Curtiss v. Marshall

8 Bosw. 22
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 19, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Bosw. 22 (Curtiss v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtiss v. Marshall, 8 Bosw. 22 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

Hoffman, J.

The complaint states that the defendant was a large manufacturer of mouldings, and used therein a large quantity of 1J inch pine lumber; that in the month of May, 1857, “said Marshall, (the defendant,) and Hiram Ourtiss made an" agreement by which it was agreed, that said Curtiss should furnish for delivery at the manufactory of the defendant, in the city of Hew York, all the l|r inch pine lumber which said Marshall would require for use in his said manufactory, for the space of one year, not exceeding in the whole one hundred thousand feet, and the defendant should pay therefor on delivery, at the rate of $40 per thousand feet.”

It is then averred that said Hiram Ourtiss did deliver about 30,000 feet, in the months of June and August, 1857. Then, that in December, 1857, “ Hiram Ourtiss had, [25]*25for the purpose of carrying out his agreement, purchased 60.000 feet more of lumber, and it was then mutually agreed by and between them, that said original agreement should be modified so that Marshall should receive, and said Curtiss deliver the said 60,000 feet, when he had used the lumber already furnished by the said Curtiss, and pay therefor in Black & Gram’s notes, at four months, indorsed by said Marshall, and said plaintiffs allege that said Marshall did use the lumber which had been purchased by said Curtiss, and after said modified agreement, said Curtiss assigned all his claim and said lumber to the plaintiffs.”

There is then an allegation, that after the said Marshall had so used the inch lumber, as before stated, to wit: in April, 1858, and at other times, an offer to deliver the 60.000 feet was made and refused.

The defendant expressly denies both the original and the modified agreement; the delivery of 30,000, or any number of feet under the same; or the offer to deliver the 60.000 or any other number of feet, according to the same.

The proof is (assuming it for the present to be sufficient), that the original agreement of May, 1857, was as stated •in the complaint, adding that the lumber was to be delivered monthly; that in December, 1857, he delivery of the lumber was by agreement suspended until the defendant had used what he had already received, but on condition that he should take at once (or in one parcel), the balance of the 100,000 feet, as soon as he had used up what he had received. In November, 1857, Hiram Curtiss had sold his business and lumber to the present plaintiffs, but possession not to be delivered till January, 1858. At the time of the December agreement, the defendant was apprised of this sale; one of the plaintiffs was present at the making such agreement. H. Curtiss acted as agent of the plaintiffs in making such modified agreement. Robert E. Curtiss, one of the plaintiffs-, states he was present, and the defendant was to take all the lumber which we then had on ha,nd for him at one time. He must refer to the plaintiffs. [26]*26The action proceeds on the modified agreement and nothing else.

Then, on the question of pleading and variance, the case is this: An allegation in the complaint of an agreement between Hiram Ourtiss and the defendant, and proof of an agreement by him as agent of the plaintiffs, his agency, and their interest in the subject matter, being known to the defendant. In other words, it was an agreement made in effect with the plaintiffs through their agent.

How can this be such a variance between the allegation in a pleading and the proof, as could have actually misled the adverse party in maintaining his defense upon the merits. (Code, § 169.)

If the allegation had been that the agreement was had with the plaintiffs, proof that it was made by H. Curtiss, as their agent, would have sustained the case, without amendment. (Richards v. Westcott, 2 Bosw., 589, and see Chapman v. Carolin, 3 Bosw., 456.) It does not appear to me satisfactory to rest the case upon this point.

The agreement proceeded upon, is that of December, and three witnesses concur that the balance of the lumber was not to be delivered until the defendant had used up that which had been previously delivered. He was to take it in the spring, when he had used up what he had on hand.

To sustain the action, sufficient testimony must have been adduced that the defendant had used up what had been delivered, or such a rescission of the contract by him as would entitle the plaintiff to proceed on another ground. How the evidence is so slight and unsatisfactory (apart from the effect of the complaint and answer), that I should treat the verdict as without evidence to support it.

Hiram Ourtiss merely says: He thought defendant had used up the lumber bought of him; presumes' he saw other lumber than his own at defendant’s yard; “ don’t know that defendant had used up all the lumber bought of me.” Eobert E. Ourtiss states that the defendant said he was not [27]*27going to take any more lumber, in consequence of witnes’s father not having done right about some notes.

On the other side, the defendant expressly swears that in August, 1858, when he went out of business, he had on hand 7,000 to 11,000 feet of lumber, which he had bought of Ourtiss. And George Marshall says there was torn 7,000 to 9,000 feet.

The allegation of the complaint was explicit that all the lumber furnished had been used. The defendant, denying expressly every agreement of every kind, has not met this allegation in general or particular terms.

I do not think that this was such a plain admission on the pleadings, as precluded the defendant from adducing evidence to contradict that of the plaintiff. Besides, the absolute denial of any agreement seems to involve a denial of the allegation that something was done and completed under and in pursuance of it.

I think there must be a new trial.

Bosworth, Ch. J.

By the original contract of May, 1857, H. Ourtiss was to furnish and deliver to Marshall, “ all the pine lumber which said Marshall would require for use in his said manufactory,' for the space of one year,” which Marshall was to take; and he was to “ pay therefor on delivery, at the rate of $40 per 1,000 feet,” and, as a matter of course, in money.

After the delivery of 30,000 feet, and in December, 1857, the original agreement was modified so “ that Marshall would receive and said Ourtiss deliver ” 60,000 feet more of lumber, which Ourtiss had purchased for the purpose ■ of carrying out the original agreement. Marshall was to receive the 60,000 feet, “when he had used the lumber already furnished by said Curtiss, and pay therefor, in Messrs. Black & Gram’s notes, at' four months, to be indorsed by said Marshall.”

The complaint states that “ after the said modified agree- . ment, Ourtiss assigned all his claim and said lumber to the plaintiffs.” •

[28]*28The proof is, that H. Curtiss sold out all his interest in the original contract, and, all the lumber he had, and his business to the plaintiffs, in Uovember, 1857, possession to be given in January, 1858. H. Curtiss testified that when defendant called on him in December, 1857, the time the alleged modified agreement was made, “ he was notified that I had sold out; one of the plaintiffs was present in December.” “ I modified the agreement in December, 1857, as agent of plaintiffs.” Robert E.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Place v. . Minster
65 N.Y. 89 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Bosw. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtiss-v-marshall-nysuperctnyc-1861.