McCarthy v. Krebs Pigment & Chemical Co.

118 Misc. 566
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 Misc. 566 (McCarthy v. Krebs Pigment & Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarthy v. Krebs Pigment & Chemical Co., 118 Misc. 566 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Bijur, J.

This action was brought to recover for the balance due under a written contract for the sale to defendant by plaintiff’s assignor of quantities of zinc ashes. The written contract describes the article sold as:

Zinc ashes or skimmings — from 73% zinc contents upwards * * *. Quantity and description of material: 600 tons minimum and 1200 tons maximum of light colored zinc ashes * * * Price:

[567]*567Material running 73% to 74.99% in zinc 72|%

Material running 75% to 79.99% in zinc 74%

Material running 80% and over in zinc 77% of the average St. Louis Spelter quotation during the month of shipment.”

The “ St. Louis Spelter quotation ” was conceded to be the acknowledged market price for pure zinc as regularly published to the trade.

The error assigned by appellant consists of the admission into evidence of parol testimony as to a trade custom, and of a course of dealing between the parties including previous contracts and of some other similar proof for the avowed purpose of interpreting the agreement. The principle of the integrity of written instruments precludes the admission of parol evidence to vary them. It is of minor importance whether that be a rule of substantive law or of evidence. Brady v. Nally, 151 N. Y. 258; Wallach v. Riverside Bank, 206 id. 434. Of course, theoretically parol evidence may often be necessary or at least appropriate, to identify generally the parties or the subject-matter of the contract (Marks v. Cowdin, 226 N. Y. 138, 143, 144), but its limitation to such a function presents as a practical matter no question which is material to the present case. Two general exceptions to the rule excluding parol evidence are well recognized. They are tersely stated in Braxton v. Mendelson, 233 N. Y. 122, as follows: “In the absence of technical phrases whose meaning is obscure, or of latent ambiguities making the subject-matter of the contract doubtful, the court must construe it. (Brady v. Cassidy, 104 N. Y. 147) * * * In the case before us fortunately we are relieved of many of these difficulties by the existence of a written contract, complete in itself containing no latent ambiguities, no words of technical import.”

See, also, United States Printing & Lithograph Co. v. Powers, 233 N. Y. 143, decided by the court on the same day. The interpretation of technical phrases may fairly be regarded as a mere translation of unfamiliar words or words of dual import, and adequate testimony as to a universal custom of the trade is a common mode of solving this difficulty. Victor v. National City Bank of N. Y., 200 App. Div. 557; Peisch v. Dickson, 19 Fed. Cas. 123, per Story, C. J. (1815). Evidence of a custom is often resorted to also to amplify or add to some adjective element of the contract, as for example, mode of payment of delivery and the like, such provisions being deemed to be present in the contract by implication, the intention of the parties being assumed to be governed by the universal usage of the trade wherein they are engaged. Wigm. Ev. [568]*568§ 2440. The limitations of this class of evidence are expressed in two notable cases as follows:

Usage and custom cannot be proved to contravene a rule of law or to alter or contradict the express or implied terms of a contract free from ambiguity, or to make the legal rights or liabilities of the parties to a contract other than they are by the terms thereof. When the terms of a contract are clear, unambiguous and valid, they must prevail, and no evidence of custom or usage can be permitted to change them.” Hopper v. Sage, 112 N. Y. 530, 535.

The custom, if allowed, and of the force suggested, would in effect alter thp contract in a particular material to the rights of the defendants. Evidence of it was, therefore, properly excluded.” O’Donohue v. Leggett, 134 N. Y. 40.

The subject of ambiguity in a contract, while it presents theoretical difficulties, is generally capable of practical solution with reasonable precision. The classical definition of ambiguities announced in 1597 by Sir Francis Bacon in his Maxims, rule 23, was that a patent ambiguity “ appeares to be ambiguous upon the deed or instrument,” but that a latent ambiguity exists where the matter seemeth certaine and without ambiguity, for anything that appeareth upon the deed or instrument; but there is some collateral! matter out of the deed, that breedeth the ambiguity.” He adds that a patent ambiguity “ is never holpen by averrement * * * for that were to make all deeds hollow and subject to averrements.”

He also said (Law Tracts, p. 99): “ All ambiguity of words by matter within the deed, and not out of the deed, shall be holpen by construction, or in some case by election, but never by averrement, but rather shall make the deed void for uncertainty.’’ See, also, Pollock, C. J., in Nichol v. Godts, (1854) 23 L. J. Ex. 314, and Tindal, C. J., in Saunderson v. Piper, (1839) 5 Bing. (N. C.) 425, 431.

Whether Lord Bacon’s declaration is to be taken as literally true, and patent ambiguities to be held in all cases to render a contract void has been the subject of much debate. Colpoys v. Colpoys, Jacob, 451; Whalen v. Stephens, 193 Ill. 121, 135; Fish v. Hubbard’s Admrs., 21 Wend. 651. The disagreement arises generally rather from futile attempts at accurate terminology than from difference of opinion as to the application of the principles.

There is a practical line of demarcation difficult to define in words between a true patent ambiguity and mere lack of precision in expression which is a matter of resolution by judicial construction.

If there be, as I think there is here, an ambiguity which is not latent but patent, according to the old distinction, that is not a matter to be solved by evidence as to the meaning of the parties — in a case, that is where there could be parties — it is to be solved [569]*569by the Court as a matter of construction.” Wright, J., in Committee of London Clearing Bankers v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, L. R (1896) 1 Q. B. Div. 222, 227.

Salient examples of the distinction are to be found in the respective cases of Nichols v. Frothingham, 45 Me. 220, and Augustine v. McDowell, 120 Ia. 401. In the former case a note payable six — after date ” was held not to be void for uncertainty but open to judicial construction as meaning six months after date, the court saying (p. 226): “ Notes payable in six days are seldom seen, while those payable in six years are not very common. The word most frequently in use in the commercial arrangements of men, not only in our cities, but in the country to designate the time when notes and bills fall due, is months * * * it was left out by mistake.” On the other hand, in the Augustine case a mortgage covering seventy, more or less of corn in field ” was held to be not such a description as may (p. 404) be aided by extrinsic evidence, but no description at all.”

A latent ambiguity or a technical phrase may be resolved or explained respectively by parol evidence of appropriate character.

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Related

McCarthy v. Krebs Pigment & Chemical Co.
204 A.D. 501 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1923)

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