Gourd v. . Healy

99 N.E. 1099, 206 N.Y. 423, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 987
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 99 N.E. 1099 (Gourd v. . Healy) 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
Gourd v. . Healy, 99 N.E. 1099, 206 N.Y. 423, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 987 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Werner, J.

This action, which has been twice tried, was brought to recover the purchase price of fifty cases of wine. The original complaint contained the usual averments where there has been a bargain and sale but no delivery, and the answer was in substance a general denial. At the first trial the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff. The judgment entered upon this direction was reversed by the Appellate Division upon grounds set forth in an opinion (137 App. Div. 323) which will be referred to further on. After this reversal the plaintiff obtained leave to serve a supplemental complaint in which there was nothing new except the allegation that the plaintiff had at all times since the commencement of the action kept good the tender set forth in the original complaint, and the defendant again interposed a general denial. At the- second trial the complaint was dismissed at the close of the plaintiff’s proofs, upon the ground that the plaintiff had not established a cause of action.

There is no dispute over the fact that on the 26th day of May, 1906, the plaintiff sold to the defendant fifty cases of wine at the agreed price of $740, which was to be billed November 1, 1906, at four months, thus fixing the 1st day of March, 19Ü7, as the day of payment, and' that meanwhile the plaintiff was to hold the wine subject to the shipping instructions of the defendant. The original contract rested wholly in parol, but it was supplemented by a written correspondence which materially modified its terms, and the question we have to decide is: What are the rights and obligations of the parties under the contract as thus modified ?

The first writing which followed the oral contract was the plaintiff’s letter of the same day (May 21, 1906), in which, after thanking the defendant for the order and stating the price of the wine, the plaintiff said: “I will *427 write to the shippers to hold this wine subject to your future shipping instructions, and they will bill the goods to you next November.” It is conceded that at that time the wine was in a cellar in Bordeaux, France, and was part of a .larger quantity which had not been divided. The wine was billed to the defendant on November 1, 1906, payable in four months, and' in the bill there was the statement that the wine is “lying in Bordeaux awaiting your instructions.” Thus the matter stood until March 25, 1907, when the parties had some conversation over the telephone which was followed later in the day by a letter from the plaintiff to the defendant in which the former wrote: “In confirmation of conversation over the telephone to-day, I send you a copy of my letter acknowledging the receipt of your import order etc. * * * If you will advise me what quantity you want brought from Bordeaux, I will have the same come with other goods for-me, ” To this the defendant replied, acknowledging the receipt of the agreement and stating that his cellar was still quite well stocked. Continuing, he said: “I consider I made a great bargain in purchasing those wines as they are very fine, but if you could accommodate me by carrying the same, and not have them delivered to me until October 1907, this year, I will pay interest on same from now on at the rate of six per cent for the investment of your money; by granting me that privilege you will confer a favor.” On the very next day (March 28, 1907) the plaintiff responded by writing: “ I will be happy to carry the merchandise until next October, interest to be added on the value from the first inst.” At this point, therefore, the time of delivery and payment had been pushed forward from March to October, but the original stipulation that the defendant was to give shipping instructions remained unchanged. Apparently nothing further was done until November 7th, when the plaintiff seems to have written a letter which is not in evidence. Its import may be-inferred, however, from the nature of the *428 defendant’s reply dated November 8th, 1907, in which he writes: “Yours of November 7/07 at hand. In reference to Bordeaux wine I wish to say that I am not fully prepared to take it now. I will pay the interest till the amount is paid as agreed, and if you will send me a bill of it I will send you a check.” The only reasonable inference to be gathered from this letter is that the defendant had been asked to take the wine, and his reply was a request for further time of uncertain duration. Again the plaintiff acquiesced and- on the next day (November 9, 1907) he sent to the defendant a bill 'dated November 1, 1906, payable in four months, with interest to be added from March 1st, 1907. The plaintiff’s letter inclosing this bill requested a check in accordance with defendant’s promise of November 8th. Another month passed when the plaintiff again wrote under date of December 4th, 1907, calling the defendant’s attention to the bill which had been sent on November 9th at defendant’s request, and expressing plaintiff’s astonishment at not having received the defendant’s check. The - letter also contained a refei’ence to the fact that as the shippers had so long taken care of the goods without any expense to the defendant, it would be proper for him now to make a settlement of the bill, and it ended with another request for payment. To this the defendant replied on the next day (December 5, 1907), that he had previously written- that he could not then take the wine, but was willing to pay interest for the delay and had asked for a bill for the interest, but that his letter had evidently been misunderstood by the plaintiff. And he added: “I intend to take the wine later as soon as it is convenient and am willing to pay you interest till that time.” The letter concludes with a request for a bill of the interest, and the suggestion that if this should prove unsatisfactory to the plaintiff he could cancel the defendant’s order. On the next day (December 6, 1907) the plaintiff wrote to the defendant saying: “I certainly did not *429 understand your letter of the 8th as meaning that you only wished to pay the interest. * * * On November 7th I called your attention to the payment according to the agreement, and your letter of the 8th inst. followed, which I understood to mean, taking into consideration the previous correspondence as above mentioned, that you wanted a memorandum of what the interest amounted to, in order to pay it with the bill, so that you can imagine that your letter was very much of a surprise to me, inasmuch as you only desired to pay, the interest and wanted the principal amount to run on, and without your fixing any definite time to take the goods. The wine might remain in Bordeaux till spring, but that would have nothing to do with the payment, as I settled for it a year ago.” The letter continued with the suggestion that the defendant had been treated with great forbearance, and that the plaintiff, in order to get the matter closed, would take the defendant’s check for the interest, and his note for three months for the principal. To this the defendant replied that if the proposition contained in his letter of December 5th was not agreeable to the plaintiff the latter could sell the wines. “If you wait my convenience,” said the defendant again, “I will take the goods. Never issued notes and don’t believe in them.” On the 9th of December, 1907, the plaintiff again wrote to the defendant, saying: “ The question is not whether I can or cannot sell the wine held for your account in Bordeaux /

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.E. 1099, 206 N.Y. 423, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gourd-v-healy-ny-1912.