Falvey v. Woolner

71 A.D. 331, 75 N.Y.S. 1106

This text of 71 A.D. 331 (Falvey v. Woolner) 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
Falvey v. Woolner, 71 A.D. 331, 75 N.Y.S. 1106 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Patterson, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages for the breach of a contract entered into between the plaintiff’s assignors and the defenddant. The answer admits the making of the contract, and then sets up five separate affirmative defenses to the cause of action. A demurrer was interposed to these several defenses and each of them; that demurrer was sustained'; and from the interlocutory judgment entered thereupon the defendant appeals. We are not informed of the grounds upon which the learned judge below sustained this demurrer, but upon an examination of the pleadings we are satisfied that each of the separate defenses is well pleaded, and, the facts set forth therein being conceded, each of those defenses is available to defeat a recovery by the plaintiff.

The substantial averments of the complaint are the following: In November, 1892, Emil Cauffman & Co. were merchants in Philadelphia, dealing in liquors and spirits. At that time there [334]*334existed in the State of Nebraska a corporation, known as the Nebraska Distillery Company of Nebraska City, which corporation was engaged in the business of manufacturing distilled spirits. On June 12, 1891, that corporation and Cauffman & Co. entered into a contract, by the terms of which the corporation agreed to sell and ship to Cauffman & Co. every month six carloads of No. 1 high proof spirits at a price which should be one cent per gallon less than the net price at which such spirits were sold by another corporation, known as the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company of •Peoria; and by the same contract it was agreed that the arrangement should continue until June 12, 1894, Cauffman & Co. having reserved to them the privilege of renewing the contract for a further period of three years upon giving written notice of' their intention so to do, such notice to be given prior to Play 12, 1894. Thus original contract relations were established between the Nebraska Distillery Conrpany and Cauffman & Co. It is further alleged in the complaint that the defendant Woolner purchased all the property of the Nebraska Distillery Company, and by a specific contract, dated November 23, 1892, assumed the performance of the contract, made between Cauffman & Co. and the Nebraska Distillery Company, under which contract Cauffman & Co. had been purchasing and the Nebraska Distillery Company had been delivering to them six carloads per month of proof spirits, at a price one cent less per gallon than the price made by the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company to its agents and customers. The complaint then avers that, when Woolner bought the property of the Nebraska Distillery Company and made the contract by which he became substituted as the promising party with Cauffman & Co., the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company was a corporation the purpose of which was in effect to control' all distilleries in the United States manufacturing spirits and alcohol, and, in substance, to constitute a monopoly for the manufacture and sale of these articles; and it is also charged that the defendant Woolner, when he made his purchase from the Nebraska Distillery Company, did so with the object and purpose.of transferring the same to the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company, the necessary inference to'be drawn from which is, that Woolner’s purchase was to enable the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company thus to acquire and control [335]*335the product and the business of the Nebraska Distillery Company, which purpose it is substantially alleged in the complaint was effectuated by an assignment made by Woolner of his acquisition of the property of the Nebraska Distillery Company to the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company in December, 1892. The complaint then alleges that after a certain date Woolner ceased to perform his contract and refused to do so, and that Cauffman & Co. have kept and performed all the conditions required by the contract on their part to he performed. After other allegations in the complaint not material at present, the plaintiff proceeded to claim that, by the refusal of the defendant to perform the contract and make shipments in the manner required thereby to the plaintiff’s assignor, the latter sustained great loss in their business, and that if the contract had been performed by Woolner in accordance with its terms large profits would have accrued to Cauffman & Co.

From these allegations it is made plainly to appear that the defendant Woolner bound himself to the performance of the contract made by the Nebraska Distillery Company with the plaintiff’s assignor.

The first affirmative defense relied upon by the defendant is that, contemporaneously with his purchase from the Nebraska Distillery Company, there was made another contract which entered into and was part of the consideration given by the Nebraska Company to him, that various persons interested in the corporation, being its officers and some of its stockholders, should not engage in the business of manufacturing spirits and alcohol for a certain time within a radius of 1,000 miles of Nebraska City, in the State of Nebraska. It is expressly alleged in the answer that it was part of the consideration upon which the defendant made the purchase that all of its stockholders should and would enter into a written agreement to refrain from engaging in business in the manner indicated; that it was expressly agreed that such a covenant was to be part of the consideration passing to Woolner for the purchase, and that without that agreement Woolner would not have made the purchase. It is then further alleged that at that time and prior thereto Cauffman was and had been a stockholder of the company, was well acquainted with all of its affairs, was at all times in' close relations with the officers and directors of the company, was an active party in the [336]*336negotiations leading up to the sale of the property to Woolner, and thus was not only an active participant in the transaction which ended in the purchase of the property by Woolner, but was an assenting party to the making, of that promise and agreement by the Nebraska Company.

The gist of this defense, therefore, is that side by side with the agreement of purchase made by Woolner was an agreement between him and the assignors of this plaintiff that the business Woolner purchased should be protected from the interference and rivalry of those wlio were engaged or interested in the Nebraska Distillery Company. It is evidently pleaded as an agreement made for the protection of the purchase. In this defense it is then set forth that the parties whose rivalry was to be guarded against violated the terms of the agreement not to engage in business; that some of them actually did engage in business in competition with Woolner or his assignee as the purchaser of the business of the Nebraska Company, and at the very time of the negotiations which ended in Woolner’s purchase some of those persons were really making their arrangements to establish another distillery for the manufacture of spirits and alcohol within the interdicted distance from Nebraska City.

The whole of this defense, in one aspect, is that of a failure of consideration for the contract upon which the plaintiff sues. We must take the contract for the purchase and the contract for the protection of Woolner (they being simultaneously executed) as being parts of one transaction ; and it being shown that Cauffman & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A.D. 331, 75 N.Y.S. 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falvey-v-woolner-nyappdiv-1902.