People v. Brooklyn Cooperage Co.

74 Misc. 277
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 74 Misc. 277 (People v. Brooklyn Cooperage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Brooklyn Cooperage Co., 74 Misc. 277 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Chester, J.

This action was originally submitted to the late Justice Fitts for determination but remained undecided at the time of his death. By stipulation it has come to me for decision.

The complaint was demurred to by the defendant cooperage company for insufficiency. The demurrer was overruled at Special Term; and the judgment entered thereon was affirmed by the Appellate Division (114 App. Div. 723) and by the Court of Appeals (187 N. Y. 142). It was thus determined that the complaint stated a good cause of action. At the Special' .Term the contract between the university and the cooperage company, which is annexed to and made part of the complaint, was held, in an unreported opinion, to be [279]*279void as not being permissible under the statute (Laws of 1898, chap. 122) which provided for the establishment of a College of Forestry at Cornell University. Nevertheless, the appellate courts, seem to have avoided this question, except that, in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, it is said (p. 154) that: “ There can be no doubt that subdivision third of the contract confers upon the (cooperage) company •powers hostile to the general scheme of the act of 1898.”

This was the important clause of the contract and the one which purported to give the company the right to require the university to cut, at its own expense, and deliver to the company in each and every year for fifteen years such quantities of wood in logs and cord wood as it shall give written notice that it shall require during the following season,' provided the amount shall not exceed oné-fifteenth of the wood standing on the college forest.

The cooperage company claims that it has been damaged in a very large amount by reason of the alleged breach by the State and the university of this contract. In its answer it made no demand for affirmative relief as against the university. On the hearing before me I granted a motion which was pending before Mr. Justice Fitts which permitted an amendment to such answer. This was granted, as stated by me at the time, for the purpose of enabling the court to frame equitable relief to the plaintiff, if it awarded any, upon such terms and conditions as to damages as justice requires. But, under the amendment authorized, no affirmative relief could properly be granted in favor of the cooperage company against the university, for the reason that no claim for such relief against the university was made in the original answer, and it was not required therefore to litigate any such claim, and for the further reason that the court, upon the trial, could not allow an amendment making a substantial change in the “ claim qr defense.” Code Oiv. Pro., § 723. The proposed amendment was not allowed, therefore, for the purpose of bringing in such a “ claim or defense,” but solely as above stated for the purpose of enabling the court to frame equitable relief, if any, to the plaintiff. The amended complaint, as interposed, nevertheless, appears to [280]*280be framed to cover a claim for affirmative relief by way of damages in favor of the cooperage company against both the State and the university. From the view I am compelled to take of the. case, however, the amendment, whatever its scope or purpose, is unimportant, because I see no way in which any damages can be awarded to the" cooperage company as against either the plaintiff or the university, as a condition of granting equitable relief or otherwise.

The Court of Appeals held as above mentioned • with respect to the third clause of the contract and stated (p. 153) that: “ That covenant in question is one that might be entered into by the absolute owner of forest property'who is desirous of clearing the same by annual sales of timber.” That court deemed, however, that the situation presented was one “ where the rights of the parties can only be properly protected by a trial in which all the facts bearing upon the controversy can be elicited and considered.” P. 154.

The trial has been had, but I fail to see that the evidence produced in support of the allegations of the complaint is. very materially different from the facts alleged therein which were admitted for the purpose of the demurrer, or that the evidence of the defendants makes any very substantial change in these facts. Of course they are greatly amplified by the evidence, and there is a vast amount of testimony by experts on forestry as to their differing theories or opinions regarding the science of forestry; but the controlling facts were before the Court of Appeals on the demurrer, and the conclusions it reached leave me but little latitude in framing the judgment which must follow the trial.

The third clause of the contract was the one which brought disaster to the whole scheme, for the reason that the expense involved in doing the cutting required exceeded the amount payable under the contract for the timber and wood citt. The cutting could not therefore proceed without annual appropriations by the State. When these were withheld the cutting ceased.

After quoting several provisions of the contract, it is stated in the opinion of the Court of Appeals (p. 152) that: “ These recitations and provisions clearly show that the cooperage [281]*281compány entered into the contract with full knowledge of the fact that the university represented the state under a restricted agency, and that the entire property involved was the college forest under the act of 1898. A person dealing with an agent whose powers are special ajad restricted, of which fact he has notice, contracts with him at his peril, and is bound by the provisions of the act of the legislature or written instrument from which he derives his authority.”

The act of 1898 authorized Cornell University to establish a “ department in said university to be known as and called the ¡New York State College of Forestry for the purpose of education and instruction in the principles and practices of scientific forestry.”

The trustees of the university, under the act, were authorized, with the consent and approval and under the direction of the forest preserve board, to purchase not more than thirty thousand acres of land in the Adirondack forests ;• and the act provides that “ the university shall have the title, possession, management and control of'such land, and by its board of 'trustees through the aforesaid college of forestry shall conduct upon said land such experiments in forestry as it may deem most advantageous to the interests of the state and the advancement of the science of forestry, and may plant, raise, cut and sell timber at such times, of such species and quantities and in such manner, as it may deem best, with a view to obtaining and imparting knowledge concerning the scientific management and use of forests, their regulation and administration, the production, harvesting and reproduction of wood crops and earning a revenue therefrom, and to that end may constitute and appoint a faculty of such school, consisting of one director or professor, and two instructors, and may employ such forest manager, rangers and superintendents, and incur such other expenses in connection therewith as may be necessary for the proper management and conduct of said college and the care of said lands and for the purposes of this act, within the amount -hereinafter appropriated.” The amount appropriated was $10,000, and the expenditures authorized were thus limited by the amount of the appropriation.

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Related

People v. . Brooklyn Cooperage Co.
79 N.E. 866 (New York Court of Appeals, 1907)
People v. Brooklyn Cooperage Co.
114 A.D. 723 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
74 Misc. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brooklyn-cooperage-co-nysupct-1911.