Lackawanna Mills v. Weil

21 A.D. 492, 47 N.Y.S. 585
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 A.D. 492 (Lackawanna Mills v. Weil) 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
Lackawanna Mills v. Weil, 21 A.D. 492, 47 N.Y.S. 585 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

One ground relied Upon by the appellants for the reversal of the judgment is that the learned trial judge erred in denying the motion to dismiss the complaint at the close of - the plaintiff’s case. The merits of this position necessarily involve an examination of the facts as to whether or not, as contended by the defendants, the plaintiff defaulted in the performance of its contract on June 1, 1891, and failed to give notice to the defendants of readiness to perform within a reasonable time after August 5, 1891.

It appeared upon the trial that on May 12, 1891, the plaintiff sent to the defendants an invoice of the 1,800 dozen, amounting to $16,200, and thereafter delivered to the defendants eight cases, the last two on August 19, 1891; that on July 2, 1891, the plaintiff wrote the. defendants that they had packed and stored at the mill, ■subject to their order, the fifty-seven cases which were then undelivered. A controversy arose between the. parties as to whether or riot the goods which had been delivered corresponded to the terms of sale. The defendants claimed that the shirts and drawers were sold by sample and upon the agreement that they should correspond [495]*495to similar goods manufactured by the plaintiff for the defendants and delivered in 1890 under No. 423, and that the goods did not correspond to the sample or to No. 423 in the respect, among others, that the shirts and drawers of No. 423 had four-hole pearl buttons, and that those of No. 424, which are the goods in controversy, had two-hoie buttons. On August 5,'1891, the parties had a conference, the result of which was that the plaintiff allowed the defendants sixty dollars in settlement of the claim for wrong buttons on four cases which had been delivered between June 22 and August 1, 1891; and it was agreed that the 840 dozen of shirts then undelivered should be altered so as to have four-hole instead of two-hole buttons.

The question whether this was a gratuitous engagement on the part of the plaintiff, or was undertaken as the result of reasonable objections of the defendants, based upon the fact that there was a difference between the goods sought to be delivered and those required by the contract, was, among others, referred by the learned trial court to the jury. Upon the, plaintiff’s evidence, however, as it stood at the close of the case when the motion to dismiss was made, it was not so favorable to the defendants that the judge would have been justified in granting the motion ; because, in addition to what appeared, as already cited, it was also shown that the goods were all manufactured, packed and ready for delivery in February, 1891; that they were invoiced to the defendants May 12, 1891; that the contract required that they should be ready for delivery June 1, 1891, and should be. actually delivered in small lots as ordered by the defendants after that date, and should be paid for June tenth. On July second, as already stated, notice was given to the defendants that, the goods were stored . subject to their order. The defendants seemed to recognize the correctness of this procedure by repeatedly ordering those goods shipped, and in the Lamp-man order of August nineteenth they direct the plaintiff to ship “cases that you are holding, ‘subject to our order’ as under noted.”

On August fifth the difference had been settled, ahd the only change made in the original contract was that in regard to the change of buttons; .and that for the moment may be considered as a modification of the contract. All the goods shipped after August fifth had changed buttons, and all the goods ordered by the defendants had [496]*496either been actually delivered or tendered, and none were returned. Finally, although they had received goods on August fourteenth and nineteenth, and had not returned them, they refused to receive or admit into their store goods ordered on the nineteenth which were tendered to them on August twenty-fifth. There is evidence tending to show that, at the time of this tender and refusal to' receive, -the buttons had all been changed, the testimony being that within one or two days after Lampman’s visit to the mills on August nineteenth, all the changes as to buttons had been made.. However this may be, the rejection of these, goods without examination was at the defendants’ risk. If such goods corresponded with the requirements of the contract, such refusal to receive constituted a breach on the defendants’ part, which made it unnecessary for- the plaintiff to make any further tender. It was not required to ship all the remaining cases from Scranton to New York for the purpose of offering them to the defendants so that they might reject them. It was sufficient that the goods were ready for delivery and stored subject to the defendants’ orders. ,

In Van Sickle v. Nester (34 Hun, 64) the rule is well stated in the following language : If the plaintiff drew to the defendant a load of barley and tendered it upon the contract, and the barley in all respects corresponded with that required by the terms of the contract, and the defendant refused to accept it, it cannot be that the rule is that the plaintiff must continue day after day to draw other, loads to the defendant and have them refused until he has drawn and tendered the whole amount required by the contract. Such a rule would be a hardship and unjust. The defendant, by refusing to accept, was guilty of a breach of the contract, and this breach dispensed with the necessity of the plaintiff’s offering to deliver the rest. ■ If there had been no breach of the contract on the -part of the defendant, if. the barley was not of the quality required by the contract, then he had a right to refuse to accept, and it would then have been the duty of the plaintiff to have purchased and delivered other barley. ' But upon this question the. evidence is conflicting. It was submitted to the jury, and the jury have found in favor of the plaintiff.” (See, also, Canda v. Wick, 100 N. Y. 127; Howe v. Moore, 37 N. Y. St. Repr. 736.)

Hpon the question1 of the plaintiff’s ability or willingness to per[497]*497form, there was in the case, at the time the motion was made, evidence from which the jury might infer, as they subsequently did, that the plaintiff delivered or offered all goods ordered by the defendants, by having the balance called for by the contract in storage subject to the defendants’ orders, the stored goods being, as the jury have determined, up to the requirements of the contract. Had the defendants changed their minds subsequent to August twenty-fifth and become willing to accept goods, they should have communicated that change of mind to the plaintiff by at least sending an order for more goods.

The question of law of course arises, not as to the right of the plaintiff to recover at all, not as to the right to go to the jury upon the" question of the amount of damages, but as to when the payment became due, so as to set the interest running; and this is to be determined by the consideration of whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon the original contract, or such contract as modified by the agreement of August fifth; or, as held by the learned trial judge, whether the recovery should be for the balance due upon the entire contract, with interest from July 1, 1891, the date of the last payment. The date of payment, however, is not controlling upon the motion to dismiss, this latter requiring us to review the evidence with a view to determining whether there was sufficient testimony from which the jury could properly infer that the plain- ' tiff was entitled to recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 A.D. 492, 47 N.Y.S. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lackawanna-mills-v-weil-nyappdiv-1897.