Goepel v. Kurtz Action Co.

179 A.D. 687, 167 N.Y.S. 317, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8066
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 9, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 A.D. 687 (Goepel v. Kurtz Action Co.) 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
Goepel v. Kurtz Action Co., 179 A.D. 687, 167 N.Y.S. 317, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8066 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

Laughlin, J.:

The complaint contains two counts; the first is for goods sold and delivered under an express contract and for damages for loss of profits caused by defendant’s failure to allow plaintiff fully to perform an executory contract, and the second is on a quantum meruit for other goods sold and delivered. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court dismissed her claim for loss of profits and she recovered on her remaining claims; and on the verdict judgment was entered for the amount of the recovery and dismissing her complaint for loss of profits. She appealed generally from the judgment but she enforced it in so far as it was in her favor; and on defendant’s motion her appeal to this court was dismissed evidently on the ground that by enforcing part of the judgment she was debarred from prosecuting her appeal which was from the whole judgment (158 App. Div. 879); but the Court of Appeals held that this was error and remitted the case to this court to consider and decide whether the trial court erred in dismissing the plaintiff’s claim for loss of profits. (216 N. Y. 343.)

The contract involved in the first count of the complaint is in the form of an order in writing signed by the defendant on the 7th of December, 1909. It was delivered to and accepted by the plaintiff. It relates to ten items of piano hardware consisting of wires, screws, spoons, brass center [689]*689pins, damper springs and spring rail springs, specifying the quantity and price of. each. Following this enumeration of goods, quantities and prices the remaining part of the contract is as follows: “To be delivered January 3rd and duplicated each month during the year of 1910. Prices to hold good for the entire year, with the privilege of increasing order twenty-five per cent.” The plaintiff proceeded to make deliveries under the contract until the 14th of February, 1910, when the defendant by letter requested a suspension of shipments until further notice. The plaintiff replied acquiescing in the request and stating that notice had been given to the factory to cease manufacturing, but requesting defendant to resume requisitions as soon as possible. On the seventeenth of February defendant requested a small shipment of center pins and regulating screws, and on the twenty-fourth of February the plaintiff wrote defendant referring to that order and stating that the factory had written her requesting advice relative to the holding up of the orders and stating that they would proceed to make up the goods so that upon their being called for by the defendant they could be forwarded immediately, and requesting information with respect to the resumption of orders. To this the defendant replied, stating that it would decline the receipt of any further shipments ordered prior to the 20th day of December, 1910, by which evidently was meant 1909. This probably was owing to the fact, as shown upon the trial, that the defendant had changed managers and its new manager was not aware of the contract in question. On the seventh of March the plaintiff wrote asking whether the defendant meant that it would decline to perform the contract of December 7,1909, and stating that if it did plaintiff would hold it hable for all damages caused by its failure to perform and manifesting willingness and readiness to perform on her part and saying that if she did not hear from defendant by the eighteenth instant she would assume that defendant would not perform the contract and intended to refuse to accept further shipments under it. To that letter apparently there was no reply. On the fifteenth of March the plaintiff presented a bill to defendant for the balance claimed to be owing on shipments made on or prior [690]*690to February fourteenth. To this defendant replied, promising a settlement. There was, therefore, a total breach of the contract which gave rise to a cause of action in plaintiff’s favor for damages consisting of the value of the contract, in so far' as it remained unexecuted, to be determined by the profits she would have made had she been permitted to perform, at least in so far as such profits may be said to have been within the contemplation of the parties.

The plaintiff in the first count of her complaint alleges that she lost the profits which she would have made on the sale of the merchandise covered by but undelivered under the contract by reason of defendant’s breach and that such loss of profits amounted to the sum of $2,276.69. It is not alleged and it does not appear by the contract whether the goods were manufactured and on hand, or to be procured in the market or to be manufactured. If they were manufactured and on hand or purchasable in the market the plaintiff’s loss of profits on the contract is to be measured by the difference between the market value or market price of the goods and the contract price; and if they were to be manufactured her loss is to be measured by the difference between the reasonable cost of manufacture and the- contract price. (Devlin v. Mayor, 63 N. Y. 8; Todd v. Gamble, 148 id. 382; Lehmaier v. Standard Specialty & Tube Co., 123 App. Div. 431; Isaacs v. Terry & Tench Co., 125 id. 532; Hinckley v. Pittsburgh Steel Co., 121 U. S. 264; Belle of Bourbon Co. v. Leffler, 87 App. Div. 302; Boehm v. Horst, 178 U. S. 1.)

Counsel for the respondent contends that the plaintiff offered no competent evidence of loss of profits. The plaintiff showed by the testimony of her son, who managed her business, that she was not a manufacturer and that on receiving the order she placed it with the firm of Blake & Johnson, who were manufacturers, and that she was to receive the goods from them at ten per cent less than the contract price; that she had been acting as a sales agent for Blake & Johnson under an arrangement by which she received a commission of ten per cent on all goods of their manufacture which she sold; and that they accepted the contract in question on those terms, but billed the goods to her and she paid them therefor. It was not alleged or shown that the defendant was aware of [691]*691the arrangement between the plaintiff and Blake & Johnson, or that the contract with it was made with express reference thereto or that it knew that the plaintiff contemplated thus subletting the contract to Blake & Johnson. If the defendant was a stranger to the subcontract the plaintiff’s loss of profits was not determinable by her special contract with Blake & Johnson but by the reasonable cost to her of filling the order. (Devlin v. Mayor, supra; Isaacs v. Terry & Tench Co., supra; McManus v. American Woolen Co., 126 App. Div. 68.) The evidence, however, warrants the inference that defendant knew that plaintiff was only a dealer in and not a manufacturer of piano makers’ supplies, for it appears that the parties had had similar business relations for upwards of a year prior to the making of this contract and that plaintiff filled the prior contracts through Blake & Johnson who invoiced the goods to her but shipped the goods from their factory direct to defendant and that it knew that such goods were manufactured for plaintiff by Blake & Johnson.

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Bluebook (online)
179 A.D. 687, 167 N.Y.S. 317, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goepel-v-kurtz-action-co-nyappdiv-1917.