Crossman v. Lurman

57 A.D. 393, 68 N.Y.S. 311
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 A.D. 393 (Crossman v. Lurman) 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
Crossman v. Lurman, 57 A.D. 393, 68 N.Y.S. 311 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Rtjmsey, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages because of the refusal of the defendants to accept certain coffee which the plaintiffs agreed to sell to them. The coffee was tendered to the defendants and was refused because it did not comply with the contract, which was to sell 500 bags of sound Rio coffee in’ grade about standard eight and nine of the Coffee Exchange. The contract contained a provision.for grading and arbitration in case of a dispute, as to which it is only necessary to say that there was a dispute and that an arbitrar tian was had, and the arbitrators decided that the boffee was of the grade which the contract called for. The defendants still refused to accept it upon the ground that it ivas colored in such a way as to be adulterated within the provisions of section 41. of the Public Health Law of the -State of New York, and that, for that reason they were not bound to take it. The case has been tried threé times and has been in this court twice before. Upon the first appeal, which is reported in 33 Appellate Division, 422, it was held that the defendants, to justify their refusal to accept this coffee because it was adulterated within the provisions of the Public Health Law, were bound to show, not only-that it was artificially colored, but that, the effect of the coloring was to conceal damage or make the coffee appear better than it really was or of greater valué. No different rule was established when the case was before this court for the second time (46 App. Div. 63), but the judgment from which that appeal was taken was reversed because of the erroneous admission of evidence. Upon the trial now under review it was conceded that the coffee was artificially colored, and the only question as to which ther’e was a dispute, was whether the artificial coloring concealed damage or made the coffee appear better than it really was or of greater value, and that was the question submitted by the court to the jury. The evidence was sufficient to warrant the conclusion which the jury . reached,, and the only matters for us to decide are whether any of the exceptions, taken by the plaintiffs and which are here relied upon are well founded. Those exceptions, so far as it is necessary to examine them separately, are as follows :

It is claimed that the court erred in denying a motion to direct a a verdict for the plaintiffs upon the ground that the question of adulteration was settled in their favor by the arbitration which had taken 1 [395]*395place under the contract. That question is not open for discussion in this court. It was determined by the General Term (90 Hun, 303; affd., 149 N. Y. 588), which conclusion was adopted by this court upon the former appeal. (33 App. Div. 422.)

But it is claimed that, so far as the sale in the original packages of articles imported.into this State is affected by the Public Health Law referred to, that statute is beyond the power of the Legislature to enact. The argument is that the sole power to regulate commerce is given to Congress; that with respect to the adulteration of food products Congress has exercised that power by chapter 839 of the Laws of 1890 ; that the power being exclusive, the action of Congress overrides the law of any State passed upon the same subject, and, therefore, that the State law has become inoperative. If the Public Health Law was intended to be or could be construed to operate as a regulation of commerce, there could be no doubt that any action of Congress on that subject would be exclusive, and would override the State statute. But the fact, that Congress has the power to regulate commerce does not exclude the exercise of the police power of the State so far as it may prohibit the bringing into the State of anything which, from its nature, may not properly be said to belong to commerce, or because its condition is such that it is detrimental to the health of the people of the State. The rule as to the power of the States is laid down,in the opinion of Mr. Justice Catron in the License Cases (5 How. 504-599), and that rule, although it was not adopted by the court in that case, has been approved in subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, and may safely be adopted as showing the power of the States in that regard. (Bowman v. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co., 125 U. S. 465, 489; Railroad Co. v. Husen, 95 id. 465.) In each case, whether the result of the adulteration is such as to authorize the Legislature toi prohibit its sale, is a question to be decided with respect to the particular article.

That brings us to an examination of the exceptions taken to the rulings of the court with respect to the admission of evidence. It must not be forgotten that the question for the jury has been brought by the rulings of the court and by the facts admitted on the trial within a very narrow compass. The claim of the defendants is that this coffee had been adulterated within the provisions of the Public [396]*396Health Law. ■ (General Laws, chap. 25, § 41Heydecker’s General Laws, 2016.) It was not denied that the coffee .was colored with some coloring substance, and the question was whether the presence-of that coloring substance on the coffee concealed damage or made-the coffee .appear better than it really was or of greater value. There was' no other question for, the jury than that, and the testimony which was presented on the trial raised a dispute only so far as it bore upon that question. The burden of proof of that fact was Upon the defendants.

That the coffee was colored was conceded. The defendants proved it by one of .the plaintiffs, called as a witness for the defendants, and the plaintiffs proved it by one of the defendants, called as a witness for. them, so that neither party was in a situation to dispute that fact. The defendants having' given evidence tending to show that the coffee was colored, and that the effect of it was to conceal damage and make the coffee appear better and of greater value than it really was, the plaintiffs put upon the- .stand Lurman, one of the defendants, who gave such testimony as he was called upon to give by them, Lurman answered frankly all the questions he was asked. It appeared from his testimony that he had examined the coffee; that. he. found it nicely colored with a powder;' that he.saw a lot of painted coffee; that it was low grade coffee, containing black, with- - ered, sour and swollen beans; that it was impossible, to tell the brown beans from the black beans because of the coloring matter upon them, and if it had been uncolored it would have been a low grade coffee;: and the effect of the coloring matter was to conceal imperfections in the grains. He gave other testimony as to which there seems to have been no particular dispute. After Mr. Lurman had been sworn, one Lee was called as a witness. He was not, so far as appears, at all interested in the matter, and was attending the trial at the request of the defendants, although he had not been sworn by them. With regard to the testimony of Lurman and Lee, the court was requested to charge That the plaintiffs having called Mr. Lurman.and Mr. Lee as their witnesses, the jury are not at liberty to disregard these witnesses, but these witnesses must be considered to be credible witnesses.” This charge was given, and to it the plaintiffs excepted, but it is to be noticed that the exception of the plaintiffs did not adopt the precise words used by the court in [397]*397its charge, but the exception read, “are not at liberty to discredit

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Bluebook (online)
57 A.D. 393, 68 N.Y.S. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crossman-v-lurman-nyappdiv-1901.