Morris Asinof & Sons, Inc. v. Freudenthal

195 A.D. 79, 186 N.Y.S. 383, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4700

This text of 195 A.D. 79 (Morris Asinof & Sons, Inc. v. Freudenthal) 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
Morris Asinof & Sons, Inc. v. Freudenthal, 195 A.D. 79, 186 N.Y.S. 383, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4700 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is an action by the seller of merchandise against the buyer thereof to recover damages for his failure to accept and pay therefor. The complaint, as amended by consent on the trial, is on a contract alleged to have been made between the parties on or about the 20th day of December, 1917, by which the plaintiff agreed to sell and deliver to the defendant, and the defendant agreed to purchase, two hundred and eighty pieces of mackinaw cloth, consisting of about forty-five yards to the piece, at the agreed price of $2.50 per yard, delivery [80]*80f. o. b. New York, $5,000 to be paid in cash immediately upon receipt of the invoices by the defendant and the balance to be paid on or before January 5, 1918, with a proviso by which plaintiff was to be released from liability with respect to fifty-one pieces of the cloth, which then were in transit to the plaintiff, in the event that they were not received by it, and the defendant was given an option to take any or all of seventy-five additional pieces at the same price in case they should be received by the plaintiff as expected. At the suggestion of the defendant, who claimed that the minds of the parties had not met on a binding contract, the evidence with respect to the contract was presented in order that the point concerning the sufficiency thereof might be presented without incumbering the record with other evidence relating to the tender of performance by the plaintiff, its readiness and ability to perform and its damages.

At the close of the evidence offered by the plaintiff with respect to the making of the contract, the complaint was dismissed on defendant’s motion. The only point presented by the appeal, therefore, is whether the evidence shows prima facie the making of the contract. Plaintiff is a domestic corporation and its place of business was at the city of New York and the defendant was engaged in business at Baltimore, Md., under the name of L. Freudenthal & Son. It appears that the preliminary negotiations for the contract were had through a broker.

On the morning of the, 21st of December, 1917, plaintiff wrote and mailed to the defendant a letter referring generally to the agreement made through the broker and inclosing invoices for 280 pieces of the cloth, and stating that it had on hand ready for shipment 229 pieces and had invoices for 51 additional pieces which were in transit and which it expected to receive within a few days, the total net amount of the goods invoiced as $32,230.63, and stated that the terms of sale were that defendant should send a check for $5,000 upon receipt of the invoices and remit for the balance by January 1, 1918, and that it was understood that if any of the 51 pieces should be lost in transit, plaintiff was not to be held responsible and that it was expecting -75 additional pieces, and that defendant could have them when received [81]*81if he wanted them, and that the goods would be packed ready for shipment at defendant’s disposal f. o. b. New York. Apparently there was no understanding as to which of the parties should communicate with the other first, for the day before the plaintiff so wrote the defendant, the defendant wrote the plaintiff confirming the order placed through the broker, but stating that the order was for 342. pieces, and with- respect to the terms, stated the price the same as the plaintiff claimed and that a check was to be sent for $5,000 on receipt of the invoices, but stating that the balance was to be paid between January first and January fifth, and the plaintiff was. to hold the goods to defendant’s order. The letter from the defendant was received by the plaintiff .on the afternoon of December twenty-first, after its first letter of that date had been mailed and it thereupon wrote and at about six p. m. that day mailed another letter to defendant acknowledging the receipt of his letter confirming the order, and stating that it was entirely satisfactory with one exception and that was with respect to the number of pieces, and it therein stated that it could not hold itself responsible for the delivery of 342 pieces and that it had in stock 229 pieces and invoices for 51 more, and that there was hardly a possibility of its not receiving them, but that it could not hold itself responsible in case it did not, and it reiterated what had been stated in its first letter with respect to 75 additional pieces and closed by agreeing to deliver the 229 pieces which were on hand, and the 51 pieces when received, and as many of the 75 pieces when received, as the defendant desired, and requested an acknowledgment by the defendant to the end that there might be no misunderstanding. On the twenty-fourth of December defendant wrote the plaintiff acknowledging the receipt of its letter of the twenty-first — evidently .referring to plaintiff’s first letter of that date — and stating that it wished to correct plaintiff’s statement as to terms and referred to defendant’s letter of the twenty-first, which it was conceded meant the twentieth, confirming the order and stating that the balance over the $5,000 would be paid by it between the first and the fifth of January and not between the date of the letter. and the first of January as plaintiff [82]*82had proposed, and the letter closed with the following: “ Please acknowledge this accordingly and oblige.” This letter was not received by plaintiff until December twenty-sixth, and the suggested change by the defendant with respect to the time he was to have to pay the balance had already been assented to by the plaintiff in its second letter of December twenty-first, which evidently had not been received by the defendant when he wrote the letter of December twenty-fourth. The plaintiff, deeming that the defendant in the meantime must have received its second letter of December twenty-first assenting to the only change in the contract suggested by the defendant in this letter of the twenty-fourth of December, did not further communicate with the defendant concerning it; but not having received defendant’s check for $5,000 on account of the invoices inclosed to him with its first letter of December twenty-first, wired him as follows: “Surprised not having received check five thousand dollars. Wire answer.” After receiving this telegram, and on December twenty-sixth, defendant wrote plaintiff as follows: “ Not having received a reply to our letter of the 24th inst., and as the terms specified by you in your letter of the 21st was not in accordance with our offer of Dec. 20th we herewith return the invoice and cancel the order.” It does not expressly appear when the defendant received plaintiff’s second letter of the twenty-first, but since defendant’s letter of the twenty-fourth referred only to one of plaintiff’s letters of the twenty-first, the jury would have been warranted in finding that at that time the defendant had only received the plaintiff’s first letter of the twenty-first, which showed that plaintiff was only prepared to contract unconditionally for the delivery of 229 pieces of the goods, and that the defendant, by only suggesting that he be given until January fifth to pay the balance, assented to the plaintiff’s first letter of December twenty-first with respect to the quantity of goods covered by the sale. The jury would also have been warranted in finding that the defendant before • attempting to cancel the contract on December twenty-sixth, had received plaintiff’s second letter of the twenty-first, consenting to the time of payment as specified in the defendant’s letter of December twentieth and repeated in his letter of December twenty-fourth. That being so, defendant was fully informed [83]

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Bluebook (online)
195 A.D. 79, 186 N.Y.S. 383, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-asinof-sons-inc-v-freudenthal-nyappdiv-1921.