Farish Co. v. Madison Distributing Co.

37 F.2d 455, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2568
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 1930
Docket145
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 37 F.2d 455 (Farish Co. v. Madison Distributing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farish Co. v. Madison Distributing Co., 37 F.2d 455, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2568 (2d Cir. 1930).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff was a cotton commission house acting on behalf of a North Carolina mill, originally known as the Shelby Cloth Mills, later as the Cleveland Cloth Mills. The defendant used such fabrics in its business. The facts, as the jury might have found them, were as follows:

On November 25, 1925, one E. R. Valentine, a salesman of the plaintiff, made a written contract with the defendant for the delivery of such goods, and on December 15, 1925, an oral contract for another delivery, for which Valentine wrote out an unsigned order. Both these recited that the contract was made “for the account of Shelby Cloth Mills to Madison Distributing Company.” When these contracts came to the notice of one Gerdes, the plaintiff’s credit man, he declined to accept them and spoke on the telephone to Oppenheimer, the defendant’s manager, who told him that the defendant’s factor, Pelz, Greenstein & Co., would guarantee payment. Gerdes accepted the assurance without communicating with the factor, and in his own hand changed the contract and order, so that they read “to Pelz, Greenstein & Co. Dept. Madison Distributing Co.” He also changed the address to that of the factor. “Dept.” was a way not uncommon in the trade of designating the relation of principal and factor.

These two contracts were not involved in the case at bar, but four later ones were, dated January 18, February 5, March 5, and March 15, 1926. Each of these was oral, and for each Valentine prepared a written order (two for the first), which read like the earlier after Gerdes had changed them. The plaintiff carried the account on its hooks in the factor’s name, and sent all invoices to it,, until the parties began to fall out about the middle of May, after which it directed them to the defendant. The defendant accepted a large part of the goods, and in some instances, at any rate, paid for what it received, though the factor paid for the greater part.

About the middle of May the defendant was in arrears in a number of payments, and had not got the guarantee of Pelz, Greenstein & Co. Three of the plaintiff’s employees had an interview with Oppenheimer, who denied that he had promised to procure the guaranty and demanded more time for payment of the overdue bills. On condition that the factor should guarantee these, the plaintiff gave an extension of 60 days, and eventually the defendant procured a guarantee of six invoices, all the factor ever did guarantee. ■ At about this time, May 13, 21, and 29, the plaintiff sent invoices to the defendant for the remainder of the goods covered by the four contracts in suit, which the mill sent to the defendant’s dyers in Passaic, making out the bills of lading to the plaintiff. So1 far as we can infer from the very seanty evidence on the issue, delivery was commonly made by notifying the dyers that the goods were at the defendant’s disposal; but as to none of the installments here involved were the dyers ever notified, the defendant not being ready at any time to accept. Because of what happened in the summer of 1926, we do not find it necessary to decide this question, and shall assume with the defendant that no delivery was ever made.

Towards the end of July the plaintiff, becoming tired of the delays, asked Oppenheimer to accept the balance then in the dyers’ possession, or, if not, that it be allowed to resell them at a loss. The defendant refused, saying that it hoped to “move” them shortly, as soon as it could get more money from its factor. The matter was then allowed to drag along for two weeks more, when substantially the same talk was repeated. Finally, about the middle of September, *457 the plaintiff insisted upon a third interview, when the defendant offered to accept the undelivered balance, if the plaintiff would sell it at a reduced price, which the plaintiff refused: It resold the bulk of what it held for the defendant’s account on October 7, and the remainder on February 9 and March 15,1927.

Before disposing of these goods, which were of a special pattern, the plaintiff “covered the trade” as best it could, did “a lot of missionary work,” “canvassed” the market, and realized “on that market a fair price.” Just what was meant by the last phrase does not appear, but apparently there was no ready sale, nor any active competition between buyers who were in need of such goods. The judge in his colloquial charge left it to the jury to find the difference between the contract and the market price, but later, upon request of defendant for an added instruction, delivered himself as follows: “If the market price when the contract was broken, gentlemen, was at one figure, and before the goods could actually be moved ® * * it declined further, of course that loss would come on the defendant.” The jury found for the full damages claimed, plus an amount equal to interest from the collection upon the resale of October 7th to the day when the trial opened. Nothing was said about interest in the charge, but the complaint demanded it.

The first question is one of pleading. The defendant asserts that the plaintiff was not the seller, but the Cleveland Cloth Mills. It conceded, however, that before the writ issued the plaintiff had acquired the interest of the mill in the goods. While the complaint alleged the contract to have been made with the plaintiff, the answer alleged that the mill was the seller, and a reply that the plaintiff had been bound to pay the mill for the goods and had done so. No doubt the answer should have been confined to a traverse, but the defendant chose to plead evidence as a defense, and the reply alleged further evidence, which in fact showed that the plaintiff was the real party in interest, for it was irrelevant whether it was such as seller or as assignee. Thus the pleadings, taken as a whole, disclosed facts upon which the plaintiff’s claim might rest. We no longer cut fine in such matters, when there is no substantial interest at stake. The New York Civil Practice Act (sections 105, 283) has left such questions to the discretion of the court, and the pleadings may be amended at any stage. The point is devoid of merit, and would in our judgment have been so, even without the reply. Webb v. Central R. R. (C. C. A. 2, Dec. 9, 1929), 36 F.(2d) 702.

The question whether the defendant was the buyer was one of evidence, for the contracts were not written. If the jury believed the plaintiff’s witnesses, there could be no doubt. The factor had been introduced into the transaction only as a guarantor; its business was confined to advancing money, and it bought no goods. It is impossible that either party should have supposed the contrary. The defendant received and used the larger part of the goods, paid some of the freight bills, and even part of the purchase price. Oppenheimer repeatedly recognized that acceptance lay with him, asked for extensions, bargained for a reduction in price, and provoked the final rupture. There was no conceivable color for pretending that the factor was the buyer, except the action of the plaintiff in so' carrying the account and in billing the goods. That was theoretically relevant upon the issue, but it was of trivial weight to show that the plaintiff meant to sell to the factor. No honest jury could have come to any other verdict than that rendered.

The question of damages depends upon the time of the breach and the rule of computation. The defendant does not assert that there was a delivery, and, as we have already said, there apparently never was; certainly' none definitely appears.

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Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 455, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farish-co-v-madison-distributing-co-ca2-1930.