In re Hosiery Manufacturers Corp.

206 A.D. 414, 201 N.Y.S. 516, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7229

This text of 206 A.D. 414 (In re Hosiery Manufacturers Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Hosiery Manufacturers Corp., 206 A.D. 414, 201 N.Y.S. 516, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7229 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

The facts upon which the application for a compulsory arbitration herein is based, are largely a matter of record, and are not in dispute. They are as follows: The petitioner, a New York corporation, a jobber in hosiery, as buyer, and the respondent West Branch Knitting Company, a corporation of Pennsylvania, a manufacturer of hosiery, as seller, had been in contract relations as such with each other since November 21, 1921, pursuant to which various transactions were in progress when on April 29, 1922, a new contract for the purchase and sale of additional merchandise consisting of hosiery to be manufactured by the seller was entered into, which, among other things, provided substantially that all disputes arising thereunder should be settled by arbitration in New York city, pursuant to the New York Arbitration Law by each party designating, upon eight days’ notice and demand by the other, a disinterested person to act as arbitrator, the two so designated to appoint and designate an umpire, and that should either party fail to so designate an arbitrator the one so designating an arbitrator had the right to at once compel the party in default to do so as provided by the Arbitration Law. There are two other clauses of the contract conferring jurisdiction upon the courts of this State for the purposes of the enforcement of the provisions of the arbitration clause and by which each party designated as their agent the then acting secretary of the New York Chamber of Commerce to receive service of all notice, process, pleading and judgment, etc.

The contract also provides that the petitioner might make a preliminary examination of the merchandise, the subject-matter of the contract, at the port of New York prior to its shipment (the merchandise being purchased for export) in order to determine whether it met contract requirements and, in case it did not, the petitioner might reject it, or do whatever was necessary to make it conform, and if such prehminary inspection was not made at the port of New York and upon arrival abroad it was ascertained, as the contract provided, that the merchandise failed to conform to sample or to the terms of the contract the petitioner had the right to deduct the damages, to be ascertained as the contract provided, from any payment then due or to become due by it to the respondent West Branch Company, or by making a [416]*416direct claim therefor against the latter which it thereby agreed to pay.

On November 21, 1921, another written contract had been entered into between the same parties for the purchase and sale of merchandise consisting of hosiery which was thereafter and on December 28, 1921, modified by another written contract increasing the quantity of merchandise purchased, both contracts containing the provision with reference to examination and inspection and the rights of the petitioner arising therefrom, and that the contracts were to be construed according to the laws of the State of New York.

On October 3, 1922, November 8," 1922, November 17, 1922, and November 20, 1922, various other written contracts, some of which were subsequently modified by written contracts, were entered into between the parties for the sale of merchandise consisting of hosiery, the modifications simply increasing the quantities purchased. These contracts of October third, November eighth, seventeenth and twentieth, and their modifications, contained the same clauses for arbitration and that the rights of the parties were to be governed by the laws of the State of New York and, as well, the provision in reference to inspection and examination at the port of New York, or at the point of foreign destination, as were contained in the contract of April 29, 1922.

On and prior to November 11, 1922, disputes had arisen and were pending undisposed of between the petitioner and the respondent West Branch Company with reference to the performance by the respondent West Branch Company of the contracts of November 21, 1921, and April 29, 1922, in that petitioner claimed that the respondent West Branch Company had refused and neglected to deliver all of the merchandise to be delivered when and as provided for; that the merchandise which had been delivered was not of the. kind agreed to be manufactured, sold and delivered, and that the petitioner had been damaged in large sums which it had and claimed to have the right to offset against any claim or claims asserted by the respondent West Branch Company represented by trade acceptances or otherwise.

On November 11, 1922, the respondent West Branch Company drew three trade acceptances, all dated that day, to its own order, due respectively December 27, 1922, January 18, 1923, and February 16, 1923, which the petitioner accepted on or about November 11,1922. Each of these trade acceptances stated that the obligations of the acceptor arose out of the purchase of goods from the drawer, and they were drawn and accepted and represented deliveries of merchandise made by the respondent West Branch Company [417]*417to the petitioner partly in alleged performance of the contract of April 29, and partly in alleged performance of the contract of November 21, 1922. These trade- acceptances were subject to all of the terms and provisions of the contracts referred to and were drawn and accepted without any adjustment having been made of the differences then existing between the parties.

At the respective due dates of these trade acceptances they were presented for payment by the respondent West Branch Company and payment was refused, each being indorsed by petitioner: “Payment ordered suspended until our differences are taken care of.” At this time, in addition to the disputes which had arisen with reference to the performance of the contracts in respect to the deliveries of merchandise for which these trade acceptances had been given, other disputes had arisen and were pending undisposed of between the respondent West Branch Company and petitioner, growing out of the former’s failure to perform the other contracts for the purchase and sale of merchandise in respect of which either defective deliveries had been made or no deliveries made at all.

After the dishonor of these trade acceptances and after petitioner’s claims had arisen by reason of the respondent West Branch Company’s failure to perform its several contracts, and with notice and knowledge on the part of the respondent Natalie Goldston of the fact of the existence of such disputes and the dishonor of said trade acceptances and the failure of the respondent West Branch Company to perform its several contracts, the latter assigned to her these three trade acceptances, and transferred several other alleged causes of action growing out of the delivery by the respondent West Branch Company to the petitioner of certain merchandise delivered pursuant to said several contracts, and in one instance merchandise delivered by the respondent West Branch Company to the petitioner on consignment for sale for its account.

The respondent Goldston thereupon on January 30, 1923, as such assignee and transferee instituted an action against petitioner in this court, designated No. 1, consisting of two counts on the two trade acceptances due respectively December 27, 1922, and January 18, 1923, to recover the sum of $3,042.25 and $2,968.38; and on the same day instituted another action in this court against the petitioner designated No. 2, on two counts, one to recover the sum of $10,509.14 for merchandise alleged to have been sold and delivered by the respondent West Branch Company to the petitioner, and the other on an alleged account stated arising out [418]

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Bluebook (online)
206 A.D. 414, 201 N.Y.S. 516, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hosiery-manufacturers-corp-nyappdiv-1923.