Dobbins v. Pratt Chuck Co.

151 N.E. 146, 242 N.Y. 106, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 965
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 151 N.E. 146 (Dobbins v. Pratt Chuck Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobbins v. Pratt Chuck Co., 151 N.E. 146, 242 N.Y. 106, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 965 (N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

Crane, J.

The Pratt Chuck Company is a corporation engaged in manufacturing and selling drill chucks and other steel products at Frankfort, New York, and produces steel scrap as a waste, or a by-product. Steel scrap is classed in the trade as light ” and heavy ” steel scrap according to its thickness; that which is one-quarter of an inch or more in thickness being known as heavy scrap. The company had many departments — a cap department, a chaplet department, the cable department, and a fork and hoe department. All the factory buildings, including that of the fork and hoe department, were right alongside of each other with only a railroad switch between them. They were about 100 feet apart. Most, if not all of the heavy scrap came from the fork and hoe department.

For years the plaintiff, who was in the steel scrap business at Homer, New York, doing business under the name of Dobbins Bros., had been a customer of the defendant. He had been buying steel scrap, both light and heavy, from the corporation for several years. The scrap thus purchased from and through the defendant came from all the departments; the heavy scrap coming from the fork and hoe department.

On July 6, 1916, the plaintiff placed another order with the defendant for steel scrap, evidenced by two letters constituting the contract of sale. They are as follows:

*110 “ The Pratt Chuck Co.
“ Frankfort, N. Y.
Dobbins Brothers, July 6th, 1916.
“ Homer, N. Y.:
“ Gentlemen.— Referring to your recent -visit relative to Scrap, are pleased to advise that we will accept your contract for year ending June 30th, 1917, as per offer which we now make as follows:
“ Heavy Scrap — $12.40 per G. T.— F. O. B. cars Frankfort.
“ Light Scrap — $10.10 per G. T.— F. O. B. cars Frankfort.
“ 30 days net.
“ Kindly advise by return mail if you wish the Scrap at above prices as we are withholding acceptance from other parties. Very truly yours,
“ THE PRATT CHUCK CO.
C. H. Buckley.”
“ Joseph Dobbins Maurice Dobbins
“ Homer, N. Y., July 7, 1916.
“ The Pratt Chuck Co.,
“ Frankfort, N. Y.
“ To Dobbins Brothers, Dr.
“ Cabbage
“ Largest Cabbage Dealers in the United States. Storehouses in all the Leading Cabbage Sections of New York State. Storage capacity, 6,000 tons.
“Annual shipments, 1,500 cars. Wire or write us your wants. We sell on track. No commission stock. Get in touch with us.
“ Gentlemen. — Your letter of July 6th at hand. We accept your offer on all your steel scrap for one year to July 1, 1917, at prices as below.
“ Heavy steel scrap $12.40 G. T. Frank.
“ Light steel scrap $10.10 G. T. Frank.
“ This is a high price but will take the gamble.
“ Respect, yours,
“ DOBBINS BROS.”

*111 With the facts and relationships in mind, as just stated by me, there would be no question in anybody’s mind that the scrap referred to covered the output of the defendant’s factory, including all its departments, and especially that of the fork and hoe department from which came ninety per cent, if not all, of the heavy scrap. No distinctions had ever been made regarding the source of the output among the departments. This was an internal matter with which the purchaser had nothing to do.

At the time of these letters the plaintiff knew nothing about any change in the defendant’s business. It appeared later that on July 1, 1916, five days before the order, the defendant had incorporated the fork and hoe department under the name of the Pratt Fork & Hoe Corporation, of which it owned all the stock. Outside of a change in the names of the officers, the business of the Fork & Hoe Corporation was run under the same management, and under the absolute" control of the defendant. Being the sole stockholder, the Pratt Chuck Company as a fact ran and operated after July 1, 1916, the Pratt Fork & Hoe Corporation as it did its other departments, under its absolute power and control. As subsequently stated to the plaintiff: They told me that they owned the control, the whole thing.”

The defendant performed its contract and delivered to the plaintiff the scrap steel bargained for, with the exception of about 200 tons of the output of the fork and hoe department or corporation. All of the heavy scrap steel, with this exception coming from the Pratt Fork & Hoe Corporation, was delivered under the contract to the plaintiff. The plaintiff had no contract with the Pratt Fork & Hoe Corporation; no dealings with them whatsoever. His only contract was the letters above referred to passing between him and the Pratt Chuck Company. Under this contract, and in performance of it, the Pratt Chuck Company delivered to the plaintiff the heavy *112 steel scrap from the Pratt Fork & Hoe Corporation. These acts indicated that the defendant considered the heavy steel scrap of its subsidiary as its own, and that the words in the two letters " heavy scrap and light scrap, f. o. b. cars Frankfort,” and We accept your offer on all your steel scrap,” referred to all the scrap coming from the defendant’s factories, including the fork and hoe department, or corporation. Why should the courts strain to give' an interpretation to a contract contrary to that which the parties themselves have acted upon?

For a failure to deliver the 200 tons of heavy steel scrap, the plaintiff brought this action. The defense has been that the contract did not call for any scrap from the Pratt Fork & Hoe Corporation; that this was a separate and distinct corporation; and that the defendant did not contract regarding its output. The Appellate Division in reversing a judgment recovered by the plaintiff has held that it was incompetent to introduce oral testimony to show what scrap the contract referred to. In this respect we cannot follow the Appellate Division.

What may appear to be quite clear upon the face of the letters becomes ambiguous when defendant’s acts and conduct are understood. The contract to deliver all of its scrap steel may have two meanings when it appears that five days before the making of the contract the defendant divided itself into two parts, and that from one of the parts came ninety per cent of the subject of the contract. What these words “ scrap f. o. b.

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 146, 242 N.Y. 106, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbins-v-pratt-chuck-co-ny-1926.