Kirkland v. Niagara Gorge Railroad

109 A.D. 201, 95 N.Y.S. 657

This text of 109 A.D. 201 (Kirkland v. Niagara Gorge Railroad) 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
Kirkland v. Niagara Gorge Railroad, 109 A.D. 201, 95 N.Y.S. 657 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Hooker, J.:

Plaintiff’s assignor, the International Navigation Company, on February 7, 1901, proposing to operate a line of steamships upon [202]*202the Niagara river during the season of the Pan-American Exposh tion, entered into a traffic arrangement with the defendant, the Niagara Gorge Railroad Company, which then operated a line of railroad.along the lower Niagara river. This agreement provided that the navigation company should have the right to sell coupon tickets which should give the holders the privilege of riding over the defendant’s line; the navigation company was to pay the sum of forty-five cents for each coupon sold by it, payments for which, were to be made daily to the defendant; the agreement Was to become operative on the 1st day of June, 1901, and continue until the 1st day o'f October, 1901; with the privilege to the navigation, company to continue it Upon the same terms until the 1st day of November, 1901. The contract also provided: “And.in addition thereto,, as a security for the performance of this contract, the Navigation Company agrees that it will deposit with the treasurer of the Gorge Company, on or before June 1, 1901, the sum of five thousand ($5,000:00) dollars in cash, or an approved surety company bond in the sum of ten thousand ($10;000.00) dollars, conditioned for the faithful performance of. this contract, as the Gorge • Company may elect.” The navigation company also agreed to purchase from the defendant at least 2,000 coupon tickets per day and to pay for them whether it resold the same-or not, and that if the. navigation. company purchased and paid for 240,000 or more coupon tickets the defendant would rebate and pay back to it the sum of seven and one-half cents for each coupon ticket so purchased by it, the rebate payment to be made on the 1st day of November, 1901, or as soon.thereafter as the business could be conveniently adjusted between the parties. This contract was in writing, signed and sealed by the parties thereto. On June 10, 1901, the parties by a further agreement in writing, modified that of February seventh, by providing that the contract should go into effect on July first, instead of June first, and “ that any and all tickets in, excess of 180,000 which may be sold by you shall be at and after the rate of forty-five cents; and that.ány and all tickets over our road sold by you in May and June shall be at and after the-rate of forty-five cents each. The guaranty shall be- amended so as. to be 180,000 instead-of 240,000, and. the rebate shall relate only to 180,000 and shall not apply to any tickets sold in excess of that [203]*203nun^bev. A further condition for this modification will be that the $5,000 cash guaranty provided for by the contract shall be paid to the treasurer of the Niagara Gorge Railroad Co. at once, as we understand that you are already issuing tickets with coupons over our road, and we have honored them and desire to continue to do so.” Later the sum of $5,000 mentioned in.the agreements was paid over, by the navigation company to the defendant.

At the end of the season the navigation company owed. $1,499.50 for coupons it had not paid for; it claimed to be entitled to the sum of $5,000 it had paid to the defendant less this sum; on the defendant’s refusal to pay, the claim came by mesne assignments to the plaintiff and this action was commenced. At the close of the evidence both parties moved for a direction of a verdict; the jury was discharged, and later the court directed a verdict for $3,500.50, the difference between the amount of a deposit of $5,000 and the amount concededly owing to the defendant, together with interest on that sum from the 4th day of November, 1901. The defendant appeals from the judgment entered upon findings made and signed by the justice before whom the case was tried.

The navigation' company failed to purchase 2,000 coupon tickets daily or 180,000 in the aggregate, and the defendant claimed that because the navigation company had thereby committed a breach of the contract in that respect the-defendant was entitled to keep the $5,000, for that deposit was made as security for the performance of this contract. We are persuaded, however, that during the life of the contract the defendant waived its provisions relating to the purchase of a given number of coupon tickets by the navigation company.

As early as the 27th day of July, 1901, it was realized and discussed by letter between the parties. to the contract that so far as attendance was concerned the exposition was a failure and disappointment to every one who was dependent upon this attendance for business. On that day the manager of the navigation company wrote to the defendant that three weeks before -that time they had informed the defendant’s treasurer that they “ would not go on under the two thousand daily coupon agreement and understood from him that your company was not thinking about that feature of our -agreejnent and therefore I did not deem it necessary to submit [204]*204any other proposal with reference to it.” The letter stated that it was an utter, impossibility to. think of fulfilling the 2,000 daily coupon clause of the contract, and the most they could do would be to send all the traffic they could at the flat rate, and that they would-be exceedingly sorry at the end of the season to he-entitled to no rebate. On September Vt, 1901, the defendant wrote to the navigation company’s manager as-follows: '“'At -the last meeting of the board of-directors I was instructed to inform you that while there .is every disposition on the part of the Niagara Gorge Railroad . Co, to treat your -company with the utmost fairness, there is no time to further modify a written contract entered into months ago and already once modified. , Our treatment of .your company is a sufficient guaranty that you can depend upon fairness and reasonable treatment on a final settlement. I was instructed,, however, to say to you that from this time forth -we desire to have paid daily for the coupons sold over our line the sum of fifty cents each instead of' forty-fiye cents each as heretofore, as the forty-five cent rate was a special concession on the theory that you were to carry out the-written contract. In view of the fact that the written 'contract has not been observed On your part, this request, I am sure," will seem entirely reasonable to you. Our -treasurer will be instructed to-make collections accordingly. Trusting;,that this will be entirely satisfactory, Tours,” etc. On September 19, .1901,. the defendant’s auditor informed the navigation company that commencing with the; seventeenth of that month coupons would be rated at fifty cents instead of forty-five as theretofore. The navigation company paid the new rate without demur from that time until the close of. the season.

We are convinced that-the true interpretation ■ of. the letter ol September seventeenth is that it evidences an intention on the part of'the defendant to waive, the terms of, the. contra,ct- theretofore in force requiring the navigation company to purchase, 2,000 coupons daily. •

Although-it is stated, that there is no time to modify the contract of February seventh,' and. the navigation company was urged to rely on the'fairness of the defendant as that attribute had,been - evidenced by the past dealing between- the . parties, - yet the letter distinctly reads: “I was instructed, fioioeveryto say to you” that [205]*205henceforth the charge for tickets must be fifty instead of forty-five cents each, and this “ as the forty-five cent rate was a special concession on the theory that you were to carry out the written con

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Bluebook (online)
109 A.D. 201, 95 N.Y.S. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkland-v-niagara-gorge-railroad-nyappdiv-1905.