Crane v. Barron

115 A.D. 196, 100 N.Y.S. 937, 37 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R. 350, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3659
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 A.D. 196 (Crane v. Barron) 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
Crane v. Barron, 115 A.D. 196, 100 N.Y.S. 937, 37 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R. 350, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3659 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinions

Patterson, J.:

The plaintiffs sued to recover damages for the breach of a con. tract alleged to have been, made by them with the defendants for " the sale and delivery byithe latter of a certain quantity of lumber. ’ The claim of the plaintiffs, as set forth in the complaint, is that on the 7th of November, 1902, their copartnership and that of the defendants entered into an agreement whereby the latter agreed to sell and deliver to the former 1,500 pieces of hickory plank, 400 pieces to- be' three by nine inches and upwards by twenty feet long, 100 pieces ■to be four by nine inches and upwards by twenty feet ■ long; the lengths,, however, of fifteen per cent ,of the plank might -be eigln teen feet; 800 pieces to be three by eight inches and ilpwards by twel ve, fourteen and sixteen feet long; 200 pieces to be four by eight inches and upwards by twelve, fourteen and sixteen feet long, but as much of thd foregoing 1,000 pieces to be sixteen.feet long as . twelve feet long. ' The agreement also provided that the defendants could send- a few pieces of the three by eight inch planks only ten feet long. Certain requirements of the timber were, it,is .alleged, also mentioned in the contract, but special reference to them is not required. It is alleged ill the complaint that the prices fixed upon by the contract were sixty-five dollars per thousand feet for the longest plank and sixty dollars for the shortest. It is further alleged • that the'■ defendants failed and refused to "perform the terms and conditions of the contract' and to- deliver the planks, with the exception of 130 pieces delivered in May, 1903. - Performance and readiness to perform on the plaintiffs’ part- is also alleged. ' In their [199]*199answer, the defendants deny that they entered into the contract as alleged in the complaint, or that the plaintiffs were ready to perform its conditions; they admit that they refused to deliver some -of the plank referred to in the complaint but that they did deliver 130 pieces. They then proceed to set up among other defenses the following, viz.: That during the month of May, 1903, they delivered and tendered to the plaintiffs 11,859 feet of hickory lumber, but that the plaintiffs would and did receive only a part thereof, and that they ever since have, after the payment for the same became due and payable, refused to pay for the same, which refusals were in violation of the terms of the agreement referred to in the plaintiffs’ complaint, if such'an agreement were made, and constitute a breach, and that at the time of such refusals the defendants had performed all that was required of them under the allegéd contract, and, further, that if the agreement ever were made, it was rescinded, waived and abandoned on or about January 27, 1903. The defendants also interposed a counterclaim which as we view the case it is unnecessary now to consider. Whatever relations existed between the parties concerning the subject-matter of their dealing, as it was originally entered upon, were established by letters exchanged between thern ; and-the learned judge who presided at the trial or the cause held, and instructed the jury as matter of law, that there was a valid binding contract made on or about November 7, 1902. The letters alluded to fully justify the ruling of the court. On November 6, 1902, the plaintiffs wrote to the defendants: “We are in receipt of your favor of the 5th instant and note that yon think you can get out ■.some 20-foot plank and we herewith give you the following memorandum which you can saw out at once.” Then followed a description of the timber desired, specific instructions concerning the character of the wood and how it should be treated, and there was a price named for the long planks of sixty-five dollars a thousand and for the short planks of sixty dollars in New York. On the 7th of November, 1902, the defendants wrote to the plaintiffs as follows: “ We have before us your esteemed favor of November 6th, ordering 1,500 pieces of hickory, and we have sent the order to the mill with instructions to commence cutting at once. We will ship this lumber via the Pennsylvania Railroad, lighterage free, unless you prefer a different delivery. We enter this as our order No. 1449, and you will please [200]*200refer to this number in further correspondence. Thanking you for the order and awaiting your further favors, we remain,” etc. The letter of the plaintiffs plainly indicates that they gave an order to the - defendants for the timber therein mentioned, which the defendants were to saw out at once; and the defendants acknowledged the order as one obligatory upon them and undertook to ship the lumber to the plaintiffs by a certain carrier, unless a different one was preferred. There was- nothing left optional with the defendants nor was their promise to supply the lumber conditional The quantities were specified, the price was named and nc element of a binding contract is wanting. The omission to fix a time at which the delivery should be made was supplied by the law, which would require performance within a reasonable time, and there is some evidence to show that a period of six weeks from the time oi making the contract would have sufficed. That the defendants understood and acted upon the ■ arrangement as a binding contract appeal’s at various places in the-record In other correspondence they speak of the plaintiffs’ letter as an order fói'the merchandise and the evidence 'shows that they accepted that order and undertook to execute it. They did not furnish lumber on tlie contract within what is testified would have been a reasonable time for performance.

The trial justice aiso ruled and so charged the jury that Without justification the defendants failed to perform the contract; or, in other words, were guilty of a breach of that contract, and- lie' held that the breach was complete on January 26, 1903, and it was upon that breach that the plaintiffs’ right to recover was predicated. He evidently must have taken the view that the defendants’ failure to-make delivery before January 26, 1903, put them in the wrong and gave, the plaintiffs an immediate right of action. -Conceding that there may have been a breach of the contract arising from the failure to deliver the merchandise within a reasonable time, it is-obvious that that breach was Waived by the plaintiffs. On the 26th ' of January, 1903, the defendants wrote to the plaintiffs as follows i “ Referring to your letter and order of November 6th, for hickory plank, would say that we wisli to advise you at this time that, in all probability the mill will not be able to get out this-timber. We placed this order with the Southern Saw Mill Co. of New Orleans, La., who have a mill at Tomnolen, Miss., where they are- getting out [201]*201some very nice hickory, and where the writer saw their" logs coming in last October before seeing you about this order. They took hold of this order, but do not seem to be making any headway on it, and we, therefore, wish to advise you of the outlook, so that you can protect yourselves and buy the lumber in other quarters if necessary for your contracts. If they get out any lumber which is applicable on your order, we will offer it to you before we sell it to other parties, giving you the option of taking it or not at that time, but from present indications they will have very little, if any, of it this season.” This letter disclosed the situation in which the defendants were placed, namely, their inability to perform the contract at that time because it .was out of the power of the party to whom they had confided the execution of the order in Mississippi to furnish the timber.

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Bluebook (online)
115 A.D. 196, 100 N.Y.S. 937, 37 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R. 350, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-v-barron-nyappdiv-1906.