Heinemann v. . Heard

50 N.Y. 27, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 384
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 50 N.Y. 27 (Heinemann v. . Heard) 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
Heinemann v. . Heard, 50 N.Y. 27, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 384 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Rapailo, J.

In so far as the plaintiffs’ cause of action is founded upon the failure of the defendants to fill the plaintiffs’ order for teas, we concur in the opinion of the court below that a case was not made out, sufficient to have been submitted to the jury. The original order was for Oolongs; but it appears that these could not have been purchased at the plaintiffs’ limits. By their letter of May 2, 1865, the plaintiffs authorized the substitution of “Fine Moyune teas, the usual assortment of fully Fair Cargo.” The plaintiffs’ witnesses agree that this order was ambiguous; as “ Fine Moyune” and “Fair Cargo ” denote different grades; the “Fine” being a superior grade to “ Fair Cargoand some of them testify, without contradiction, that the order would be understood by the trade as calling for “Fine” Moyune. There is no evidence establishing that this grade could have been purchased in conformity with the order. The evidence in relation to the invoices of Moyune teas which arrived at this port not only fails to show that they were Fine Moyune, but establishes that they did not come under that designation. As to this branch of the case, therefore, the nonsuit was properly granted.

But a very different case is presented in respect to the order for silk. By them letter of December 14, 1865, the defendants undertook to explain their omission to execute the order, and to answer the loud complaints in that respect contained in the plaintiffs’ letters of September 26 and October 3, 10 and 12. In this letter of December 14, the defendants admit that they might have purchased the silk in June at $480 to $500 per picul (the plaintiffs’ limit being a fraction over $525); and they give their reason for not having *32 done so. They do not claim that there was any difficulty in obtaining silk of the quality ordered, or in procuring its shipment in time to enable them to draw for the price under the letter- of credit. The only reason they assign for the non-fulfillment of the order is that they thought it best to delay purchases in the hope of a still further decline in the price, from causes which they mention; and that in this hope they waited till after the first of July, when news arrived from Europe which advanced the rate. They state this to have been the reason which prevented their action while action was possible; and, in answer to plaintiffs’ complaints in respect to _ their omission to keep them advised, they state that they delayed writing while they still hoped for a chance to buy; and that their feeling of annoyance at having been led to a wrong decision must be their excuse for not having done so later. They admit that they erred, but claim that they did so from a reasonable hope of doing better for the plaintiffs than their instructions.

Without regard to the other evidence in the case in support of the plaintiffs’ claim, we think that, on the question of the ability of the defendants to have executed the order for the silk, this letter was sufficient to have required the submission of that question to the jury. The defendants were in a position to have better knowledge of the facts than any other person; and the jury would have been authorized to regard this letter as an admission that the only excuse the defendants had for not having executed the order was that they waited in the hope of buying on much more advantageous terms than the plaintiffs had directed; and, in that case, the only question remaining would have been as to the sufficiency of the excuse, in connection with the explanations given, and the facts appearing on the trial.

The letters, to which that of the 14th of December was an answer, were such as to call upon the defendants for the best reasons they could give for their failure to fill the order. If they made proper efforts and met with obstacles, or if they could not obtain the necessary facilities for shipment, those *33 facts must have been within their knowledge; and it cannot be supposed that, under the circumstances, they would have been content to assign, as their only excuse, an admitted error of judgment, had facts existed showing that they were not in fault, and that it was out of their power to have performed the duty they had undertaken. Their omission to state any such facts, and their concession that they had erred in not executing the order, might fairly be regarded as implying an admission that they could have executed it had they not voluntarily refrained. (See Entwisle v. Dent, 1 Exch., 823.)

This admission was not conclusive upon the defendants, and would not preclude them from showing any impediment which may have existed to the execution of the order, such as the absence of any vessel in which to make the shipment, or their inability, notwithstanding diligent efforts, to find the required qualities or procure the silk to be re-reeled in time to be shipped and drawn against under the letter of credit. But it made a prima facie ease for the plaintiffs in those respects, and relieved them from the necessity of going into proof as to those facts in the first instance.

The plaintiffs, however, did not repose wholly upon the letter of December 14, but introduced proofs upon these several points; and it is claimed, on the part of the respondents, that these proofs not only fail to show that the order for silks could have been executed, but, on the contrary, establish that it was impracticable.

Unless the latter proposition can be maintained the effect of the admission, inferable from the letter of December 14, is not destroyed. But a careful review of the evidence satisfies us that it is not inconsistent with the positions claimed by the plaintiffs, but tends to support their allegations. There is some conflict between the witnesses as to the time necessary to obtain the silk for shipment; but on the question of the propriety of a nonsuit, the plaintiff is entitled to the benefit df such of the testimony as is most favorable to him, and to the most favorable construction of that testimony, Viewed *34 in that manner, it establishes the fact that, from about the 10th, and,- as one witness states, from the 5th, of June, the price of silk of the quality ordered was from $480 to $500 per picul; and that during the month of June a much larger quantity than that ordered by the plaintiffs was sold at those prices. The evidence taken on commission speaks of the period of greatest depression, hut does not show the price paid to 10th or the 5th of June, except that one witness states that on the 20th of June he delivered thirty boxes at $500 per picul, under a contract for delivery in three weeks, on order about four weeks previously. This testimony also shows that the time necessary for re-reeling and preparing silk for shipment varied according Jo the amount ordered. One witness states that the usual time, consumed between the dates of making contracts for such silk and obtaining possession of it ready for shipment, was three or four weeks for 100 boxes if ordered from one man. Another, that the usual time was three weeks. Another, that the usual time was three weeks for 150 b9xes if contracted for-from one dealer only. The quantity ordered by the plaintiffs was about 120 boxes, or forty-five piculs. Ho witness states that it could not be procured in less time if ordered in smaller lots from different dealers. They speak of the amount one dealer could produce in three weeks or a month.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y. 27, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinemann-v-heard-ny-1872.