East Coast Moving & Storage, Inc. v. Flappin

78 Misc. 2d 140, 355 N.Y.S.2d 525, 1974 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1346
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedApril 4, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 78 Misc. 2d 140 (East Coast Moving & Storage, Inc. v. Flappin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Coast Moving & Storage, Inc. v. Flappin, 78 Misc. 2d 140, 355 N.Y.S.2d 525, 1974 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1346 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

Allen Murray Myers, J.

This case illustrates how New Yorkers are being victimized by unscrupulous truckers of household goods. The racket is such that the average consumer can do very little to protect himself. The scenario is something like this. A person in need of a trucker to move his household goods from one abode to another, shops around for the best price. He finds that no trucker will commit himself. Instead he will be told that in the trucker’s estimate the job should take approximately X amount of man hours at so much per man hour plus the cost of packing cartons and the like. Based on this type of an estimate he will choose the lowest bidder. But when the moving job is completed the bill presented bears no resemblance to the estimate. It may be as much as 400% or more greater. This is accomplished by the trucker giving a low estimate to get the job and then inflating the man hours by such gold bricking devices as deliberately getting lost for many hours while transporting the goods from one location to another. Not only is the consumer vicitimized but so is the legitimate trucker who has to compete with the racketeers.

Here is what occurred in the case tried before me without a jury.

Plaintiff sued for breach of a contract for the moving of household goods and for an account stated, to which the defendant interposed a defense of fraud.

I found the testimony of plaintiff’s principal witness, its truckman, Joseph Pajor (Joe), incredible. Either he had no sense of time, space or distance or he was lying. His attempts to justify his actions on behalf of plaintiff merely serve to buttress my view that the plaintiff and its assignor had deliberately embarked on a scheme to defraud the defendant. I do [142]*142not believe plaintiff’s claim that defendant had more belongings in his apartment on the day of the move than when the estimate was given, and I do not believe any of the excuses offered to justify 15 hours of moving time with three men and two vehicles.

I believe the facts to be as testified to by Mark Flappin, the defendant. In response to an advertisement in New York Magazine, he hired .Crockett’s Movers and Storage to move his < household goods from a three-room apartment at 305 East 86th Street (at 2nd Ave.) to 1701 York Avenue (at 89th St.) on March 22, 1973. Defendant was given an estimate on the phone and sometime within the week before the move a representative of Crockett came to defendant’s home, delivered some boxes, took a brief look at the contents of the apartment and gave the defendant a written estimate. According to the estimate, the move would take four to five hours with one van and two men at $18 an hour (costing approximately $100 with cartons). The estimate was in conformity with the estimate defendant had received on the phone when he first spoke to Crockett.

Although plaintiff promised to begin at 8:00 a.m., no truckman appeared until 9:30. And it was not Crockett that showed up but Joe on behalf of the plaintiff, East Coast Moving and Storage. Defendant was not aware until later in the day that Crockett was not moving him and that he was dealing with an unlicensed mover. Had he known Crockett was unlicensed he would not have hired him.

Joe, the truckman then disappeared until 11:00 a.m. when defendant fortuitously met him at a nearby coffee shop with a helper named Bob. They told defendant they needed and were waiting for an extra man but that there would be no extra charge for him. Therefore defendant did not object to the extra man. The movers then began to work at about 11:00 a.m. At about 1:30 p.m. a third man with a small truck appeared. It took these three men approximately five hours, until 4:00 p.m., to move the prepacked contents of the three room apartment into a truck. They then took five hours to travel from 86th Street and Second Avenue to 89th Street and York Avenue. To add insult to injury, they left two large cartons behind.

When the movers arrived at York Avenue at 9:30 p.m., it took them an additional five hours to unload defendant’s goods. Defendant claims that he never saw more than one man working at a time during those five hours. Upon completion of the job at 2:00 a.m., Joe asked the defendant for $385 for 15 hours’ work which defendant refused to pay. Plaintiff is suing to recover this sum.

[143]*143Defendant interposed a counterclaim for lost and damaged property in the amount of $200. I shall dispose of this claim first because its resolution does not involve any complex issues.

In the course of unpacking, during the week following the move, defendant found that one carton with its contents and two bridge chairs were missing, and that there were rips in the fabric on the arm of a brown reclining chair and on the bottom of a gold chair and a break in the leg of a brown reclining chair. I find the value of the lost bridge chairs to be $50 and the contents of the lost box as follows: Four “ LeCreuret ” pots, $75; one dozen large glasses, $12; one-half dozen small glasses, $6; one hammered aluminum tray, $12; cover of casserole set, $25 ; and three copper-bottomed pots, $40. Total: $220. There was no testimony as to the cost of repairs to the damaged furniture. Defendant made a claim for his lost and damaged property but was never reimbursed. I find that the items were lost and damaged as a result of plaintiff’s negligence. Defendant is therefore entitled to judgment on his counterclaim for $200, which is less than the amount of damages proven.

The next question is whether plaintiff can recover on its contract or in quemtum meruit.

Plaintiff was served with a notice to admit dated August 1, 1973, stating that plaintiff was not licensed as required by the Transportation Law of the State of New York on March 22, 1973. Since plaintiff failed to respond, I find that plaintiff was an unlicensed mover.

I also find that 15 hours was an unconscionably long time for this move and that it should have been and could have been performed within the estimated time of four to five hours at the contract price of $18 per hour.

On the action on an account stated, I find that there was no evidence to sustain such a finding, particularly since defendant had protested the amount demanded.

Whether plaintiff can recover on breach of contract or quasi contract presents more complex issues. In the first place, the contract for the trucking was made with Crockett and not with East ICoast Moving and (Storage, Inc. However, plaintiff’s owner and president, Freddy K. .Seidel, testified that he often did jobs for Crockett and Crockett often did jobs for him, and that Crockett called him, gave him the contract, and asked him to do the job. I therefore assume that Crockett had assigned the contract to plaintiff and plaintiff Avas a proper party plaintiff in-this action.

[144]*144It would appear that plaintiff should be entitled to recover at least the fair and reasonable value of his services unless his contract and actions were so tainted by fraud and illegality that it would be against public policy to permit him to recover.

Transportation of property for compensation is governed by article 7 (§ 160 et seq.) of the Transportation Law. Section 160 (subd. 3, par. [c]) of the said law provides that it is applicable to: ‘ ‘ the transportation of household goods between points within cities of a population of one million persons or more ’ \

Only New York City is a member of this class.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Misc. 2d 140, 355 N.Y.S.2d 525, 1974 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-coast-moving-storage-inc-v-flappin-nycivct-1974.