Kinston Cotton Mills v. Kuhne

129 A.D. 250, 113 N.Y.S. 779, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1274
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 18, 1908
DocketNo. 1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 129 A.D. 250 (Kinston Cotton Mills v. Kuhne) 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
Kinston Cotton Mills v. Kuhne, 129 A.D. 250, 113 N.Y.S. 779, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1274 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Scott, J.:

The defendants appeal from a judgment entered upon a verdict. The action is, or was before the amendment of the complaint hereinafter referred to, one for money had and received, and arose upon the following state of facts: The plaintiff is a foreign corporation engaged in the manufacture of cotton yarns. The defendants are bankers in the city of Mew York. The English-Greene Company was a corporation engaged in the business of buying and selling cotton yarns either as commission merchants for the manufacturers or as middlemen buying from the manufacturers and 'selling to consumers. In which capacity it acted with reference to the transactions out of which this action arose is one of the disputed questions of fact. On January 25, 1904, the defendants entered into an agreement with the English-Greene Company to make advances to the latter upon sales made by them. This agreement seems to have been a renewal, with some modifications, of a former contract of similar tenor. It provided in substance that the English-Greene Company might present to defendants invoices of goods sold to customers, made payable to defendants, with shipping proofs attached. If acceptable and accepted by defendants they agreed to collect the amount of the invoices, to bear one-half the loss in case the customers should fail, arid meanwhile to advance to the English-Greene Company not less than eighty per cent of such invoices, charging interest upon such advances. There was an alternative provision, which does not enter into the present case, under which defendants agreed upon certain conditions to take up what are known as mill drafts drawn upon and accepted by the English-Greene Company. A considerable business was done between the English-Greene Company and the defendants, the advances by -tlie latter amounting at times to as much as $30,000. On January 18 and 19, 1904, following upon a correspondence between plaintiff and the English-Greene Company, two orders were given by the latter company to plaintiff, which express the final result of their negotiations. The first of these orders reads as follows:

[253]*253“ No. 489. January 18, 1904.
To Kinston Cotton Mills, Kinston, N. C.:
“ We confirm our order for 10,000 lbs. 20-1 Cones, Twist Hosiery, frame spun, Foster wind. Price: 24.25 cents per lb. Terms: less 2% and 5%, 10 days. F. O. B. Philadelphia. Delivery: 3,000 to 4,000 lbs. weekly at once. Kindly acknowledge receipt of this confirmation by signing and returning detachable slip and oblige,
Yours very truly,
“ ENGLISH-GREENE CO.
“ Per James E. Mulgkew,
" Approved by J. H. English, Order Cleric.
“ Manager Department.”

The second order was similar in all respects except as. to the amount, description and price of the goods ordered. A number of shipments were made under these orders. There are involved in this action five shipments which were made under the first order, and eight shipments made under the second. Pursuant to instructions given by the English-Greene Company the bills of lading for twelve of these thirteen shipments were made out to defendants, the thirteenth being made out to the English-Greene Company. All of the bills of lading were, however, forwarded by plaintiff to the English-Greene Company, together with an invoice, which was in each case in the following form:

Kinston, N. C. Feb. 3, 1904.
“ English-Gbeene Co. New York City, N. Y
Bought of Kinston Cotton Mills
“ Spinners of Knitting Yarn.
“ Order No. 491.
“ Shipped to Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne
“ Orvvigsburg, Pa.
“ Freight prepaid. Terms Net.”

Then followed the case number, weight, price and discounts.

On various dates between February'4 and 14, 1904, the English-Greene Company pledged to defendants under its contract with them invoices against customers to whom it had sold yarns shipped by plaintiff pursuant to the aforesaid orders, said invoices representing sales aggregating $2,771.87. These invoices were at some[254]*254what lower prices than those at which the goods had been shipped by plaintiff, the reason being that the English-Greene Company had sold the goods before ordering them from plaintiff in the expectation of filling the orders with goods from another mill, which had, however, refused to deliver them. On some date prior to February 16, 1901, the plaintiff had drawn a draft on the English-Greene Company for $1,500 on account of the shipments made under the aforesaid orders, and on said February sixteenth plaintiff drew a further draft on the English-Greene Company on account of said shipments. Meither of these drafts were paid. On February 19, 1901, plaintiff sent to defendants a statement of account for the goods shipped to its order on request of the English-Greene Company and requested payment of the same. Defendants replied, returning the account, and disclaiming all liability to plaintiff therefor. The plaintiff afterward sued the English-Greene Company and recovered judgment for the amount of the shipments under the foregoing orders, for which bills of lading had been made out to said company. On March eighteenth proceedings in involuntary, bankruptcy were instituted against the English-Greene Company. In those proceedings the plaintiff- verified and filed two claims against the English-Greene Company, one for the value of the goods for which bills of lading were made out to that company, and one for the value of the goods for which bills of lading were made out to defendants, the latter being the same claim sought to be recovered in this action. Defendants made efforts to collect the amounts due upon the invoices pledged to them by the English-Greene Company, but were largely unsuccessful, being able to collect only about thirty. per cent of the face value, the failure to collect being apparently due not to the insolvency of the purchasers but to the fact that many of them held "valid counterclaims or offsets against the English-Greene Company. Finally, treating the accounts as having been pledged to them, defendants sold the accounts at auction for an insignificant sum. It is plain at the outset that it is very important to ascertain whether the plaintiff sold the goods to the English-Greene Company on credit, or whether, as is now claimed, it merely consigned them to the English-Greene Company for sale, as factor, or commission merchant, retaining the title in itself. • If the transaction constituted a sale on credit the plaintiff would of [255]*255course have no cause of action against defendants. The jury found on this question in plaintiff’s favor, although it must be conceded that the evidence would, at least, have been consistent with a contrary finding. The orders given by the English-Greene Company were such as might be given by any purchaser, and contain no suggestion that the English-Greene Company was acting merely as a selling agent for plaintiff.

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Kinston Cotton Mills v. Kuhne
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94 N.E. 640 (New York Court of Appeals, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A.D. 250, 113 N.Y.S. 779, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinston-cotton-mills-v-kuhne-nyappdiv-1908.