The principal contention of defendants upon this appeal is that, by the contract between the parties, plaintiff was to obtain the architect’s certificate as a condition precedent to payment, and that, as he had failed to obtain such certificate for the work for which he claims in this action, he ought not to recover. This objection may, I think, be disposed of by a reference to a stipulation entered into by defendants for the purposes of the trial. The plaintiff had alleged in his complaint that there had been inserted in the written contract, by mistake, (plaintiff being unable to read or write,) certain provisions, among others those relating to the architect’s certificate, which were no part of the actual agreement between the parties; and he prayed that the contract might be reformed by striking out those provisions. The cause was placed upon the equity calendar of the court by plaintiff, but, upon defendants’ stipulating as hereafter mentioned, the cause was stricken from the equity calendar, and a trial by jury directed. The stipulation of defendants was that the case may be tried before a jury with the same effect as if tried at the equity term as to the reformation part, and at the opening of the case defendants’ counsel stated “that there was no necessity for any reformation of th ¿contract; * * * that the defendants make no claim that the plaintiff was to do anything other than the excavating, digging^ removing of all earth,, boulder, and other matter, and leave sand for completion of work on the premises 312 and 314 Eighth avenue, for the sum of @3,500, payments to be made as the work progressed; that the contract did not include underpinning of adjoining premises, and rocks were to be removed by other parties.”
In this statement of claim as to the obligations of plaintiff under his contract with defendants, there was an omission or waiver of any claim that payments under the contract were conditioned upon the procurement of an architect’s certificate. All evidence upon the issues arising upon the pleadings as to reformation of the contract was excluded upon defendants’ objections, and it would seem that the question of the architect’s certificate was thus eliminated from the case. The stipulation and statement of defendants as to their claim under the contract were made in order to relieve the plaintiff and the court from trying the issue as to a reformation of the contract, and concede plaintiff’s position as to the actual contract between the parties. But even if the stipulation and statement did not have this effect, and the plaintiff were bound under his contract to procure the architect’s certificate, there was abundant proof in the ease to show the defendants waived this requirement. That question, together with the issue of fact as to the alleged abandonment of the-work by plaintiff, was submitted fairly to the jury, and their verdict in plaintiff’s favor has ample evidence to sustain it. The evidence of waiver was admitted without objection, and defendants could not afterwards object that, it had not been pleaded.
The exceptions of defendants were not well taken. The motions to dismiss the complaint were properly denied. The judge’s charge was proper. The exception at folio 210 was not good, as the questions as to the architect’s certificate were out of the case. The exception at folio 267 was not well taken, as the question did not call for the earth removed, but the “number of tickets” upon which defendants settled with third parties for cart-loads of earth. The exception at folio 285 was not well taken, as the question called for a conclusion. There is no exception at folio 201. The exception at folio 331 does not call for a revisal because the question allowed to be put to the witness was not in effect answered. The previous answer of the witness, which was not objected to, contained in substance the same testimony as that objected to. The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.