The action is brought to recover for certain repair work done by the plaintiff about the Twenty-second Regiment Armory and the armory of Squadron A, both located in the borough of Manhattan, city of Yew York.
One item, 'amounting to ninety-two dollars and eighty-five cents, was for repairs to a motor used to operate an exhaust fan to carry off the smoke from an indoor rifle range. There was evidence that the motor needed to be repaired at once, as the range was to be used on the night of the day on which the repairs were ordered. Another item, amounting to ninety-seven dollars and seventy-four cents, was for work done and material furnished in repairing burnt out and broken electric light wires which were loose and dangling and liable to start a fire in the hay and straw and other inflammable material in the armory of Squadron A.
The third item, amounting to seventy dollars and forty cents, was for work and materials furnished in repairing a heavy lantern, weighing some 300 pounds, which hung suspended in a dangerous condition over the street, being liable *208to fall at the time when the order to make it secure was given to the plaintiff.
¡No question is raised on the appeal as to the value or necessity of the work done; the claim of the defense being that the work was not ordered in the manner required by statute and, consequently, that there can be no recovery, either on the theory of contract or of quantum meruit.
Section 134 of the Military Code (Laws of 1898, chap. 212, as amd. by Laws of 1901, chap. 314, and Laws of 1904, chap. 321), provides the manner in which the city of ¡New York may be made liable, among other things, for repairs upon armory buildings; further providing for advertising for bids for such repairs and the awarding contracts for the same to the lowest bidders, containing, however, this additional provision, namely, “ except that in case of an emergency said commissioner ” (of public buildings, lighting and supplies) “ may cause repairs immediately required to be done without calling for competition a.t an expense not exceeding $1,000 in any one instance.”
Section 1565 of the revised charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466) provides that: “All powers and duties relating to the construction, repairs and maintenance of and to public armories in The City of New York, and to the purchase of supplies therefor, so far as the same have heretofore been conferred upon the commissioner of public buildings, lighting and supplies by chapter two hundred and twelve of the laws of eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, known as ‘the military code ’ are hereby devolved upon the armory board having jurisdiction within The City of New York, as in said military code provided. The powers and duties heretofore exercised by the commissioner of public buildings, lighting and supplies as a member of said armory board are hereby devolved upon the president of the board of aider-men, who shall be a member of said armory board.”
In Lewis v. City of New York, 106 App. Div. 454, 459, it was said: “ The armory board undoubtedly had power, in case of an accident which required immediate repair to an armory building, to make ‘a contract for such repairs without calling for competition.”
*209On "behalf of the appellant, it is argued that the repairs in the present instance were not of an emergent character; but" upon this issue I think the trial justice properly decided in favor of the plaintiff.
There is a serious question, however, whether the orders were issued in the manner contemplated by the statutes just referred to. The power formerly vested in the commissioner of public buildings, lighting and supplies to “ cause repairs immediately required to be done without calling for competition ” in case of an emergency, as above shown, has now been vested in the armory board which, by section 134 above quoted, is made to consist of the mayor, the president of the board of aldermen, the two ranking officers of or below the grade of brigadier-general in command of the troops of the National Guard quartered in this city, and the president of the department of taxes and assessments. It was shown upon the trial that the armory board had, by resolution, passed on April 11, 1902, employed a secretary to be the executive officer of the board, which resolution was still operative, and-that the practice followed in regard to emergency work had been for the person in charge of the building to either telephone or send a letter in the form of a requisition that work of a designated character was required. Thereupon an inspector was sent to verify the report that the work was of an emergent character; and, if it was found to be such, a contractor was called up by the secretary and given an order to do the necessary work; and such orders were given by the secretary and there had never been an instance where the armory board had been called together and a resolution adopted in the case of repairs costing less than $1,000.
The contention of the appellant appears to be that the issuance of the orders through the secretary of the armory board was not a compliance with the statute, and that the board itself should have acted specifically in each instance as an emergency arose.
Considering the fact that the board includes the mayor and other high city officers, whose time is so likely to be absorbed in other and more important matters, I do not think *210it should he held that the Legislature intended, in cases of comparatively trivial expense, such as are now under consideration, that repairs urgently needed should he left undone until the board could be gotten together for action. Under the practice that has been followed for a number of years the board has established and authorized a method of attending to such matters which seems to be as well devised and guarded as is possible where things have to be done speedily. The fact that the bills have been required to be certified by the ranking line officers, commanding the organizations quartered in the armories affected, after their approval by the armory inspector, is a further safeguard and assurance against abuse in the method of procedure established.
¡Recognizing and giving due weight to the facts adverted to in Lewis v. City of ¡New York, 106 App. Div. 454, that expenditures of the kind now under consideration are not strictly for a municipal purpose or for carrying on the municipal government, and that the provisions of the Military Code must be strictly complied with in order to impose a liability upon the city, I am, nevertheless, of the opinion that, under the circumstances here shown, it should be held that the board did cause the repairs to be made within the true intent of the statute.
The defendant contends that the allowance of interest upon the claims in suit was error.
The plaintiff upon the trial rested his case upon a quantum meruit and adduced evidence tending to show the reasonable value of the repair work in suit. In White v. Miller, 78 N. Y. 393, 399, the court, after a full discussion of the leading authorities, said: “ The cases last cited tend to show that where an account for services, or for goods sold and delivered, which has become due and is payable in money, although not strictly liquidated, is presented to the debtor and payment demanded, the debtor is put in default and interest is set running; and that, if not demanded before, the commencement of the suit is a sufficient demand to set interest running from that date.”
This' statement was accepted in enunciating the current *211rule on the subject in de Oarricarti v. Blanco, 121 N. Y. 230, 233. There the action was brought to recover a balance alleged to be due for the reasonable value of services rendered and performed by the plaintiff; and through Gray, J., the court, in adverting to the White case, said (p. 233) : “ I think the rule thus intimated by the learned judge in that case is a sound one and commends itself to our judgment in such a case as this. Here the claim for eompen-. sation for services was not only unliquidated, but the legal right of the plaintiff to recover anything for those services was contested by the defendant. The amount was absolutely uncertain which he should have, if he was entitled to anything, and the demand in his complaint rested on quantum meruit. Hence, I think, it cannot be said that the defendant was in default toward the plaintiff in the discharge of any indebtedness, until, at least, the plaintiff had made a demand upon him, after the close of his services and in such wise as to charge him with notice of his deficiency.”
The doctrine of the foregoing case was reaffirmed and applied in Sweeny v. City of New York, 173 N. Y. 414, and O’Keefe v. City of New York, 176 id. 297, in which it was held that, in an action to recover for labor or materials furnished to the city, interest could only run from the date of the filing of the claim with the comptroller.
The rule of the de Carricarti case was also followed in the recent case of Fleming v. Jacob, 57 Misc. Rep. 372, which is directly in point. That action was brought to recover on a quantum meruit for work and materials; and Mr. Justice Mills held that, although the plaintiff’s claim was upon a quantum meruit and was unliquidated, “ still he was, as matter of law, entitled to interest upon the amount found to be due upon the claim, such interest to be computed from the date when payment of the claim was demanded from the defendant. S'weeny v. City of New York, 173 N. Y. 414; 66 N. E. 101; de Carricarti v. Blanco, 121 N. Y. 230.” As the full amounts of the respective claims were allowed by the trial justice, the case of Excelsior Terra Cotta Co. v. Harde, 90 App. Div. 4, 8, which *212holds that, if a demand is necessary, it must he for the amount due, and, if it includes any item not recoverable, the demand is illegal and interest cannot be allowed, does not apply.
The case of Beckwith v. City of New York, 121 App. Div. 462, cited by the defendant’s counsel, is entirely diEerent in its facts from the present one. There the action was .brought to recover prospective profits claimed to have been lost in consequence of the city’s refusal to permit the plaintiff to perform his contract with it to furnish and lay water mains in certain streets and for various expenses he was put to in consequence of such breach. Interest was allowed from the date of filing the claim. This was held to be improper, because the amount due was not capable of being ascertained by mere computation, the court observing that the ascertainment of prospective profits on such a contract as the one there involved depended on many elements other than established market values.
We have no such situation in the case at bar; and, under the authority of the cases cited above, the plaintiE is entitled to interest from the time he demanded payment from the comptroller of the city of New York, even though recovery was sought upon the theory of quantum meruit, rather than for the contract price.
Interest was allowed from December, 1906, about which time the claims were certified by the armory board inspector and by the ranking line officer commanding the organization quartered in the armory at which such repairs were made; and computation from that date was permitted by the trial justice, upon the theory that such papers must be presumed to have come into the-possession of the comptroller at the time of such approval.
Such presumption, however, cannot be indulged in, for the reason that the claim dated January 4, 1907, was not filed with the comptroller until January 9, 1907.
As the claim was against the city, and not against the armory board, interest should,-therefore, have only been allowed from the date last mentioned, and not from December, 1906, as was done by the trial justice.
*213The judgment should, therefore, he modified by deducting $16.20, interest from December, 1905, to January 9, 1907, thus reducing the judgment to $296.79, damages and costs, and, as so modified, affirmed, with costs.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.