Arnot v. . Pittston and Elmira Coal Co.

68 N.Y. 558, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 759
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 68 N.Y. 558 (Arnot v. . Pittston and Elmira Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnot v. . Pittston and Elmira Coal Co., 68 N.Y. 558, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 759 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

This action is brought to recover the price of about 2,700 tons of coal, sold and delivered to the defendant by the Butler Colliery Company in the month of August, 1869. The plaintiff claims under an assignment from the last-named company.

The findings of the referee establish that this coal was delivered pursuant to a contract between the two companies, dated August 3, 1869, and the defence mainly rests upon the alleged illegality of that contract. The referee has found that the circumstances under which the contract was made were as follows:

The Butler Colliery Company was a Pennsylvania corporation, engaged in mining and vending coal, at or near Pitts-ton, Pennsylvania. The defendant was also a Pennsylvania corporation, engaged in the same business, but in addition *564 had a coal depot at Elmira, New York, where it was largely engaged in vending anthracite coal, the product of the Pitts-ton mines, and in distributing it, by canal and railway, from Elmira, to dealers and consumers, through a very large extent of country north and west of that point. Elmira was connected with Pittston by canal, and was the chief market for coal in western New York, and prices of coal were there established for the extensive district before mentioned.

The purpose of the defendant in making the contracts in question was so to control the shipment and supply of coal for the Elmira market as to -maintain an unnaturally high price of coal in that market, and to prevent competition in the sale of coal therein, and, but for that purpose, the defendant would not have entered into the contract in question with the Butler Colliery Company. Of all these facts the Butler company had notice at the time of making the agreement.

As a further means of accomplishing the same purpose, the defendant had made contracts adapted to promote it with all the other mining proprietors at Pittston. Of these contracts the Butler company did not have actual notice.

The agreement in question, entered into for the purpose which has been stated, was as follows : The defendant agreed that it would take all the coal which the Butler company should desire to send north of the State line, not exceeding 2,000 tons per month, at the regular market-price established from time to time by the Wyoming Coal Exchange, less fifteen per cent per ton commission, and that settlements should be made tin the tenth of each month for all the coal delivered during the preceding month.

The Butler Colliery Company agreed that it would not sell coal to any party other than the defendant, to come north of the State line, during the continuance of the agreement, which was during the season of canal navigation for 1869.

The other provisions of the agreement related to mere matters of detail, not affecting the legal question involved.

It is found as a fact in the case, that' the product of the Butler Colliery Company largely exceeded 2,000 tons per month.

*565 It cannot escape observation that by this agreement the Butler Colliery Company did not agree to sell or deliver to the defendant all of the product of its mines, nor any specific quantity or proportion thereof. It was entirely optional with it whether or not to deliver any coal to the defendant. But the defendant did agree to take all the coal which the Butler company might desire to send north, to the extent of 2,000 tons per month. This undertaking would have been utterly void for want of mutuality, had it not been for the agreement of the Butler company that it would not sell coal to any other party, to come north of the State line. The only consideration for the agreement of the defendant to take of the product of the Butler company to the extent of 2,000 tons per month, consisted in the stipulation of that company not to sell to any one but the defendant. Without that stipulation, the paper called a contract would have amounted to nothing, hieither party would have been bound to deliver or accept any coal. That stipulation was all that gave vitality to the contract.

Bearing in mind the fact found, that the product of the Butler company’s mines was largely in excess of 2,000 tons per month, the object of the agreement is plain. The defendant, without binding itself to take the whole product of the mines of the Butler company, endeavored by this agreement to keep all of the coal of that company out of the market, except the limited amount which it agreed to take, and thus to artificially enhance the price of that necessary commodity. This purpose was the basis of the whole agreement, and, as is found by the referee, was understood by both parties at the time of entering into the contract.

That a combination to effect such a purpose is inimical to the interests of the public, and that all contracts designed to effect such an end are contrary to public policy, and therefore illegal, is too well settled by adjudicated cases to be questioned at this day. (Morris Run Coal Co. v. Barclay Coal Co., 68 Pa. St. R., 173; People v. Fisher, 14 Wend., 9; 4 Denio, 352; 5 id., 434; 44 N. Y., 87, and cases cited.)

Every producer or vender of coal or other commodity has *566 the right to use all legitimate efforts to obtain the best price for the article in which he deals. But when he endeavors to artificially enhance prices by suppressing or keeping out of market the products of others, and to accomplish that purpose by means of contracts binding them to withhold their supply, such arrangements are even more mischievous than combinations not to sell under an agreed price. Combinations of that character have been held to be against public policy and illegal. If they should be sustained, the prices of articles of pure necessity, such as coal, flour and other indispensable commodities, might be artificially raised to a ruinous extent far exceeding any naturally resulting from the proportion between supply and demand. Ho illustration of the mischief of such contracts is perhaps more apt than a monopoly of anthracite coal, the region of the production of which is known to be limited. Parties entering into contracts of this description must depend upon each other for their execution, and cannot derive any assistance from' the courts.

The plaintiff, however, contends, that notwithstanding the illegality of the stipulation of the Butler Colliery Company not to sell coal to other companies, he is still entitled to recover for the coal actually delivered to the defendant.

The coal was, as found by the referee, delivered under the illegal contract. The purpose of the vendee was against, public policy, and the vendor knew it. This brings us straight to the question, whether the vendor, delivering goods under such a contract, can recover for the price. I think that under the circumstances of the present case, as found by the referee, he cannot. If an absolute purchase had been made by the defendant of the Butler Coal Company of any specified quantity of coal, or even of all the coal which the Butler company could produce, that contract would have been legal, notwithstanding that the object of the purchaser was to secure a monopoly and that the vendor knew it.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.Y. 558, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnot-v-pittston-and-elmira-coal-co-ny-1877.