A. S. Rosenthal Co. v. Brilliant Silk Mfg. Co.

217 A.D. 667, 217 N.Y.S. 138, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7874
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 217 A.D. 667 (A. S. Rosenthal Co. v. Brilliant Silk Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. S. Rosenthal Co. v. Brilliant Silk Mfg. Co., 217 A.D. 667, 217 N.Y.S. 138, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7874 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The defendant, appellant, entered into a contract with plaintiff on the 20th day of March, 1919, for the sale of 300 pieces quality “ A-36 Warp Print Taffetas at one dollar and fifty cents a yard. The contract provides with reference to quality of goods and deliveries as follows:

“To be of good material and made as carefully as if made for ourselves, with the understanding that if goods are merchantable they will be accepted and no claims made for únavoidable imperfections. * * *
“ An effort is to be made to deliver, if possible, all or the principal part of this order by or before Nov. 30th, 1919, with the hope and expectation that additional orders will be placed in time to [668]*668keep the looms running continuously and through 1920. * * * ” (Italics are the writer’s.)

There was evidence which might have warranted a finding that defendant proceeded with reasonable dispatch to manufacture the goods and that there was delay due to strikes, to tardiness on the part of plaintiff in furnishing required information, and to the fact,, in contemplation of the parties when the contract was made, that the whole undertaking was somewhat of an experiment. •

The first delivery was made July 10, 1919, and the last December 29, 1919. Fourteen pieces were delivered in July; thirteen pieces in August; twenty-three pieces in September; thirty-six pieces in October; nine pieces in November, and two in December, one of which was a remnant. A total of ninety-six pieces constituted the deliveries made. At the end of August, 1919, there began to arise disputes as to deliveries. Finally defendant wrote on September 3, 1919: “ We sent it [the order] to the mill in the regular way, and all delays have come from mill conditions over which we had no control. The writer mentioned some of these things as possible when we took the order, and it was understood that if we could not get the goods all out in 1919 they would be taken in 1920.”

As to this defendant asserts acquiescence by plaintiff and that there was no further complaint or criticism of deliveries until December, 1919.

In the meantime, plaintiff had accepted delivery of all of the first set of ninety-six pieces and its detailed order for the second set of twenty-four warps or ninety-six pieces was given.

Notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff had agreed to take the goods as manufactured, with no claims for unavoidable imperfections, providing the goods were merchantable, nevertheless in December, 1919, the plaintiff made claims for allowances with respect to twenty-two pieces of goods delivered up to that time. On December 17, 1919, defendant wrote: We have examined the 22 pieces of Warp Print Taffetas sent back for our inspection. We are sorry to report that the principal part of the difficulty is from the weaving. We find it very difficult, and we might say practically impossible, to obtain competent weavers and department overseers to handle this class of goods at this time. When we took the order, we knew it might be slow to deliver the goods and so made no definite time for delivery. We realize that you cannot accept goods as perfect turned out in this condition, and it looks as though we could not do any better under present conditions. We have material in process now, but question the advisability of going ahead with it until we are able to do better work than at present.”

[669]*669A conference followed, and, though it was contended for defendant that plaintiff was required to accept the goods if merchantable without making any claim for unavoidable imperfections, a credit of $135.20 was made to and accepted by plaintiff.

The plaintiff then made further demands upon the defendant, which the defendant contends were unreasonable, that the Brilliant Silk Mfg. Co., Inc., should make immediate delivery of the remainder of the warp print taffetas called for by the contract. The defendant contends that this was impossible, plaintiff not even having furnished the-filling instructions for color combinations of the second set of warps until October 16, 1919; and that, though the mill had immediately proceeded with the execution of the order for the second set of twenty-four warps, there were delays at the dyers and at the printers. The defendant also contended that it could not under the circumstances comply with a demand that it state definitely when the rest of the goods could be delivered. Indeed it seems that filling instructions for the third set of twenty-four warps had not been given by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff then demanded immediate delivery of plain taffetas. Prices had advanced and defendant was unwilling to deliver plain instead of warp print taffetas because it would have resulted in taking the plain taffetas being produced for other customers who were waiting for them.

The plaintiff then refused to make payments due for goods already delivered, amounting to $1,344.38. The defendant, however, proceeded with the twenty-four warps which had been fully ordered, and demanded the amount due.

As plaintiff insisted on immediate delivery or the fixation of a definite time for further delivery as a condition of paying the balance due for the merchandise which it had received, defendant took the position that plaintiff had breached the contract and, apparently, that as a consequence defendant would refuse to proceed on its part, writing as follows: ’ „

“Feb. 2, 1920.
“ Messrs. A. S. Rosenthal Co.,
“ 112 Madison Avenue,
“ New York City:
“Gentlemen — Your letter of January 30, 1920 addressed to Messrs. Rusch & Co. in which you refuse to pay your outstanding account which has been past due since January 10, 1920 has been called to our attention. This letter followed the call made by our representative Mr. Richter upon you at your office on January 30th at which time he demanded payment of the bill but payment was refused.
[670]*670“ Deliveries of goods have been made by us strictly according to contract. The attitude of your Mr. Frank Rosenthal has been unwarrantably offensive and the statements made by him in our office in the presence of others including our attorney were both false and unfair. They were so wrong that if they had been made in the presence of a customer instead of our attorney might have resulted in serious damage. The unfair and aggressive position you have taken, together with your refusal to pay for goods already delivered according to the terms of the agreement constitute a deliberate breach of the entire contract.
“ On demand for payment you wrote in response on January 15fch to Rusch & Co. stating that there was a dispute regarding quality and asked a day or two until your Mr. Frank Rosenthal returned to the city, although the fact is that we had concluded the adjustment referred to with Mr. Rosenthal on December 23, 1919, and credit for same had been passed to you on December 26, 1919.
“ We have already notified you that at the time you requested to change your order to plain goods, which request you made on December 23, 1919, we had in process 24 warps of the approximate value somewhere between $6000 and $8000 including the labor cost to that time.

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Bluebook (online)
217 A.D. 667, 217 N.Y.S. 138, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-s-rosenthal-co-v-brilliant-silk-mfg-co-nyappdiv-1926.