The defendant has obtained a judgment entered on the order of the Special Term dismissing the plaintiff’s amended complaint on the ground that it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The material allegations of the voluminous complaint may be summarized as follows:
1. In January, 1918, the Schaefer Construction Company contracted with the city of Syracuse to construct a school building.
2. Thereafter the Maryland Casualty Company executed a bond to the city conditioned upon the faithful performance of the contract by the Schaefer Construction Company.
3. The defendant entered into an “ agreement and arrangement ” with the Maryland Casualty Company to assume all liability and responsibility of the Maryland Casualty Company upon its bond to the city of Syracuse, and to replace the Maryland Casualty Company as a surety upon said bond and hold the Maryland Casualty Company harmless from loss thereunder.
4. The plaintiff entered into a contract with the Schaefer Construction Company to furnish certain glass and to do certain glazing in the building at a contract price of $2,326.34.
5. By the 20th of February, 1920, the plaintiff had partly performed the contract by furnishing work and materials to the value of $1,585.54 and had been fully paid therefor.
6. Prior to August, 1920, the defendant procured the Schaefer Construction Company to assign to it all moneys due or to become due upon its contract with the city.
7. In August, 1920, and for a long time prior thereto, the Schaefer Construction Company was insolvent.
8. About the month of August, 1920, the defendant, with full knowledge of the situation, including knowledge that the completion of the school would cost greatly in excess of any sums due or to become due under the contract of the Schaefer Construction Company with the city of Syracuse, and that the Schaefer Construction Company was unable to perform and complete its contract with the city, and would be compelled to abandon the same, “ took over into its own charge, care and custody the said Schaefer Construction Company, and did place as directors and persons in control and in charge of the business and affairs of said Schaefer Construction Company its own representatives and agents as directors and officers of said company and controlled all of its
9. While the plaintiff was in ignorance of the insolvency of the Schaefer Construction Company, of the insufficiency of the amounts unpaid by the city to complete the work, and of the actions of the defendant mentioned above,/' the said defendant, through and in the guise of the Schaefer Construction Company and knowing that the said Schaefer Construction Company was insolvent and out of its own property or resources would be unable to pay therefor, * * * did between the 1st day of October and the 5th day of February, 1921, order, procure and direct this plaintiff to furnish glass and glazing for said school and do the work and furnish extra materials and labor, all at the reasonable value of $740.83.”
10. The plaintiff furnished said materia' and performed said work of such value “ in the belief that the Schaefer Construction Company was a solvent, going concern, conducting its own * * * affairs and with its own resources.”
11. The acts of defendant were with the wrongful intent of securing the completion of the contract with the city without payment to the plaintiff, but to secure the defendant from loss.
12. By reason of the premises the plaintiff has suffered loss and damage in the sum of $740.83.
13. Thereafter the Schaefer Construction Company was adjudicated a bankrupt without assets.
A second cause of action, growing out of a different but similar transaction, is alleged in terms entirely like those used to set forth the one summarized above.
The mere omission of a party to a contract who is receiving credit to disclose his insolvency to the other party at the time the contract is made is not such misrepresentation as will avoid the contract although the fact if known to the other would affect his credit. It is not fraudulent to say nothing. The silence of the insolvent contracting party does not establish an intent
There is no allegation in the complaint here that the insolvency of the Schaefer Construction Company existed at the time the contract with the plaintiff was made. It must be taken to have occurred during the performance of the work. There was no greater obligation to disclose insolvency during the pendency of the work than at the beginning and fraud in this case cannot be predicated, even against the Schaefer Construction Company, upon the mere failure on the part of that corporation to disclose its insolvency when it occurred. More than silence however, is alleged in the complaint. There is, first, an intention not to pay; and, second, certain overt acts to give a false impression of financial responsibility, and, third, an order, procurement and direction to the plaintiff to continue to furnish work and materials to the insolvent Schaefer Construction Company. Had the plaintiff known of the financial condition of the Schaefer Construction Company when it received these orders, it would not have been justified in unqualifiedly refusing to proceed and in abandoning the contract. (Hanna v. Florence Iron Co., 222 N. Y. 290.) It would have been justified in requiring payment as a condition to proceeding so as to obviate further reliance upon the credit of the Schaefer Construction Company. (Pardee v. Kanady, 100 N. Y. 121.) The acts alleged deprived the plaintiff of its right to be relieved from doing further work on the credit of an insolvent. They constituted an actionable wrong on the part of the Schaefer Construction Company. (Whitten v. Fitzwater, 129 N. Y. 626; Bienenstok v. Ammidown, 11 Misc. 76.)
The allegations of the complaint are to the effect that the defendant ’ co-operated with the Schaefer Construction Company in presenting a false appearance of financial responsibility with the intent of securing work and material from the plaintiff without payment therefor. In fact the allegations are to the effect that the defendant was the principal in perpetrating the fraud.
A rescission of the contract is impossible. No relief other than for damages is available to the plaintiff. In our opinion, on the facts, the defendant as well as the Schaefer Construction Company is responsible to the plaintiff for its loss. The cause of action may be looked upon as one for deceit (Williston Cont. § 1521) or for money had and received. (Miller v. Schloss, 218 N. Y. 400.)
The judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and the motion for judgment denied, with ten dollars costs.
Judgment and order reversed on the law, with costs, and motion for judgment on the pleadings denied, with ten dollars, costs.