Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Vulcanized Products Co.

126 N.E. 710, 228 N.Y. 118, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 917
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 N.E. 710 (Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Vulcanized Products 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
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Vulcanized Products Co., 126 N.E. 710, 228 N.Y. 118, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 917 (N.Y. 1920).

Opinion

Hiscock, Ch. J.

This action was brought to recover the purchase price of certain goods by appellant’s assignor sold and delivered to respondent. The respondent by its answer formally denying, but upon this appeal expressly admitting, its liability for said purchase price, has set up a counterclaim for damages by reason of failure to deliver all of the goods called for by the contract. These related and antagonistic claims have produced in this case more than the usual complications and questions.

Appellant’s assignor produced and respondent desired to purchase a certain quantity of pulled fabric.” This article was not originally manufactured for sale as such. It consisted of a cloth or fabric used for lining automobile tires and when as an incident to other business old or discarded tires were returned for salvage purposes this lining was stripped out of the tires "and became by itself an article of trade.

Early in December, 1914, negotiations were opened between the assignor and respondent for the sale by the former to the latter of a large quantity of this fabric, and on December 4th a proposed contract was mailed by "the former to the latter, covering such subject. Owing to *122 the fault of the latter this contract was not executed until January 4th, 1915, and this delay has been regarded as of some importance by appellant. As thus executed the contract provided for the sale to respondent of 20,000 pieces of fabric at a given price per pound payable 30 days from date of shipment, and of which delivery was to be made 5,000 pieces January 20, 1915, 5,000 pieces February 15, 1915, and 10,000 pieces after March 1 and during the year. At the time when there were opened the negotiations which ripened into this contract respondent was indebted to said vendor in the sum of S3,685.44 for a quantity of fabric sold and delivered to it prior thereto, part apparently being of defective quality, and there was inserted in the contract the clause: It is understood that the lot of our fabric you (the respondent) have that is not usable will be returned to us at once and the balance you keep will be paid for in full before December 15, 1914.”

The vendor did not deliver the fabric as agreed. The first shipment was not made until February and thereafter from time to time down to and including June 25th other shipments were made, in all aggregating between 7,000 and 8,000 pieces. Respondent returned a considerable quantity of these as defective and was credited therewith. In addition it paid in cash the contract purchase price for the first two shipments of merchandise and thereafter paid nothing more.

A large amount of correspondence passed between the parties in connection with the contract which it is impossible and unnecessary to restate at length. The vendor urged various reasons why it should not be held to the deliveries specified in the contract. One of these was that the respondent by delaying execution of the contract had made it impossible for the vendor to prepare to fill the first delivery as in the contract provided. Another arid more vigorously urged one was, as it now is, that the promise of respondent to settle the account of the pre *123 ceding year by December 15 was a condition precedent to the vendor’s obligations and that the failure so to settle by the time named had relieved it in whole or part from its obligations. After a certain date its letters also contained frequent requests that respondent remit the unpaid balance due for fabric which had been delivered to it and which balance under the terms of the contract was then past due.

Respondent’s letters contained requests for the shipment by the vendor of the promised merchandise. It did not assent to the vendor’s reasons for non-performance and it did not by any express terms either waive or consent to any modification of the written contract. On the other hand it did not at the time it received the various shipments make objection that they had been delayed and were not a proper fulfilment, so far as they went, of the obligations of the contract, or reserve any rights on account of delay in their shipment. In the latter part of the correspondence before the final break came, there began suggestions of damages which the respondent had suffered because of the vendor’s failure to deliver as agreed and in October the point was reached where, as the correspondence is construed by both parties, the respondent declined to pay the balance due for goods, demanding that the vendor recognize its claim for damages and make satisfactory arrangements for the shipment of the balance of merchandise called for by the contract, and the vendor refused to ship any more goods.

By evidence of which the foregoing were the more important features there was presented to the trial court the question whether appellant’s assignor was guilty of any failure to deliver goods under its contract which amounted to a breach thereof and gave respondent a claim for damages which could be made the subject of a counterclaim against the purchase price of goods which it had received. It decided this issue in favor of the respondent and we think that the evidence permitted it *124 to find, as it did, that the vendor was in default upon its contract to make deliveries of 5,000 pieces each in January and February.

We do not think that the clause incorporated in the contract requiring respondent in effect to settle its account of 1914 before December 15,1914, was a condition precedent to the obligation of the vendor to perform the present contract. Inspection of the entire agreement in the light of surrounding circumstances does not lead us to believe that this was the fair intent of the parties and meaning of the contract when it was originally prepared and subsequent events incline us still more to reject this idea of a condition precedent. As has been stated, this clause called for performance by respondent on December 15. The contract was not executed until January 4. At that time of course the vendor knew that the respondent had not fully complied and, therefore, could not comply with its obligations as the same had been written in the contract. Nevertheless it executed the contract obliging itself to make certain deliveries and it'is not to be believed that it went through the form of assuming these obligations on a condition precedent which it then knew could not be performed. As a matter of fact, respondent had largely complied with its obligations when the contract was executed and the vendor was doubtless entirely satisfied under the circumstances to make the new contract without insisting upon the prior payment of a comparatively small balance.

Neither do we think it can be said as matter of law that the respondent by its correspondence and by accepting belated and partial deliveries either waived or consented to a modification of the terms of the contract. It is possible that such a view might have been taken by the trial court. But, on the other hand, we think it was entirely permissible for it to take the other view that respondent was not waiving or modifying any of its rights but was doing the best it could to secure performance *125 by constantly urging vendor to make speedier and larger deliveries and accepting whatever it could get.

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Related

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Hershenstein
221 A.D. 592 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1927)
Goodman v. Brown Land & Lumber Co.
197 N.W. 730 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1924)
Harris v. Einhorn
114 Misc. 387 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 N.E. 710, 228 N.Y. 118, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-tire-rubber-co-v-vulcanized-products-co-ny-1920.