth of work, when the officers of the Croton department notified him that there was danger of the appropriation for the department not holding out, and that he might get into trouble by not having money to meet his payments, and advised him to stop until they felt sure that he would receive his pay; that he stopped work at their request, with the promise that he should receive notification when they felt safe that the appropriation would be replenished; that he never received any such notice, but went on with his business in other parts of the country, but left his tools and materials at the place, ready to proceed on notice, and he never did anything further in the prosecution of the work. Soon after he had thus suspended work, the railroad and its franchises were sold under foreclosure of a mortgage by the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, and were bought in by that company, and a new company was organized under the name of the New York City and Northern Railroad Company, which company went on with the construction of the road, and employed the respondent Roberts as contractor; one of the provisions of his contract *Page 395 being that he should be entitled to receive and retain any award made by the Croton Aqueduct Department, or other public authority, for raising the grade of the railroad at the crossing of the middle branch of the Croton river. Roberts, under this contract, did the work in question at a cost slightly exceeding the amount of the estimate of the commissioners, and afterward, upon notice to the appellant, made a motion to amend the order of November 25, 1876, confirming the report of the commissioners, by inserting his own name as the contractor who performed the work, thus making the award payable to himself; which motion resulted in the order now appealed from.
We do not think that the direction of the commissioners that the amount awarded to the railroad company for making the necessary changes in the grade of the road be paid to Mr. Warren as contractor, from time to time as the work should progress, gave him such a vested right in the award as precluded the court from directing that it be paid to a different contractor, who actually performed the work, after the road had passed into other hands than those of the company with whom Mr. Warren contracted; and that although Mr. Warren had no notice of the order of the 25th of November, 1876, yet having had notice of the subsequent motion to amend that order, the amended order was valid as against him.
There certainly would have been no propriety in confirming the direction of the commissioners that the entire compensation for doing the work in question be paid to Mr. Warren, when he had ceased to be contractor, had not performed the work, the railroad had changed hands, and the work had been done by the new company or its contractor, Mr. Roberts. Mr. Warren may have had some equity to be secured by the award for the small part of the work which he actually did, and which he states to have been worth a few hundred dollars, but he had no such absolute legal right to be thus protected, that it was an error of law in the court to refuse to sustain the directions of the report even to that extent, under the changed state of circumstances. *Page 396
The order of the General Term modifies that of the Special Term by adding that it be without prejudice to any claim Mr. Warren may have against the railroad companies, or either of them, for work done by him, and damages sustained by him by reason of any of the facts which he has alleged. We are of opinion that he had no legal right to further relief.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except TRACY, J., absent.
Order affirmed.