Rathbone, Sard & Co. v. Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Co.

198 A.D. 889, 191 N.Y.S. 210, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8199

This text of 198 A.D. 889 (Rathbone, Sard & Co. v. Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Co.) 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
Rathbone, Sard & Co. v. Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Co., 198 A.D. 889, 191 N.Y.S. 210, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8199 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Smith, J.:

The plaintiff and defendant had a contract for the sale of pig iron by defendant to plaintiff. The contract provided that if the plaintiff, buyer, failed to make any payment when due, the seller should have the right to cancel the contract or to postpone shipment of future installments until prior shipments were paid for. The plaintiff persistently refused to pay installments when due and refused to answer letters demanding payment. The defendant availed itself for a time of the first right under the contract, to defer shipments until payment was made. The claim of the plaintiff is that in having availed itself of this right, the defendant is precluded from asserting its right under the contract to cancel the contract for nonpayment of installments. In my judgment, the rights given to the defendant either to defer shipment or to cancel the contract are not necessarily exclusive. The purposes of these provisions are variant. The right to withhold shipments until prior payments are made is for the purpose of limiting the amount of indebtedness of the plaintiff to the defendant under the contract. The right of cancellation is for the purpose' of ridding the defendant of what it deems to be an unprofitable contract. If the delay in payment be for a short period only, or accounted for by acceptable excuse, the vendor may well be willing to allow the contract to stand and to avail itself of the right to defer shipments until prior installments are paid for. In this case, however, the delays in payment were not slight. They were prolonged through several months. The defendant's letters requesting payment of the amount due were ignored, and their communications unanswered. Under these conditions, it would seem, the contract clearly gives the right of the vendor to cancel the same, and that right of [891]*891cancellation exists, notwithstanding that for a time the vendor withheld shipments, as it might lawfully do under the contract, until payments for prior shipments were made. It is not a fair construction • of the contract to hold that the exercise of the right of withholding shipments for a period has forfeited the right of cancellation thereunder, when the default of the vendee has been so pronounced and persistent as is found in the record in the case at bar.

After payments had been long overdue and request therefor ignored, on October 4,1918, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff as follows:

‘‘ Rathbone, Sard & Company,
"Albany, N. Y.:
Gentlemen.— In regard to your recent correspondence, referring to balance due on your Pig Iron contract:
" Please be advised that shipments on your contract have been held up on account of your being in arrears with your account. I wired you on July 25th that it would be necessary for me to hold up shipments unless remittance was received. I have not yet had a reply to that wire. I must ask that you make prompt remittance to our Treasurer for your account in full, and allow us to make future shipments on your contract Sight Draft attached to Bill of Lading.
" I would call your attention to the clause in the contract, which reads:
" ‘ If buyer fails to make any payment when due the seller shall have the right to cancel the contract, or at seller’s option, to postpone shipment of future installments until prior shipments are paid for.’
“ Yours very truly,
"O. B. NEWTON,
General Sales Agent”

Upon October thirtieth, in response to a request for further shipments, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff as follows:

“ Rathbone, Sard & Company,
- " Albany, N. Y.:
Contract 11832.
Gentlemen.— In regard to your letter of October 28th, you will recall that I wired you on July 25th, advising that [892]*892it was necessary for me to hold up shipments unless remittance was received. This telegram was sent you after having taken up the matter of your past-due account with our Treasurer, who advised me that he was unable to collect your past-due account. I had no answer to this wire, and then I wrote you again on October 4th, telling you why shipments had been held up, and calling your attention to the clause in the contract ' which reads:
“ ‘ If buyer fails to make any payment when due the seller shall have the right to cancel the contract or at seller’s option, to postpone shipment of future installments until prior shipments are paid for.’
“ I continued to worry with this account until October 18th, when I wrote our Agents, Messrs,1 Rogers, Brown & Company, advising them that we had cancelled the contract. I suppose you were promptly advised by Messrs. Rogers, Brown & Company that contract had been cancelled on account of your violation of same. ,, , ,
, Yours very truly,
“O. B. NEWTON,
“ General Sales Agent”

The claim of the plaintiff then is three-fold: First, that the right to cancel did not exist after the exercise of the right to defer shipments until payments were made. This claim has heretofore been discussed. The second claim is that the right to cancel does not survive the full payment for shipments ■ then due, and that the letter of October thirtieth, therefore, cannot be construed to be an effective cancellation of the contract, because all payments for prior shipments had then been made.

In the first place, there is no question here, as to the immateriality of the plaintiff’s breach of contract. This is unquestioned by the plaintiff. The verdict was directed upon the plaintiff’s motion. Again, there is no question made by respondent that this letter of October thirtieth was effective as a cancellation, provided the defendant had the right at that time to cancel the contract. But this contract contained no limitation of the power of cancellation to a time when prior shipments thereunder were unpaid for. If the purpose of the right of cancellation be to rid the party given the right, [893]*893of what is deemed to be an undesirable contract, there can be no reason for holding that that right of cancellation must be exercised before the prior defaults of the other parties are redeemed. The exercise of the right of cancellation prior to the making of the payments due might result in non-payment of the amount, and having in mind the purpose of the right of cancellation, the right may well be exercised when the defaults have been prolonged and persistent, even after those defaults have been made good.

In Southern Coal & Coke Co. v. Bowling Green Coal Co. (161 Ky. 477; 170 S. W. Rep.

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Related

Southern Coal & Coke Co. v. Bowling Green Coal Co.
170 S.W. 1185 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
198 A.D. 889, 191 N.Y.S. 210, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rathbone-sard-co-v-virginia-iron-coal-coke-co-nyappdiv-1921.