De Bavier v. Funke

21 N.Y.S. 410, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 442
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 21 N.Y.S. 410 (De Bavier v. Funke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Bavier v. Funke, 21 N.Y.S. 410, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 442 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

LAWRENCE, J.

The action was brought to recover damages in the sum of $987.70, and interest, sustained by reason of the refusal of the defendant to accept 10 bales of silk purchased for and on his behalf by the plaintiffs. The complaint sets forth that the plaintiffs, commission [412]*412merchants in New York and Milan, were employed by the defendant, a silk manufacturer of College Point, to purchase on his account 15 bales of raw silk, under an agreement whereby the plaintiffs were to import-said silk under their own credits, and to receive payment therefor, and for their commission, in four months’ notes; a "purchase of 15 bales; the expenditure of large sums therefor; the acceptance by defendant of 5 bales, and.the refusal to accept the balance: notice by plaintiffs of their intention to sell these 10 bales on a specified date; the sale and consequent loss of the amount claimed. The answer alleges a contract to-purchase the 15 bales of the plaintiffs; admits the acceptance of 5 bales, and settlement therefor; also the tender of 5 additional bales, and refusal to accept them, on the ground, as claimed, of the inferiority in quality; denies tender of the last 5 bales, and alleges their inferiority, likewise; and contains, further, a counterclaim for $488.12 damages alleged to have been sustained by the defendant on the 5 bales admitted to have been accepted and used, and 5 bales of a prior purchase on the ground that the silk was “guarantied” by plaintiffs “to-be of cornaredo filature, strictly classical in quality,” and that it was in reality inferior. The averments of the counterclaim were put in issue by the reply.

The facts in this case are somewhat complicated, the rights and interests of the parties depending upon various letters and telegrams, which were put in evidence on the trial; and, without a thorough examination of these letters and telegrams, it is impossible to arrive at a correct determination of the issues involved in the action. From an examination of the evidence, both documentary and oral, we are of the opinion that the contract between the plaintiffs and the defendant is to be deduced from Exhibits A, B, 0, D, E, F, G, and H, and that they establish that the defendant agreed to purchase, through the plaintiffs, 15 bales of silk, deliverable during the months of October, November, and December, 1888, and 15 more bales between December, 1888, and February, 1889. In the order for the first 15 bales, under date of July 25, 1888, the defendant said: “Of course, I expect the same cornaredo as previously received, and terms, four months from delivery here.” In fulfillment of the first order, the plaintiffs notified the defendant that they had bought, “subject to approval, gold ticket quality, guarantied equal to cornaredo, which is now unobtainable at any price. ” In the order for the second lot, the defendant stated that he “expected the silks to be equal tocornaredo, and not of the woolly character.” Exhibit H. There was, therefore, no warranty that the goods should be of cornaredo filature. They were guarantied to be equal to cornaredo, which was unobtainable. The defendant, under this contract, or under these contracts, if the transactions are to be regarded as two separate transactions, accepted 15-bales, which were delivered under the first order, and 5 bales, which were delivered under the second order. His counterclaim is in respect to 5 bales delivered under the first, and 5 other bales delivered under the second, order. He had a right to demand, in the first instance, that the silk should be equal to the cornaredo filature; but it seems to us that [413]*413after acceptance and payment for certain bales, when he had had a full opportunity for inspecting and examining them, he is estopped from now alleging that they were inferior to the cornaredo filature, and from claiming damages therefor. However that may be, the defendant gave evidence tending to show the .inferiority of 9, not 10, bales of silk to the cornaredo- filature; and the question of the counterclaim was fully submitted to the jury by the justice before whom the cause was tried, and. was found adversely to the defendant.

In respect to 10 other bales deliverable on the second order, which the defendant refused to accept, different questions are presented. It is ■claimed by the appellant, in the first place, that the plaintiffs are principals, and not agents, in the transaction, and that they were, therefore, •guarantors that the silk was equal in quality to the cornaredo filature; and, secondly, that the goods were purchased subject to approval, and that he had the right to reject any of the silk, if, in his opinion, it did not suit him, or was not available for his business, or was not equal to the cornaredo filature, for any reason. If this be granted to be a correct interpretation of the contract between the parties, the defendant claims that the court below erred in denying the motion which was made by the defendant to dismiss the complaint at the" close of the case. We are of the opinion that this view of the defendant’s rights cannot be maintained. " He .had not the right capriciously to refuse to approve the goods, if in point of fact they were equal to cornaredo filature; and there was evidence to the effect that the goods delivered were equal to cornaredo filature. Such evidence being before the court, it had no right to take the question from the jury by a dismissal of the complaint. The question as to whether the goods were equal to those of cornaredo filature was fairly presented, by the learned justice who tried the cause, to the jury; and, the evidence being conflicting, their determination of the ■question of fact is final.

It is contended that the justice erred in the comments which he made upon the testimony of two of the expert witnesses; but, referring to the charge, we find no error in that respect." The justice said:

“If you believe the testimony of Mr. Moll and Bourdis, then the goods furnished by the plaintiffs to the defendant were equal to cornaredo filature, and were classical in quality, and complied with the agreement made by the plaintiffs. ”

The justice did not affirm that the whole agreement between the parties had been complied with, in the event of their believing those witnesses, but merely that the plaintiffs had made out that the goods complied with the agreement between the parties; and a perusal of the testimony of those witnesses substantiates the statement. The defendant had a right to a fair and reasonable opportunity to approve the 10 bales tendered under the second order; and, if he was not afforded that opportunity, plaintiffs cannot recover in this action. 1 It is strenuously insisted by his counsel that he did not have such an opportunity. This position cannot be sustained. On the 27th of February, 1889, the defendant positively declined to accept any more silk from the plaintiffs, and requested them not to send him any “further correspondences regarding this matter, as they will find no attention.” [414]*414On the 18th of March, 1889, he abandoned this position, and stated in a letter sent to the plaintiffs that on further consideration he would receive the further shipments under the contract, if the quality of the silk was satisfactory as per agreement, but notified them that he should hold them for damages for defective quality in the shipment of the four bales. These four bales were all part of the first lot, and had been already accepted and paid for; and, as already stated, it was too late for the defendant to • counterclaim in respect to them.' As to the remaining ten bales, it appears that the defendant had refused to accept five of them.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.Y.S. 410, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-bavier-v-funke-nysupct-1892.