Gutkind v. George Lueders & Co.

196 N.E. 201, 267 N.Y. 320, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 1219
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 196 N.E. 201 (Gutkind v. George Lueders & 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
Gutkind v. George Lueders & Co., 196 N.E. 201, 267 N.Y. 320, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 1219 (N.Y. 1935).

Opinion

*324 Crane, Ch. J.

The plaintiff is a distiller, manufacturer and blender of essential oils in Malaga, Spain. The defendant is a manufacturer of and dealer in such essential oils in New York. In 1920 the plaintiff sold to the defendant red thyme oil, guaranteed pure forty per cent phenol content. This action is brought to recover the price of part of this sale and damages for failure to accept full delivery. The defendant counterclaims, alleging damages for breach of warranty in that the phenol content was on the average of only thirty-five per cent.

A trial was had before the court without a jury, which resulted .in a judgment for the plaintiff in .the sum of $23,329.07, which included the balance of the purchase price, damages for breach, and interest.

Red thyme oil is produced by a distillation of an herb thyme, of which there are several varieties. The phenol content of the oil is the valuable part; the Spanish product varies in phenol content from twenty-eight per cent to seventy-four per cent by volume, while the variety coming from other places varies from twenty-eight to fifty-three per cent by volume. Whether these percentages be exact or not, the fact is conceded that the forty per cent pure phenol content which the plaintiff warranted the defendant had to be produced by either reducing or raising the phenol content resulting from distillation. This the plaintiff did at his place of business in Malaga, Spain, *325 before shipping to the defendant. The oil was put in drums which contained a sort of screw cap, that is, the cap screws on with a long iron bar which “ screws them hermetically.” This was all done by the plaintiff before delivery.

The parties have stipulated as to the shipments which reads in part as follows: That on or about the 23rd day of July, 1920, at Malaga, Spain, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into an'agreement wherein and whereby it was mutually agreed that the plaintiff sell to the defendant and the defendant purchase from the plaintiff 10,000 kilograms of red thyme oil for technical use only of 40% phenol content for which the defendant agreed to pay the sum of 19 pesetas per kilo, cost and freight, New York, together with discharge expenses and expenses for consular invoice, payment to be made in cash at Malaga, Spain, against delivery of documents.”

Without quoting further from the stipulation, it is enough, I think, to say that shipments commenced July 28, 1920, were made on September 25, 1920, October 8, 1920, and the 21st day of October, 1920, by various drums of oil being placed on ships at Malaga, Spain, for which the plaintiff was paid, as it was a c. i. f. contract. On the 18th of November, 1920, the plaintiff sold the defendant another 10,000 kilograms of red thyme oil of about forty per cent phenol content, for which the defendant agreed to pay the sum of twenty-one pesetas per kilo, cost and freight, New York, together with discharge expenses and expenses for consular invoice, payment to be made in cash at Malaga, Spain, against delivery of documents; shipments to be made to the end of December, 1920. Three drums of this merchandise were shipped, consigned to the defendant, for which it refused to pay, having canceled the order while the goods were in transit, and refused to take the balance of the order in a letter of cancellation dated December 1, 1920, sent to the plaintiff through its agent Vogelin, in Spain.

*326 From these stipulated, facts we understand somewhat better the plaintiff’s complaint, He sues for the price of this three-drum delivery under the contract of November 18, and for damages resulting from the failure of the defendant to take the balance of the oil sold. The defendant, on the other hand, having paid in cash for prior deliveries, refuses to pay any more, and counterclaims for breach of warranty.

There seems to be little question on the evidence about the phenol content of the oil sold, Mr, Felix Gutkind was a witness for himself upon the trial and admitted that to reduce the phenol content to forty per cent he bad used four or five other ingredients which adulterated the product and that, with the consent of Vogelin, the defendant's agent, he had used triacetin to raise the phenol content when it was lower than it should be. Triacetin is an acid and is not a phenol. He testified as follows regarding this matter:

Q. So that if the phenols appeared to he less than 40 you added triacetin to bring up the apparent phenol content to 40, is that right? A. A small amount.
“ Q. You added a small amount to bring up the apparent phenol content to 40 per cent? A, Yes,
“ Q. Did you know at that time that this test would make triacetin appear as a phenol? A, Yes.
" Q, And was that the reason why you put the triacetin in? A, No, not the only reason.
“ Q. Was it one of the reasons? A. One of the reasons, If there are missing one or two degrees, we put it in.
" Q. Suppose it is missing 5 degrees, would you put it in then? A, No,”

One of the tests to determine the phenol content .is of no value to detect or measure the adulteration by triacetin, At another place Mr. Gutkind states that Yogehn, the defendant's agent, knew that he had used this diluting mixture. Yogehn, we may say in passing, was the defendant's agent in Spain, through whom it made its *327 contracts with the plaintiff. There is no evidence that he had any authority to waive the provisions regarding the phenol content of the thyme oil purchased, or that he could accept for the defendant inferior or lower grades. This action was not commenced until nearly six years after the sale, and was not brought on for trial until after Vogelin’s death, which occurred in 1931, so that this case must be disposed of upon the issue of whether or not the defendant received at New York merchandise which the plaintiff agreed to deliver, and whether, if defective, rejection was made in time.

When the drums of oil arrived in various shipments, as above stated, they were immediately examined by the defendant’s chemists, according to methods described by them. Nathaniel Roseman and Johannes Helle were the chemists. Roseman’s tests disclosed the average phenol content of only thirty-four to thirty-five per cent. Joseph A. Crombie, the factory manager for the defendant, by a process of redistillation, discovered the deficiency in quantity of the phenol content of these drums of oil. The process used by him and the records made by Jacob T. Fehl, the foreman, were described but excluded. The exclusion of this testimony we think was error. Fehl was dead, but the records made by him as the result of this redistillation made by Crombie we think were competent. Someone had to take down the results in writing, and it was done in the usual and customary way, so far as Crombie’s testimony discloses. If we read Crombie’s testimony aright, he also vouches for the accuracy of these records.

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.E. 201, 267 N.Y. 320, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 1219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutkind-v-george-lueders-co-ny-1935.