Derleth v. Degraaf

19 Jones & S. 369
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMarch 2, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Jones & S. 369 (Derleth v. Degraaf) 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
Derleth v. Degraaf, 19 Jones & S. 369 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

By the Court.

O’Gorman, J.

The action is for goods alleged in the complaint to have been sold and delivered by Charles and Ferdinand Derleth, composing the firm of Derleth Brothers, in 1873 and 1874 to the defendants, composing the firm of Degraaf & Taylor. Both the plaintiffs and the defendants were engaged in the manufacture of furniture.

In June, 1875, the firm of Derleth Brothers, by an assignment in writing, transferred and assigned to one Henry Volkening, all their claims against Degraaf & Taylor, for goods sold and delivered, and on an account stated and settled between them on or about November 28, 1874, showing a, balance due to Derleth Brothers, of $2,927.77. By subsequent assignments the claim now in suit was transferred and assigned to the plaintiff.

The litigation as to the transactions in suit has been a long one.

Henry Volkening, as such assignee, in 1875, brought suit in this court against Degraaf & Taylor, the defendants herein, claiming judgment against them for the sum of $2,609.50, with interest, from November 28, 1874, alleging that said sum was the balance found to be due by them to Derleth Brothers, on an accounting between the firms of [375]*375Derleth Brothers and Degraaf & Taylor, had on or about November 28, 1874. That action was tried on June 20, i 1877, and resulted in the dismissal of the plaintiff’s complaint, on the ground, as substantially stated by the learned trial judge, that the weight of testimony showed that the plaintiff’s goods (being articles of furniture), were used in fitting up the saloon of one McKinley, and were furnished by Derleth Brothers, under a special contract with Degraaf & Taylor, both firms to share in. all the responsibility of the transaction; that it was a species of joint adventure ; and that the action, being brought upon an account stated, was not sustained by the evidence. From this judgment against the plaintiff in that action, an appeal was taken to the general term of this court, which was argued in November, 1878, and the general term affirmed the judgment, with costs, holding that the action was brought on an account alleged to have been stated and settled between Derleth Brothers and Degraaf & Taylor, and that on the evidence that action could not be maintained in the form in which it was brought; that all the essential elements of an account stated seemed to have been wanting; that if defendants had been guilty of any breach of contract with Derleth Brothers, they might be held to answer in another action founded on such breach or offense.

But the plaintiffs were bound to allege their true cause of action, and having failed to prove the one alleged, the complaint was properly dismissed. It was not a variance, but a failure of proof (Volkening v. Degraaf, 44 Super. Ct. 424). From this decision of the general term of this court, the plaintiff Arolkening appealed to the court of appeals. By that court the decision of the general term was sustained (81 N. Y. 268).

The court of appeals, in its opinion, held that the cause of action in the complaint was on an account stated, and nothing else ; that plaintiffs had wholly failed to make good that cause of action; that no amendment of the pleadings having been asked below, it was right to dismiss [376]*376the complaint for failure to make proof of what it averred. That decision was made in June, 1880.

The action in the case now at bar was begun in December, 1879, and is based wholly on a claim for goods sold and delivered by Derleth Brothers to the defendants, and not upon any claim of an account stated and settled between them. This action was tried on April 4, 1883, before Judge Ingraham and a jury, who failed to agree on a verdict. In December, 1883, this action was tried again before Judge O’Gorman and a jury, who failed to agree on a verdict. In April, 1884, this action was again tried before Judge Truax and a jury, who found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $4,214.72, and from the judgment entered thereon this appeal is taken.

From this long litigation the court is, no doubt, so well possessed of the facts of the case and the evidence, that a statement of them in detail is now unnecessary. The' testimony has been substantially the same in all the various trials above referred to.

The first question of law presented to the court in the present appeal is as to the right of the defendants to put the record of the action of Volkening v. Degraaf and another in evidence, as a bar to any recovery in this action, as res adjudicata, and a sufficient cause for dismissal of the plaintiff’s complaint.

The learned tidal judge did not, in my opinion, err in refusing to admit this record in evidence and in refusing to treat it as a bar to this action. The action of Volkening v. Degraaf and another was founded specifically on the allegation that the amount claimed to be due to the Derleth Brothers, by the defendants, had been ascertained by an accounting between these two firms. In support of this cause of action it was held that no evidence was given, and because of the total failure of the plaintiff in that action to support that claim by proof, and on that account alone, his complaint was dismissed. It matters nothing that the testimony of witnesses in that case was substantially the same as that produced at the trial of the [377]*377case at bar. The issues, to support which the testimony was introduced, were in these cases, in form and in substance, wholly different. The plaintiffs claim in the present action on goods sold, was not considered in Volkening v. Degraaf and Taylor. In order that the decision in one case can control another, the issues in both must be identical, not only in name, but in fact and substance (Palmer v. Hussey, 87 N. Y. 303). There was, therefore, strictly speaking, no adjudication of Volkening v. Degraaf and Taylor, entitling it to be pleaded as a bar to the present action.

Again, in Volkening v. Degraaf and Taylor, the complaint was dismissed ; and it has been held, that in such case, the decision is not on the issues in the case, which remain still undetermined and the case is not yet u res adjudicata ” (People v. Vilas, 36 N. Y. 459 ; Code, § 1209).

The contention between the plaintiff and defendants, as to the facts of the case at bar, depended wholly on the nature of the contract between Derleth Brothers and the defendants, Degraaf & Taylor, under which the goods of the former firm were furnished by Derleth Brothers for the saloon of McKinley. To ascertain what this contract really was, it was necessary to consider a paper writing signed by both firms (which paper, as was conceded, did not contain all the agreement between them), a receipt signed by Derleth Brothers, and various bills furnished by Derleth Brothers to Degraaf & Taylor ; and it was necessary also to weigh and consider the testimony, as to a certain conversation, alleged on the part of the plaintiff to have occurred between Ferdinand Derleth, one of the firm of Derleth Brothers, and Mr. Taylor, one of the defendants, a day or two before the said written paper purporting to be a contract, was signed. The occurrence of this conversation was denied by the defendants.

The attitude of the parties toward one another was this : Derleth Brothers had been in the habit for years, of supplying furniture, in the rough, to Degraaf & Taylor [378]

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Bluebook (online)
19 Jones & S. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derleth-v-degraaf-nysuperctnyc-1885.