P. N. Gray & Co. v. Cavalliotis

276 F. 565, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 980
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedNovember 23, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 276 F. 565 (P. N. Gray & Co. v. Cavalliotis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P. N. Gray & Co. v. Cavalliotis, 276 F. 565, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 980 (E.D.N.Y. 1921).

Opinion

COOPER, District Judge.

This is an action upon contract, tried by the court; a jury trial having been waived. Two main questions are presented, viz.: Whether plaintiff has an action upon the particular contract; and, second, whether he has brought the right one.

[1] The plaintiff is in the export trade, and acts as agent for foreign principals in the purchase and shipment of various commodities. The defendant is engaged in a general trading and export business in New York City. On August 22, 1919, the defendant entered into a contract with the Dominion Sugar Company, Limited, of Ontario, [567]*567Canada, for the purchase of 2,000 tons of standard cane refined granulated sugar, American style, at price of 9% cents per pound, f. a. s. steamer New York City.

Subsequent thereto, and on the 22d of October, 1919, the plaintiff, as agent for Picard & Co., of Zurich, Switzerland, made a contract with the defendant; that portion thereof essential to this controversy being as follows:

“Michael N. Cavalliotis, trading under the registered name, the Ægean Trading Company, of 120 Liberty street, New York, N. Y., has this day sold to P. N. Gray & Co., Inc., of 6 Hanover street, New York, N. Y., acting as agents for Picard & Co., Limited, of Chatham, Ontario, to be placed in escrow in Irving National Bank, as per offer made by the Ægean Trading Company on the 18th of October, seventeen hundred fifty (1,750) tons of standard cane refined granulated sugar at the price of 10.50 cents per pound net cash in New York funds, in bond, f. a. s. steamer New York. * * * ”

The Dominion Company had no knowledge of this agreement. A long exchange of correspondence followed between the defendant and the Dominion Sugar Company, and the latter complained that because of Canadian embargo it could not make deliveries. The defendant stated to the plaintiff that he could get a release of his contract with the refinery at a profit of 1% cents per pound, and of this amount he would pay the plaintiff one-half cent per pound. This was not satisfactory to the plaintiff, and the defendant on January 29, 1920, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, entered into an agreement with the Dominion Company, whereby the contract between the defendant and the Dominion Company was abrogated and fully discharged. Cavalliotis received as consideration for such release the sum of $84,800, at the rate of 2 cents per pound, apparently endeavoring to make a greater profit that he cared to disclose to the plaintiff.

From the Dominion Company’s New York representative the plaintiff learned of the defendant’s arrangement with the Dominion Company, and it immediately made a demand upon defendant for the delivery of the sugar, or else to pay over the difference between the contract and market price, and upon refusal this suit followed. The facts were substantially all conceded.

The contract is signed, “P. N. Gray & Co., Inc., by Wallace H. Foster, Secretary,” and objection is made, upon the trial that the plaintiff, as agent, cannot sue individually. The reference to the plaintiff in the body of the contract is that Cavalliotis has sold to “P. N. Gray & Co., Inc., of 6 Hanover street, New York, aching as agents for Picard & Co., Zurich.” There are strong authorities for holding that at common law a contract in such form is the personal contract: of the agent, upon which he may sue and be sued in his own name. Albany, etc., Co. v. Lundberg, 121 U. S. 451, 54, 7 Sup. Ct. 958, 30 L. Ed. 982, and cases therein cited.

By the Code of Civil Procedure of the state of New York it is provided :

“Every action must be prosecuted in the name ot the real party in interest, except that an executor or administrator, a trustee oí an express trust, [568]*568or a person expressly authorized by statute, may sue, without joining with him the person for whose benefit the action is prosecuted, A person, with whom or m whose name, a contract is made for the benefit of another, is a trustee of an express trust, within the meaning of this section.” Section 449,

Whether considered as a personal contract or a contract with an agent, the defendant cannot be relieved from liability. If the former, the recovery is payable to the agent personally; if the latter, it is payable to him as agent for Picard & Co. In Considerant v. Brisbane, 22 N. Y. 389, the plaintiff sued upon notes payable to “V. Considerant, as executive agent of the company, Bureau, Guillon, Godau & Co." The court held, in overruling a demurrer:

“Before the Code, I think, the remedy at law, upon an express contract of this character, must have been enforced in the name of the plaintiff; but that, if there was any doubt upon this subject, the plaintiff clearly falls within that description of person who, by the 113th [now 449th] section of the Code, shall be construed to be a ‘trustee of an express trust,’ and, as such, authorized to sue.”

This was followed by Albany, etc., Co. v. Lundberg, supra, wherein the contract began, “I, Gustaf Lundberg, agent for N. M. Hoglund’s Sons & Co., of Stockholm, agree to sell,55 and the agreement was signed by Lundberg merely, in his own name. Upon the authority of Considerant v. Brisbane, the court, through Mr. Justice Gray, stated:

“The case, then, stands thus: If the agreement to sell is an agreement-made by Lundberg personally, and not in his capacity of agent of the Swedish firm, the price is likewise payable to him personally, and the action on the contract must be brought in his name, even at common law. If, on the other hand, the agreement must be considered as made by Lundberg, not in his individual capacity, but only as agent and in behalf of the Swedish firm, and for their benefit, then the price is payable to him as their agent, and for their benefit, in the same sense in which an express promise to pay money to him as the agent of that firm would be a promise to pay him for their benefit, and therefore, by the law of New York, which governs this case, an action may be brought in his name. In either view, this action is rightly brought.”

In Pitney v. Glens Falls Ins. Co., 65 N. Y. 8, it was held that, where an insurance policy was effected by an agent for a pidncipal known to the insurer, but not named in the policy, the agent became trustee of an express trust with whom a contract is made for the benefit of another.

,. - Even if the complaint does not specifically allege that the plaintiff is suing as trustee of an express trust, the contract is annexed to the complaint and made a part thereof, and specifically characterizes the plaintiff as agent or trustee for Picard & Co. and gives it standing in this court. In Schipper v. Milton, 51 App. Div. 522, 64 N. Y. Supp. 935, affirmed Smith v. Milton, 169 N. Y. 583, 62 N. E. 1100, it appeared that the contract in suit read, “sold for account of Messrs. Smith, & Schipper, agents for W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila.” The court therein declared:

“It appears by tbe sold note, which, by this allegation, is to be read as part of the complaint, that the contract was made by the plaintiffs as agents for Messrs. W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila, and that this firm was in fact the seller of this hemp to the defendants, and that the plaintiffs made this contract for them.

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Bluebook (online)
276 F. 565, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-n-gray-co-v-cavalliotis-nyed-1921.