Cooke v. . Millard

65 N.Y. 352
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 65 N.Y. 352 (Cooke v. . Millard) 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
Cooke v. . Millard, 65 N.Y. 352 (N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

Dwight, C.

ETo exceptions were taken in this cause, except to the conclusions of law derived by the referee from the facts as found in the report. There are but two questions to be considered: One is, whether the contract is within the statute of frauds; the other is, if it be held that it is within the statute, were the acts, done by the parties, sufficient to comply with its terms, so as to make the contract enforceable in a court of justice ?

In order to determine whether the contract is within the statute, it is important briefly to state the exact acts which the plaintiffs were to perform.

The contract was plainly executory in its nature. There were no specific articles upon which the minds of the buyer and seller met, so that it could be affirmed that a title passed at the time of the contract. The seller was to select, from the mass of lumber in his yard, certain portions that would comply with the buyer’s order. The purposes of the parties could not even be accomplished by the process of selection. The lumber must be put in a condition to answer the order. It must be dressed and cut into required sizes. The contract called for distinct parcels of surface pine boards, clapboards and matched ceiling. Part of the lumber was surfaced, and a portion of it still in the rough. The clapboards were manufactured from stuff one and a quarter-inch thick. It had to be split, surfaced and rabbeted. The order for the various items was a single one, there being 15,441 feet of the surface pine, 10,144 feet of clapboards, and 8,000 feet of matched ceiling. The surface boards and the ceiling were in-existence, and only *357 needed dressing to comply with, the order. Whether the clapboards can be deemed to have been in existence, may be more doubtful. If a part of the order is within the statute of frauds, and a portion of it without it, the whole transaction must be deemed to be within it, as an entire contract cannot, in this case, be divided or apportioned. (Cooke v. Tombs, 2 Anst., 420; Chater v. Beckett, 7 T. R., 201; Mechelen v. Wallace, 7 A. & E., 49; Thomas v. Williams, 10 B. & C., 664; Loomis v. Newhall, 15 Pick., 159.) I think it clear that the contract was in its nature entire. It was in evidence that the intention was to buy enough, in connection with what Percival had on hand, to make up a boat load. This could only be accomplished by using the entire amount of the order. Accordingly, even if the contract for the clapboards was not a sale, it cannot be separated from the rest of the order, and the cases above cited are applicable.

The question is thus reduced to the following proposition: Is a contract which is, in form, one of sale of lumber then in existence for a fixed price, where the seller agrees to put it into a state of fitness to fill the order of the purchaser, his work being included in the price, in fact a contract for work and labor and not one of sale, and, accordingly, not within the statute of frauds ?

The Hew York statute is made applicable to the “ sale of any goods, chattels, or things in action ” for the price of fifty dollars or more. The words goods and chattels ” are, literally taken, probably more comprehensive than the expressions in the English statute, “ goods, wares and merchandise.” It will be assumed, however, in this discussion, that they are equivalent.

There are, at least, three distinct views as to the meaning of the words in the statute. These may be called, for the sake of convenience, the English, the Massachusetts and the Hew York rules, as representing the decisions in the respective courts.

The English rule lays especial stress upon the point, whether the articles bargained for, can be regarded as goods capable of sale by the professed seller at the time of delivery, without any reference to the inquiry whether they were in existence *358 at the time of the contract or not. If a manufacturer is to produce an article which at the time of the delivery could he the subject of sale by him, the case is within the statute of frauds. The rule excludes all cases where work is done upon the goods of another, or even materials supplied or added to the goods of another. Thus, if a carriage-maker should repair my carriage, both furnishing labor and supplying materials, it would be a contract for work and labor, as the whole result of his efforts would not produce a chattel which could be the subject of sale lyy him. If, on the other hand, by the contract he lays_ out work or materials, or both, so as to produce a chattel which he could sell to me, the contract is within the statute... This conclusion has been reached only after great discussion and much fluctuation of opinion, but must now be regarded as settled. The leading case upon this point is Lee v. Griffin, (1 Best and Smith, 272; Benjamin on Sales, 77). The action was there brought by a dentist to recover twenty-one pounds sterling for two sets of artificial teeth, made for a deceased lady of whose estate the defendant was executor. The court held this to be the sale of a chattel within the statute of frauds. Blackburn, J., stated the principle of the decision in a clear manner: “ If the contract be such that it will result in the sale of a chattel, then it constitutes a sale, but if the work and labor be bestowed in such a manner as that the result would not be any thing which could properly be said to be the subject of sale, the action is for work and labor.”

The Massachusetts rule, as applicable to goods manufactured or modified after the bargain for them is made, mainly regards the point whether the products can, at the time stimulated for delivery, be regarded as goods, waves and merchamr disef in the sense of being generally marketable commodities, made by the manufacturer. In that respect, it agrees with the English rule. The test is not the non-existence of the commodity at the time of the bargain. It is, rather, whether the manufacturer produces the article in the general course of his business or as the result of .a special order. (Goddavd v. Binney, 115 Mass., 450.) In this very recent *359 case, the result of their decisions is stated in the following terms: “A contract for the sale of articles then existing, or such as the vendor in the ordinary course of his business manufactures or procures for the general market, whether on hand at the time or not, is a contract for the sale of goods to which the statute applies. But, on the other hand, if the goods are to be manufactured especially for the purchaser, and upon his special order, and not for the general market, the case is not within the statute.” Under this rule, it was held in Gardner v. Joy (9 Met., 177), that a contract to buy a certain number of boxes of candles at a fixed price per pound, which the vendor said he would manufacture and deliver in about three months, was held to be a contract of sale. On the other hand, in Goddard v. Binney (supra),

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.Y. 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-millard-ny-1875.