This action was brought to recover a balance of $2,011.17, conceded to remain unpaid by defendant to plaintiE upon a con*399tract for building construction. The answer, putting in issue no allegation of the complaint, alleges, by way of defense and counterclaim, that defendant, through plaintiff’s failure to complete the building within the stipulated time, sustained damages through loss of rents to an amount equivalent to the balance unpaid upon the contract. The reply, besides putting in issue most of the material allegations of the counterclaim, avers, as an excuse for the delay in the completion of the construction, a strike on the part of the employees of the plaintiff and its subcontractors, absolving it from liability for the delay under the terms of the contract. The case came to us after a former trial in which a verdict was directed for the plaintiff. The question whether a strike had exonerated plaintiff from liability was not reached in our former decision. We held that the amounts of rents lost by defendant in consequence of the delay in completing the building were damages within the contemplation of the parties, recoverable by the defendant, unless it should develop, on a new trial, that plaintiff was relieved therefrom because of a strike. (202 App. Div. 94.)
The decisive question before us now is whether the strike clause of the contract defeated the defendant’s right to recover such damages under his counterclaim. The contract provides: “ If the
said party of the second part shall be delayed in performing said work or furnishing said material by reason of strike or strikes on the part of workmen or employees, or on the part of the workmen or employees of any sub-contractor, then the time for the completion of said work shall be extended for a period equal to the duration of any such strike or strikes.”
Plaintiff was a member of the Albany Builders’ Exchange composed of various local contractors, while its laborers, carpenters and masons and the workmen of its subcontractors belonged to labor unions which constituted a local association known as the Building Trades Council. By agreement between the Albany Builders’ Exchange and the Building Trades Council, in force for the year beginning May 1, 1920, and ending April 30, 1921, to which arrangement the plaintiff was a party as a member of the Exchange, a scale of wages had been established for the year, effective as to the laborers, carpenters and masons of the plaintiff and as to the workmen of its subcontractors. That arrangement was in effect in September, 1920, when the contract between plaintiff and defendant was made. The main portion of the construction was to be completed January 1, 1921, and that was accomplished. The contract provided, however, for a possible suspension of certain work of connecting two buildings, if a specified interference therewith should arise, with the understanding that said work *400should-not take more than twenty-one working days after notice from defendant to plaintiff to proceed with-it. On April 2.6, 1921,. defendant notified plaintiff to proceed to connect the two' buildings. April 30, 1921, the time when-the wage scale agreement would expire, was approaching and the members of the Albany Builders’ Exchange, including plaintiff, agreed - among themselves upon a reduced scale of wages which they would pay to laborers, carpenters, masons and other workmen such as were ; employed -by the-plaintiff’s subcontractors,- commencing Hay 1, 1921. The proposed reduction was the subject of discussion between the contractors and the labor unions, the latter demanding that the old , wage scale be extended for another year, to which the - plaintiff and the other' contractors declined to accede. ■ ■
During the first four days after defendant notified plaintiff to proceed with the work of connecting the two buildings, plaintiff’s men and those of its subcontractors worked in full -force.: After May first the men did not report for work because work at the old scale of wages was refused for the year then beginning. The strike among the labor unions in the building trades was general'thrdughout the city. This condition lasted until the latter part of July, 1921. For several days after May first plaintiff was unable to obtain any kind of help to carry on the contract. Plaintiff requested the labor unions to furnish men, offering to pay the wages then being offered by the other contractors and any amount additional as might be adjusted later when the' strike was settled;- but the unions refused unless plaintiff would sign the agreement continuing the old scale of wages for a year. Commencing May fifth plaintiff proceeded with the work with such workmen as it could obtain. They were very few in number, especially at the outset-,- some experienced and competent and some not. As' labor conditions improved- and as fast as it could,, the plaintiff increased its: for-de' and satisfactorily completed the- work on July 26, 1921. Subsequent to May 1, 1921, plaintiff did not pay the old scale of’ wages. It paid the. same wages that were paid by other con-' tractors in the city of Albany at the time and the same wages that continued tó prevail at the time of the trial. The-subcontractors had similar experiences. ■
No question is'raised as to the fact that this disagreement with its employees caused the plaintiff to fail - to complete the work within the stipulated time and was sufficient in duration to rólieve the plaintiff from liability if it was a strike within the meaning-of the strike clause of the contract. The point raised by the defendant is that it was not a strike; but a lockout which plaintiff-itself inaugurated; that the delay was caused, riot because its *401employees had gone on strike for an increase in wages; but solely because plaintiff refused to employ its labor except at reduced pay.
Webster’s New International Dictionary defines a “strike” as: “ Act of quitting work;' * * * such an act done by mutual understanding by a body of workmen as a means of enforcing compliance with demands made on their employer; a stopping of work by workmen in order to obtain or resist a change in conditions of employment.” A “lockout” is there defined as: “Act of locking out; refusal of an employer to furnish work to employees, used as a means of coercion.” The defendant urges that the employees of the plaintiff quit work because their pay was to be reduced, but we think that it is equally just to say that the employees quit work because they could not obtain the continuance of a higher scale of wages than the plaintiff was willing to offer. They stopped work in order to obtain these higher wages or to resist the change in the condition of their employment as to wages which the plaintiff required of them as the condition of their continuance in its employ. It was not a refusal of the plaintiff to furnish work within the meaning of a “lockout.”' The plaintiff urged them to work but under" a changed condition which the men resisted. We cannot see why this was not such a strike as was contemplated by the building contract. The provision of the contract is general in its terms and" not limited to any particular kind of a strike. It does not by its terms purport to make any distinction between a strike provoked by the voluntary act of the employer and one instituted by the workmen without such provocation. In the case of Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R. R. Co. v. Bowns (58 N. Y. 573) the Court of Appeals had under consideration a similar strike clause in a contract. The holding of the court in that case is well expressed in the headnote as follows: “ In consequence of a reduction of wages, a strike of the miners and other employees in plaintiff’s employ occurred, interrupting its business and preventing it from obtaining all the coal called for. In an action to recover for the coal delivered under the contract, held, that the clause was a limitation upon the absolute undertaking to sell and deliver; that- plaintiff was not prohibited thereby from conducting its mining operations upon the same general principles it would have been governed by, had the contract not been made, nor wa!s it required to resort to extraordinary or unusual means to prevent strikes, but, by necessary implication, had the right, irrespective of its effect upon the action of its operatives, so long as it was done in good faith, and solely with a view to its general business, to adopt ’ such rules and regulations and pay such wages as were usual, *402reasonable and proper under the circumstances; and, it appearing that plaintiff acted in good faith and upon just and reasonable business principles in reducing the wages, that it was not liable to defendants for the damages resulting.” We think the case just cited is decisive of the question raised here unless the law as there laid down has been modified by what was said by the Court of Appeals, Judge Cardozo writing, in the case of McGovern v. City of New York (234 N. Y. 377). Carefully distinguishing between things said and things decided we find that in the McGovern case the Court of Appeals was interpreting and applying a -strike clause which was expressly limited in its scope. In that case the clause itself clearly provided that a strike provoked by the voluntary act of the employer was not a strike within the meaning of that contract. There is no such limitation in the contract with which we are dealing. In the McGovern Case (supra, at p. 387) Judge Cardozo says: “The contract is referred to in the complaint as incorporated therein, and a copy was handed up to us on the argument. The plaintiffs misconceive its effect. After declaring that time is of the essence, and providing for liquidated damages for delay, it extends the time for completion in case the contractor shall be actually and necessarily delayed by reason of any labor strike not caused or instituted or provoked by the contractor or his agents.” Judge Cardozo said (p. 388): “ They may not set up their own contract with their own employees as an excuse for the nonfulfillment of their duty to another; ” but he had in mind the duty of the contractor in that case, under the contract itself, not to cause or provoke a strike by the contractor’s voluntary act. In the instant case the parties did not agree in advance to eliminate from mutual consideration the contingency of a strike provoked by the voluntary act of the employer. A strike did occur within the usually accepted meaning of the term and we must hold upon the authority of Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R. R. Co. v. Bowns (supra) that if the plaintiff acted in good faith and upon just and reasonable business principles in reducing the wages, the occurrence was a contingency to which both parties agreed in advance. This was the law of the case as submitted by the trial court to the jury in substantially the language of the Court of Appeals as laid down in the case of Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R. R. Co. v. Bowns (supra). It is immaterial that the effect of the proposed reduction in wages had for its result a benefit to the employer and detriment to the defendant. The uncontradicted proof in the case indicates that the proposed reduction in wages was a matter of the general conduct and management of the plaintiff’s affairs upon general principles by which *403it would have been governed had the contract with the defendant not been made. The act of the plaintiff, in joining with the other employers in the same line of business to fix a wage scale in the community at the end of a period over which the wage scale had previously been fixed in a similar manner, cannot be challenged as an act of bad faith so far as this defendant was concerned. The plaintiff made no effort to abandon its contract but on the contrary made every effort to conclude it within the shortest time available to it within the circumstances. It offered to its former employees the payment of whatever wage was finally agreed upon between the contending forces upon the final outcome of the strike. This offer was refused by the men. The plaintiff paid to the men it was able to employ the prevailing market rates in the community at the time and the same scale as paid for similar work at the time of the trial. No error was made in charging the jury as to the law of the case and the jury has found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff which we think should not be disturbed. If the trial court was in error with respect to the measure of the defendant’s damages for loss of rents, that error becomes immaterial since under our holding the defendant is not entitled to recover any damages.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
H. T. Kellogg, Acting P. J., Van Kirk and Hasbrouck, JJ., concur; Kiley, J., dissents, with an opinion.