National City Bank v. Prospect Syndicate, Inc.

170 Misc. 611, 10 N.Y.S.2d 759, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1634
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 Misc. 611 (National City Bank v. Prospect Syndicate, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National City Bank v. Prospect Syndicate, Inc., 170 Misc. 611, 10 N.Y.S.2d 759, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1634 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Genung, J.

This is an action by the assignee of a conditional sale contract to recover from the buyer the balance due thereunder.

On September 6, 1938, the Carburetor Combustion Corporation, as seller, and the defendant, as buyer, entered into a written conditional sale contract for the purchase and sale of a heating device called an “ automatic unit,” which contains the following provisions:

“ All the terms, conditions and provisions of this contract are herein contained. No representations or warranties shall be binding upon the Seller unless endorsed in writing hereon and signed by a duly authorized officer of the Seller. * * *

“ It is further agreed that, if any claim(s) should arise with respect to any warranty as herein set forth, such claim(s) will be made by the Buyer upon the Seller and not upon any Assignee of the Seller, and that the Buyer will not set up any such claim [612]*612as a defense or counter-claim as against any Assignee of the Seller hereunder.

This Contract may be assigned by the Seller and if so assigned, the assignee shall have each and all of the rights of the Seller hereunder, but in the absence of express assumption of such liability, the assignee shall not be liable hereunder to the Buyer or his legal representatives or assigns.”

The contract specified that payments were to be made in monthly installments to the holder ” at the office of this plaintiff.

Pursuant to the terms of the contract, the seller delivered the automatic unit ” to the defendant and installed it in the defendant’s building. Thereafter and on September 19, 1938, the defendant executed an Installation Certificate ” wherein it certified that the seller had completely performed all its obligations under the said conditional sale contract and that the defendant accepted the performance as satisfactory.

The Installation Certificate ” states:

“ September 19, 1938.
I (we) the undersigned, hereby certify^ that all things and all materials as described or referred to in the Conditional Sale Contract entered into by and between
CARBURETOR COMBUSTION CORP.
(Seller)

and the undersigned, dated September 6, 1938, have been furnished by the said Seller; that the delivery and/or the installation as therein agreed by the said Seller to be made has (have) been fully completed as required, and that the said things, materials, delivery and/or installations have been and are hereby accepted by the undersigned as satisfactory.

“ PROSPECT SYNDICATE, INC.
“ By Isaac Teener
“ (Buyer’s Signature.) ’

By written assignment the seller assigned and delivered the said conditional sale contract to this plaintiff. The seller also delivered the said Installation Certificate ” to this plaintiff.

In reliance upon the express terms of the written conditional sale contract and the “ Installation Certificate,” the plaintiff paid the seller $785, the purchase price specified in the conditional sale contract. On the same day the plaintiff notified the defendant in writing that it had become the owner and holder of the conditional sale contract and directed the defendant to make payments due thereunder to it and requested the defendant to inform the plaintiff immediately if the terms of the contract for the sale of [613]*613the “ automatic unit ” as shown by the conditional sale contract were not in accordance with the defendant’s understanding. That written notice states: Please be advised that we have acquired for value from the Seller a Contract entered into by you for the purchase of appliance(s), referred to in the accompanying statement. The Seller has informed us that he has delivered and satisfactorily installed the merchandise ordered by you. If the appliance(s) or terms of the contract as indicated in this statement are not in accordance with your understanding, please advise us immediately." The defendant at no time communicated with the plaintiff regarding the terms and provisions of the conditional sale contract.

But after receiving the said notice the defendant made two monthly installment payments to the defendant in the manner required under the conditional sale contract. The defendant defaulted in making the installment payment due January 1, 1939, and has continued in default. The plaintiff demanded payment of the balance due under the contract and then commenced this action.

The defendant admits the execution of the instrument called a conditional sale contract upon which the plaintiff sues; but sets up that, simultaneously with the execution of that instrument, the seller and the defendant entered into an agreement contained in a separate and distinct written instrument, whereby the seller agreed to supply the defendant with coal, at a stated price, for a period of three years, and the buyer agreed to pay the seller therefor. The defendant contends that the breach of that separate “ coal agreement ” by the seller, after the plaintiff had acquired the conditional sale contract and notified the defendant thereof, constitutes a defense to this action to recover the balance due under a conditional sale contract.

The defendant also alleges as a defense that the seller knowingly made false statements of fact that the seller owned coal mines, which induced the defendant to purchase the “ automatic unit ” and enter into the coal agreement.”

The defendant alleges the same matters as counterclaims and seeks to recover from the plaintiff for the cost, above the “ coal agreement ” price, of coal it had to purchase in the open market.

The coal agreement ” refers to the conditional sale contract as the National City Bank contract ” and a rider attached to it provides that, if the seller should default under the “ coal agreement,” the buyer might request the seller to repurchase the contract from the National City Bank and return the contract marked ‘ Cancelled.’ ”

The defendant is obligated by its conditional sale contract to pay to the plaintiff the balance due under that instrument, regard[614]*614less of the default by the seller under the coal agreement ” and the misstatements of fact made by the seller.

The pattern of the two separate written instruments clearly shows that each written instrument represented a contract separate and distinct from the other; that the parties intended that only the instrument called a conditional sale contract was to be assigned by the seller to this plaintiff; and that the assignee was to be entitled to collect the installments payable thereunder by this defendant, regardless of the coal agreement ” or any other agreement between the seller and the defendant.

The conditional sale contract provides that all its terms, conditions and provisions are therein contained and that no representations or warranties shall be binding upon the seller unless indorsed in writing on the contract. That is indication that the conditional sale contract was separate and distinct from the “ coal agreement.”

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Bluebook (online)
170 Misc. 611, 10 N.Y.S.2d 759, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-city-bank-v-prospect-syndicate-inc-nynyccityct-1939.