Delaware Mills, Inc. v. Carpenter Bros.

200 A.D. 324, 193 N.Y.S. 201, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8177
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 17, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 200 A.D. 324 (Delaware Mills, Inc. v. Carpenter Bros.) 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
Delaware Mills, Inc. v. Carpenter Bros., 200 A.D. 324, 193 N.Y.S. 201, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8177 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Hinman, J.:

It is only by reading together the memorandum slip containing the terms of the contract and the letters of the plaintiff of September first and October fifth with the defendant’s answers indorsed thereon that we can say a complete written contract, or note, or memorandum, signed by the party to be charged has been sufficiently established to satisfy the Statute of Frauds.

Counsel for the defendant urges two objections. He contends that the parol evidence given by the salesman Ingersoll was inadmissible under the Statute of Frauds to identify the memorandum slip and to prove the circumstances under which it was prepared and delivered. He further contends that the defendant in his answers to the letters of the plaintiff did not admit the giving of the order set forth in the memorandum slip and that, therefore, the writings taken together did not set forth the essential terms of a contract.

To sustain his first contention, counsel for the defendant relies upon the cases of Wright v. Weeks (25 N. Y. 153); Drake v. Seaman (97 id. 230), and Evans v. Pelta (146 App. Div. 749). He calls attention to the following expressions used by Allen, J., writing one of the opinions in Wright v. Weeks' (supra): “ So an agreement need not be perfect by itself. It may be made certain and definite, and thus valid, under the statute, by reference to another writing, as well as by incorporating the entire contract in one paper. But the reference must be to another paper,, and so distinct as to make that paper a part of the contract itself. (Kenworthy v. Schofield, 2 Barn. & Cres. 945.) The parties cannot unite two papers, [329]*329so as to make them unitedly constitute a valid contract, unless they are physically joined, or the intention to unite them appears on the face of the papers. If the connection between two papers depend upon verbal testimony, or if the reference in the written memorandum is to something verbal, the whole evil intended to be remedied by statute will be experienced.”

A careful reading of the Wright case demonstrates that the statement of the learned justice so far as it related to connecting two separate papers, was mere dictum. The case involved a contract for the sale of land where the writing fixed the price but referred to terms as specified,” not in the memorandum and which rested entirely in parol. The only writing in that case showed on its face that it was not a complete agreement in writing. The time and manner of payment of the purchase price was of the essence of the agreement. It was just as necessary to the plaintiff as the portion which was committed to writing. It was one of the terms of the agreement and was left in parol. It was not evidenced by any additional writing. The identification by parol evidence of two separate writings as constituting a contract was not involved. Moreover, the case of Kenworthy v. Schofield (2 Barn. & Cres. 945), cited by Allen, J., is not helpful in determining the question which we have here. That was a case decided in 1824 and related to a sale at auction where certain conditions of sale were read before the bidding commenced but were not attached to the catalogue which was the only thing signed by the auctioneer. The court said that “ as they were not actually attached or clearly referred to, they formed no part of the thing signed.” The catalogue made no reference to these conditions whatsoever, and it was not even proved that the purchaser heard them read or knew of the conditions. Moreover, there are other English cases which have come to be the leading cases and recognized in this State to which reference will be made which were decided long subsequent to the opinion in Kénworthy v. Schofield (supra), and relax the rule there laid down. What was said in the case of Drake v. Seaman (supra) was not at all intended to decide the present case. The court was dealing with a writing which omitted any reference to the subject-matter of the agreement for which a certain sum was to be paid. The court hypothetically stated several contracts to the subject-matter of which the writing might have applied and reached the conclusion that one of the essential terms was omitted, namely, the subject-matter of the contract. There was no question in that case with reference to connecting two separate writings which together might have constituted an enforcible contract.

[330]*330The case upon which the defendant relies most particularly is that of Evans v. Pelta (supra), decided in the First Department. In that case a memorandum of the order was made by plaintiffs’ agent and transmitted to the plaintiffs and was not signed by the defendants. Later the defendants wrote the plaintiffs acknowledging that they placed an order for a few skirts, Dec. 7th ” and requesting the plaintiffs to delay shipping. Later the defendants again wrote stating, We will let you know when to ship goods bought.” The court said: “ Without the testimony of the salesman who took the order it would be absolutely impossible to tell a single element of the terms of sale. At most, we have a memorandum signed by the defendants, admitting that they had given some sort of an order; but that is not sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the statute.”

The only cases cited by the court in that opinion were Brauer v. Oceanic Steam Nav. Co. (178 N. Y. 339) and Wilson v. Lewiston Mill Co. (150 id. 314). Neither of these cases reaches the point involved here. They simply sustain the well-settled proposition that verbal evidence cannot be resorted to in order to supply any of the essential terms of the contract which the writing or writings relied upon omit. In the first case it was expressly conceded that there were essential conditions of the real contract on which the writings were silent and in the second case the court held that there was no implication to be drawn from a writing that an offer had been made and accepted. The Evans case is also distinguishable from the case at bar in that the memorandum prepared by the agent in that case was simply transmitted to the agent’s principal. There was no carbon copy left with the other party as in this case. The oral negotiations were not reduced to writing and a carbon copy left with the party to be charged as written evidence of the agreement of the parties. In the Evans case the memorandum made by the agent and forwarded to his principal may well have been a self-serving declaration not made in the presence of the other party nor submitted to him for his scrutiny. It thus would not have been competent evidence as to the terms of the contract under well-settled rules. No estoppel could run in such a case and the memorandum of the agent would not be binding upon the other party. If the memorandum prepared by the agent in the Evans case had not been a self-serving declaration written out for his own purposes and simply forwarded to his principal and thus not binding upon the other party, but had been prepared in duplicate as in this case in the presence of the other pasty for the purpose of reducing to writing the oral negotiations and terms and one of the duplicates had been there[331]*331upon handed to and received by the other party, the court could not have reached its decision in that case under the well-settled law of this State and of England. Such memorandum becomes competent evidence as to the terms of the contract. (Lathrop v. Bramhall, 64 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A.D. 324, 193 N.Y.S. 201, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-mills-inc-v-carpenter-bros-nyappdiv-1922.