Hauck Food Products Corp. v. B. A. Stevenson & Co.

118 Misc. 31
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 Misc. 31 (Hauck Food Products Corp. v. B. A. Stevenson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hauck Food Products Corp. v. B. A. Stevenson & Co., 118 Misc. 31 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Bosch, J.

The issue litigated in this action was in relation to the defendant’s counterclaim. There is no question but that the defendant purchased from the plaintiff, some time in the month of November, 1920, a bill of goods for which it agreed to pay $1,610. Having failed to pay the same, the plaintiff commenced this action about the 25th day of January, 1921, against the defendant to recover the amount due. Subsequent to the sale of goods by the plaintiff to the defendant, and on or about the 4th day of January, 1921, the defendant claims to have acquired, by assignment, from the receivers of E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., a claim and demand against the plaintiff' growing out of a certain contract dated September 23,1920, made between the said E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., and the Hauck Food Products Corporation, for the sale by E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., to the plaintiff of two tanks of Soya bean oil of about 60,000 pounds each. The only question to be determined in this case is the liability of the plaintiff to the defendant, on account of such assigned cause of action.

The contract referred to between E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., and the Hauck Food Products Corporation appears to have been a contract prepared by Drew & Company and submitted to the plaintiff for its acceptance. Part of the contract is typewritten and part printed, and one of the conditions of the same is as follows: “ If before the completion of the contract either party thereto shall suspend payment or become bankrupt or insolvent, the other party, upon notice being given to the defaulter, shall close the contract forthwith, any difference to be for the account of the defaulter.”

It appears that on the thirtieth day of October, by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Max Lowenthal and Henry S. Fahrleigh were appointed receivers of E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., and ordered to take possession of all and singular the property, business assets and effects of the said corporation. The appointment was made in an action entitled [33]*33“ Sumner N. Samuels, Plaintiff, against E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., Defendant.” Such action was brought by Samuels claiming to be a creditor. The bill of complaint was verified on the 30th day of October, 1920, and on the same day the defendant in that action, E. F- Drew & Company, Inc., interposed an answer, verified on that day, whereby it admitted the truth of the allegations set forth in the bill of complaint. One of the allegations in the bill of complaint was: “That the defendant company is unable to pay, as they mature, the debts due and presently falling due upon said floating debt as aforesaid. The defendant company is also unable to pay, as they mature, claims of various individuals, firms, and corporations for merchandise purchased, and for labor, services, etc.” Another allegation in the bill of complaint was “ that by reason of the extraordinary financial conditions due to readjustment ensuing upon the termination of the war, the defendant corporation is unable to provide for the payment of its obligations and debts now maturing or about to mature, or to convert presently sufficient of its assets to secure the funds necessary for the prosecution of the present conduct of its business.” From the allegations of the bill of complaint which were admitted by E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., as well as by the order appointing the receivers, it appears that E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., did suspend payment and become insolvent.

Section 156 of the Personal Property Law, subdivision 3, provides as follows: “A person is insolvent within the meaning of this article who either has ceased to pay his debts in the ordinary course of business or cannot pay his debts as they become due, whether he has committed an act of bankruptcy or not, and whether he is insolvent within the meaning of the federal bankruptcy law or not.”

Under the above-quoted provision of the contract between the Hauck Food Products Corporation and E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., and in view of the provisions of the Personal Property Law, E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., on the 30th day of October, 1920, suspended payment and became insolvent.

■ On or about the first day of November, a tank of Soya bean oil, shipped to E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., arrived at Kingston, the place of business of the defendant. Such shipment was made under the contract in question and sight draft with bill of lading attached was forwarded by the Mechanics and Metals National Bank of New York to a bank at-Kingston. The draft was drawn on the plaintiff for $6,350. That amount had been advanced by the Mechanics and Metals Bank to E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., [34]*34on October 26, 1920, when it took over the bill of lading. The plaintiff’s attention was called to the sight draft and bill of lading and on November 4, 1920, the defendant wrote and caused to be sent to °E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., 50 Broad street, New York city, a letter referring them to the contract of September 23, 1920, covering two Sellers tanks pressed Manchurian Soya bean oil, for October shipment from the Pacific coast. This letter referred to above-quoted portion of contract, and informed Drew & Company that under that clause the plaintiff was now free to close the contract. The draft was refused and papers returned to the forwarding bank. Subsequently and on or about November 10, 1920, the papers were returned to the bank at Kingston and presented to the plaintiff, which refused to accept the draft and the same was returned again to the Mechanics and Metals Bank in New York. The Mechanics and Metals National Bank subsequently disposed of the oil and on account thereof received $4,127.50, leaving a balance of $3,370.91, claimed due by the bank from E. F. Drew & Company, Inc., on account of the transaction. It is such amount ($3,370.91) for which claim is made by defendant.

In view of the determination arrived at, it is not necessary to pass upon the measure of damages or extent of the claims growing out of the alleged breach by the plaintiff of the contract of September 23, 1920. It would not, however, be anything but the difference between the contract and market value of the product on the date of original refusal. It could not be within the power of the forwarding bank to hold the product about a month and then seek to charge all the additional expenses as contended.

The contract of September 23, 1920, provided that the sale should be made for terms of net cash, with sight draft against railroad bill of lading, with certificate of weight and certificate of analysis. The receivers, by letters and telegrams of November 8, 1920, attempted to enforce acceptance of the shipment of oil by the plaintiff, contending that the clause in the contract referred to in no wise affected the contract relationship, and that the shipment and draft in due course should have been presented before the date of receivership. The receivers attempted to adopt the contract by an order of January 26, 1921. This was after the forwarding bank had ordered the goods resold, and they had been disposed of. It was also subsequent to the assignment of January 4, 1921, of the cause of action to the defendant.

The Hauck Food Products Corporation claimed the right to close and cancel the contract under the provisions of the contract hereinbefore quoted. It so contended at the time of the trial. [35]*35If it had such right, then its exercise of the same cannot be questioned. To determine that question, it requires a construction of the contract.

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Related

Hauck Food Products Corp. v. E. A. Stevenson & Co.
203 A.D. 308 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
118 Misc. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauck-food-products-corp-v-b-a-stevenson-co-nysupct-1922.