Mawhinney v. Millbrook Woolen Mills, Inc.

105 Misc. 99
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 105 Misc. 99 (Mawhinney v. Millbrook Woolen Mills, Inc.) 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
Mawhinney v. Millbrook Woolen Mills, Inc., 105 Misc. 99 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Kelby, J.

Plaintiff urges that certain allegations of the answer import the admission that the contracts with the government were voluntary on the part of the defendant. The admission might be conclusive (Horan v. Hastorf, 223 N. Y. 490; Fullerton v. Northern Bank, 184 App. Div. 37), but it is doubtful whether, as a matter of pleading, there is the admission. In testifying the defendant repudiates the idea that the contracts were voluntary,, but the evidence tends to establish the fact. It is certain that defendant voluntarily, introduced, and recommended, to the government the use of its product, and had little, if any, reluctance about entering into contract relations, and, in fact, at once did so. The withholding of its actual signature to the first contract, it claims was, in part, because precedence for the government was not in terms provided for. This, as well as the claim that defendant only yielded when the government sent us a letter and told us unless we forthwith would sign that contract, we would be put in jail,” is hardly borne out by the evidence. The letter referred to, which is that from Col. Zalinski, of July twenty-third, is not so arbitrary or coercive, and defendant’s letter of July twelfth, which evoked it, and might further have explained it, defendant did not introduce. Apparently the controversy, and the insistence were on subject of the strike clause,” and not about the silence of the contract on the subject of precedence. Acceptance of the contract, was, in that respect voluntary on the part' of the defendant. It does not seem necessary to hold more than this. The defendant’s contention is that [105]*105whether or not voluntary in their inception ” the contracts were mandates from the government. This is urged as independent of the provisions of the National Defense Act, and the argument, in support, is that the acts and contracts of governmental departmeilt heads are presumed to be by authority of the president, and where the executive acts, no statute is necessary, authority being in the Constitution, article II, section 2, making the president commander-in-chief of the army and navy. The decisions cited (Runkle v. United States, 122 U. S. 543; Wilcox v. Jackson, 13 Pet. 498; United States v. Eliason, 16 id. 291), support the proposition of presumptive authority, but not the defendant’s theory of executive power, which is in law, much narrower than the theory assumes. In Little v. Barreme, 2 Cranch, 170, it was held by the United States Supreme Court that instructions from the president to an American commander to seize vessels in enemy trade, otherwise than as provided by act of congress, did not justify the officer, nor exempt him from the payment of damages. In Milligan v. Hovey, 3 Biss. 13, it was held that the members of a military commission, and officers of the army acting thereunder, were liable in damages for arrest and imprisonment ordered by them, where the appointment of the commission was otherwise than as provided by act of congress. In Hendricks v Gonzalez, 67 Fed. Repr. 351, it was held that it was no justification for refusing clearance to a vessel, intended for insurrectionary use in a friendly country, that the refusal was under instructions from the secretary of treasury, but not authorized by congress. The rule thus is that while the president, when acting as commander-in-chief, has all the powers recognized by the usages of war, but when he does not act by martial law, he is governed by the acts of congress, and execu[106]*106tive orders, not authorized thereby, will be no warrant of power, or cover of protection. The present case is not a question at all of martial law. Martial law and civil law have not in this country lost their identity, and while it cannot be gainsaid that what was said in this case to the defendant, and what contracted with it, was military in spirit, and in eventual purpose, it was civil in its essential character. I conclude therefore that in the performance of contracts with the government, even for military supplies, precedence over civilian contracts does not necessarily inhere, nor may be imported or imposed otherwise than as provided by act of congress. This conclusion is not hampering to national efficiency in the difficult exigencies of war, for congress has in fact enacted'a statute, providing for precedence, where the executive deems it necessary, and this statute is not complained of, in this case, or out of it, so far as I know, as wanting in scope and effectiveness.

This is section 120 of the National Defense Act as follows: The President, in time of war or when war is imminent, is empowered, through the head of any department of the Government, in addition to the present authorized methods of purchase or procurement, to place an order with any individual, firm, association, company, corporation, or organized manufacturing industry for such product or material as may be required, and which is of the nature and kind usually produced or capable of being produced by such individual, firm, company, association, corporation, or organized manufacturing industry. Compliance with all such orders for products or material shall be obligatory of any individual, firm, association, company, corporation, or organized manufacturing industry, or the responsible head or heads thereof and shall take precedence over all other orders and [107]*107contracts theretofore placed with such individual, firm, company, association, corporation, or organized manufacturing industry. ’ ’

The determinative inquiry therefore in the case is whether precedence was contracted for, or ordered, in pursuance of this statute. It goes by the saying that it should be broadly construed, with its terms and implications undiminished. But it is not to be overlooked that there is not to be found in it any declaration of inherent right, or general right, to precedence in governmental contracts. No express declaration certainly, nor any reasonably sure implication, calls for the conclusion that such was intended. The statute is not self-executing. In terms it is only where the government shall place an order ” that by force of the statute “ such order ” is “ obligatory ” and given precedence “ over all other orders ” with penalties prescribed for refusal.

It is suggested, in a tentative way, that the making of a contract is, ‘ ‘ in ordinary parlance ’ ’ the ‘1 placing of an order.” It is probably so in commercial colloquialism, and an overlooked instance is in the contract upon which plaintiff sues, and which states the conditions under which “ this order is placed.” But congress did not have the colloquialism in mind. Resort to the presumption against loose verbal usage in the interpretation of a solemn statute, is not needed. Explicitly and repeatedly it is made manifest that orders placed under the statute are to be something extraordinary, something “ in addition to the present authorized methods of purchase and procurement.” The very terms bar the inference of an intent to include a purchase by ordinary contract as being the placing of an order under the section. The contracts here were ordinary contracts, negotiated and closed in pursuance of an ordinary and established method [108]*108of governmental purchasing.

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105 Misc. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mawhinney-v-millbrook-woolen-mills-inc-nysupct-1918.