In re the Arbitration between Wachusett Spinning Mills, Inc. & Blue Bird Silk Manufacturing Co.

12 Misc. 2d 822, 177 N.Y.S.2d 938, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2753
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 Misc. 2d 822 (In re the Arbitration between Wachusett Spinning Mills, Inc. & Blue Bird Silk Manufacturing 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
In re the Arbitration between Wachusett Spinning Mills, Inc. & Blue Bird Silk Manufacturing Co., 12 Misc. 2d 822, 177 N.Y.S.2d 938, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2753 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

Sidney A. Fine, J.

Respondent, Blue Bird Silk Manufacturing .Co., Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Blue Bird”), commenced an arbitration proceeding against the three petitioners before the American Cotton Manufacturers Institute, Inc., seeking an award of damages against the petitioners for breach of four certain contracts. Petitioners have moved for a stay of the proposed arbitration on the ground that there is no valid or subsisting contract for arbitration between the parties.

■ Respondent Blue Bird is a manufacturer of textile woven fabrics,' and is located in the city of New York. The three petitioners are all located in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, and have common officers, stockholders and directors. Petitioner Wachusett Spinning Mills, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Wachusett”), operates a yarn spinning mill and is engaged primarily in the spinning of worsted woolen yarns and other long-staple yarns. Petitioner Fitchburg Yarn Company, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “ Fitchburg ”), also operates a yarn spinning mill and is engaged primarily in the manufacture of cotton yarns. Petitioner Fitchburg Spinners Sales Corp. (hereinafter referred to as “ Fitchburg Sales ”), is a sales agent and factor servicing the other two petitioners.

In each instance, following negotiations between Mr. Norman Weil, vice-president of Blue Bird, and Mr. M. Fred Thoma, an executive officer of all three petitioners, respondent Blue Bird forwarded a-“ purchase order ” to petitioner Fitchburg, calling for the spinning of certain yarns to be supplied by Blue Bird, and specifying the quantities, colors and prices. Each order contained a provision for arbitration in the city of New York, in accordance with the rules of the predecessor of the American Cotton Manufacturers Institute, Inc., of “ all controversies arising out of, or relating to this contract, or any modification thereof ”. There were also a number of printed “ conditions ”, dealing with such matters as quality, quantity, delivery and shipment. On each order there appeared, below a perforated line, a form of “ acknowledgment ” to be signed and returned to Blue Bird. In each instance, the “ acknowledgment ” was [825]*825signed and returned to Blue Bird. The 1 ‘ acknowledgment’ form read as follows:

“We acknowledge Receipt of Tour Order and delivery will be made......................
................................... Firm.”

Subsequently, there was also forwarded to respondent, in duplicate, a document bearing the name of petitioner Wachusett at the top thereof, and described as ‘1 Confirmation of Accepted Order”. This “confirmation” referred to respondent’s purchase order number, and recited “ We have accepted your order subject to credit approval by our factors, as follows ”. There were then recited the same quantities, colors and prices which appeared in the Blue Bird purchase order, and a number of other provisions were set forth which did not appear in the Blue Bird order. The “confirmation” contained no arbitration clause, but did contain a printed provision that “ This contract shall be deemed to be a Massachusetts contract, and the laws of Massachusetts shall govern its validity, interpretation and performance.” The document bore the signature of petitioner Wachusett, and one of the copies sent to respondent was entitled “ Duplicate ”, and to the left of Wachusett’s signature appeared the words ‘ This is in accordance with our understanding ”, with a line thereunder for the purchaser’s signature. In each instance, a copy of the “ confirmation ” was signed by an officer of Blue Bird at the place indicated, and returned to Wachusett.

The primary question presented in whether the arbitration provision contained in respondent Blue Bird’s purchase order form became a part of the contract concluded in each instance between the parties, on the theory either that a valid and binding contract was effected by the signature and return to Blue Bird of the “ acknowledgment ” form attached to the purchase order, or that the arbitration provision was incorporated by reference in petitioner Wachusett’s subsequent “confirmation ”.

Petitioners urge that the Blue Bird purchase orders were nothing more than offers, which were never accepted by any of the petitioners, there having been nothing more than the acknowledgment of the receipt of such orders; that Wachusett’s “ confirmations ” were tantamount to counteroffers, since they contained provisions at variance with those of Blue Bird’s original offers, and thus operated as rejections of Blue Bird’s offers; and that the only contracts between the parties consisted of Wachusett’s “confirmations” which were on their face [826]*826completely integrated contracts and which contained no provisions for arbitration.

It is clear, however, that the signed ‘ ‘ acknowledgments ’ ’, which were transmitted to Blue Bird following the receipt of Blue Bird’s purchase orders, were more than mere receipts of orders, as urged by petitioners, for, in addition to acknowledging receipt of the orders, they went on to say that ‘ ‘ delivery will be made ”. It is true that the purchase orders recited that Blue Bird ‘ ‘ insisted ’ ’ on the insertion of definite delivery dates on the “ acknowledgment ” form and that no delivery dates were inserted in the signed ‘ ‘ acknowledgments ’ ’ returned to Blue Bird. The purchase orders, however, did not provide that they were conditioned upon compliance with that request, and, indeed, one of the printed “ conditions ” on the purchase order form was that “ delivery must actually be effected within the time stated on the purchase order”, otherwise Blue Bird reserved the right to cancel the order. The only reasonable construction of the statement in each of the signed “ acknowledgments ” that “ delivery will be made ” is that the order was accepted and that the party signing the “ acknowledgment ” form agreed to perform and make delivery in accordance therewith. Two of the orders stated that delivery was to be made “per letter of 5/9 from Mr. Weil ”, and that letter called for delivery before the end of June, 1958. As regards the other orders, there was an implied requirement that delivery be made within a reasonable time (cf. City of New York v. New York Central R. R. Co., 275 N. Y. 287, 292-293; Papaioannou v. Britz, 285 App. Div. 596, 600). Thus, although the “acknowledgments” did not use the word “accepted”, the express undertaking to make delivery in accordance with the orders constituted in each instance a legal acceptance and gave rise to a binding contract between the parties.

No significance in that regard attaches to the fact that Wachusett, after the return of each “ acknowledgment ”, forwarded to respondent its form entitled “ Confirmation ^ of Accepted Order ” containing no arbitration clause, which respondent signed, as being “in accordance with our understanding ”, and returned to Wachusett. Indeed, the fact that these documents are described therein as “ Confirmation of Accepted Order ” tends to confirm the view that the orders had been accepted prior to the issuance of the “confirmations”. Petitioners contend that the provision in each “ confirmation ”, that the contract was to be deemed a Massachusetts contract and governed by Massachusetts law as to validity, interpretation and performance, is inconsistent with the arbitration pro[827]*827vision contained in each of respondent’s purchase orders. There is no claim, however, that the provision for arbitration is unenforcible under Massachusetts law (cf. Matter of Marchant v.

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12 Misc. 2d 822, 177 N.Y.S.2d 938, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-arbitration-between-wachusett-spinning-mills-inc-blue-bird-nysupct-1958.