Normandie Shirt Co. v. J. H. & C. K. Eagle, Inc.

144 N.E. 507, 238 N.Y. 218, 35 A.L.R. 714, 1924 N.Y. LEXIS 671
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 144 N.E. 507 (Normandie Shirt Co. v. J. H. & C. K. Eagle, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Normandie Shirt Co. v. J. H. & C. K. Eagle, Inc., 144 N.E. 507, 238 N.Y. 218, 35 A.L.R. 714, 1924 N.Y. LEXIS 671 (N.Y. 1924).

Opinion

Crane, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for failure to deliver silk shirtings, according to contract.

The complaint alleges that on or about the 20th day of March, 1919, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into an agreement in writing, a copy of which is annexed and made part of the complaint. The exhibit recites that the plaintiff, styled the Shirt Company, has presented to the defendant, known as the Silk Company, an order in writing dated March 20, 1919, calling for the sale and delivery by the Silk Company to the said Shirt Company of 400 pieces of shirting No. 910 at $1.60 per yard, and has requested from the Silk Company credit terms of 6/10/60 upon the said order. The agreement goes on to provide for the deposit of certificates of stock and cash as security for the purchase price and the results which are to follow from non-payment. Article V reads:

The written, signed order of the Shirt Company dated March 20, 1919, when accepted by the Silk Company, with all the terms and conditions thereof as appearing and referred to thereon shall, in conjunction with this document, constitute the contract between the parties and this agreement is and shall be construed as part of the said sales contract.”

Besides this exhibit annexed to the complaint, the contract, therefore, consisted of the written order of March 20, 1919, when accepted, and all the terms and conditions appearing thereon.

This written order was accepted and appears as Exhibit II upon the trial of the action. According to the plaintiff’s allegations .it is the contract, and all of the contract, regarding manufacture and delivery entered into between the parties. ■ It reads:

*222 “ J. H. & C. K. Eagle
“ 265 Fourth Avenue
New York Mar. 20-1919 m.
Normandie Shirt Co.,
“ 164 W. 27th St., No. B-7578
“N. Y. C. Via
“ Terms 6 /10 /60 F. O. B. New York Salesman House
“ Dehvery June-July-Aug.-Sept.
Psc. Assorted Pcs. Unassorted * Description Quality Yd. Psc. Price
-- 400 32" Shirting — 1 Split Edge 910 75 /80 1.60
Above order confirmed.
“ J. H. & C. K. EAGLE,
“ B. M. Fessler,
Sales Manager.”

On the reverse side of this order appear two clauses referred to in this case:

“2 — Fire; war, strikes, legislative, judicial or public administrative acts, errors or defaults of the seller’s mill, manufacturer, dyer, finisher, carrier or vendor, or any cause not within the seller’s control, preventing the dehvery of merchandise in- accordance with the terms of this contract, shall absolve the seller from any hability hereunder.

9 — Failure on part of the sellers .to make specific deliveries shall not invahdate the balance of this contract.”

Clause 9 may be eliminated from further consideration, for it evidently means that if goods are not delivered in June as called for by the contract, nevertheless the July dehvery holds good, and so regarding the other months specified. A failure to dehver in a previous month the amount called for would not affect the requirements for subsequent months. This clause, therefore, has httle or no bearing upon the point raised in this case.

To understand this contract, and the claims of the *223 parties under it, it is necessary to have some idea of what it called for. The defendants were manufacturers of silk shirting, made at their mills in Shamokin, Pennsylvania. Plaintiff’s order called for the manufacture of shirting according to certain designs and patterns which it was to select. The goods were not in stock, but had to be made on the defendant’s looms. The shirting referred to[in the contract as “ one split edge No. 910 ” was merely the ground work of the shirting. It was by no means the finished product. Patterns and coloring had to be added. No. 910 merely indicated the quality of the silk. As stated by the witness Michael Fessler, “ 910 shirting is a quality; the 910 constitutes the ground. Every pattern is separate according to the number of stripes put in.”

We may now understand the meaning of that part of the order or contract which reads, “ assortment to be given, patterns to be selected as soon ás Mr. Licking gets paintings together.” Mr. Licking was in the defendant’s employ and the paintings referred to indicate samples or representations of shirting showing the coloring of the shirting and the width of the stripes. These various paintings or drawings had numbers. The plaintiff when these paintings were ready/ was to select the numbers showing the coloring and design of stripe which it desired. It did this by two selections made in writing on the order blank of the defendant, one dated May 3, 1919, and the other June 13, 1919. These are in the case as Exhibits 7 and 8. The numbers, such as 487, 720, 718, indicate, as I read the evidence, the design. Blue, gold, helio, indicate the color. Each selection was to be made up in sets of the various colors.

It will be noticed that while the contract was made March 20, 1919, no assortment or selection was given by the plaintiff until May 3, 1919. Other selections were designated as early as April 10th, but as I understand the parties, these selections were replaced by the selections *224 of May 3d and June 13th. Therefore, we may take it as a fact that the defendant could not very well put its warps into its looms for the plaintiff’s orders before May 3d, 1919, the date of the given assortment. This May 3d assortment called for delivery in June. The June 13th assortment called for delivery in July, August and September. Charles Hertel, who had charge of the manufacturing for the defendant, stated that after the silk threads are ready to be placed in the loom it takes approximately from nine to ten weeks to manufacture the silk according to order, that is, before it is ready to be shipped from the mill.

A strike occurred at the mills on May 26, 1919. “All the looms and all the machinery were stopped, totally stopped, no wheels were turning whatsoever” The strike continued until August 18th when the mill started up with about 40 per cent of its help. At- the time of the strike there was warp then in the looms. Hertel testified:

“ Q. Now did you resume operations again, in the end of August of 1919? A. Partly,, yes.
Q. Now was it necessary to run off the looms,' the warp, that was then in the looms? A. Yes, sir.
“ Q. How long did that take? A. From 4 to 6 weeks, according to the length of the cuts on the looms.
“ Q.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.E. 507, 238 N.Y. 218, 35 A.L.R. 714, 1924 N.Y. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/normandie-shirt-co-v-j-h-c-k-eagle-inc-ny-1924.