Remington Arms Co. v. Cotton

190 A.D. 600, 180 N.Y.S. 486, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4209
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 6, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 190 A.D. 600 (Remington Arms Co. v. Cotton) 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
Remington Arms Co. v. Cotton, 190 A.D. 600, 180 N.Y.S. 486, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4209 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Merrell, J.:

The plaintiff has recovered judgment herein against the defendant for the sum of $13,396.64. The judgment was upon a verdict of the jury at Trial Term, who found in plaintiff’s favor and against defendant in the sum of $13,234.96. The action was for fraud. Plaintiff sought to recover of defendant the sum of $18,631.20, which sum plaintiff claimed it was induced to overpay defendant for certain rifle gauges and fixtures furnished by defendant to plaintiff upon contract. Plaintiff claimed to be entitled to recover said sum on account of certain fraudulent representations of the defendant and fraudulent and padded bills presented by him representing the cost of manufacture of said tools and fixtures. The total amount paid defendant by plaintiff for said gauges and fixtures was $72,625. In its complaint plaintiff alleges that by reason of said false and fraudulent representations and dishonest bills presented by defendant it was induced to overpay defendant in the sum for which judgment was' demanded.

The plaintiff, Remington Arms Company, was incorporated on or about June 1, 1915, under and in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware. Its principal place of business was at Eddystone, Penn., and it was organized for the purpose of manufacturing Lee-Enfield rifles for the government of Great Britain. The evidence would seem to indicate that the plaintiff corporation was organized as a subsidiary com[602]*602pany to the Remington Arms and Ammunition Company of Bridgeport, Conn. Plaintiff’s plant at Eddystone was completed about July 1, 1915. The contract, in connection with which plaintiff claims to have been overcharged by the defendant, was made in June, 1915, at Bridgeport, Conn. Plaintiff claims that the contract was made and negotiated by one Fitzgerald, claimed by plaintiff to have been then in its employ as an equipment engineer. Fitzgerald testified upon the trial that the contract was negotiated by himself acting for the plaintiff corporation with the defendant at Bridgeport, Conn. Fitzgerald testified that the contract was oral between defendant and plaintiff, represented by himself, and was to the effect that the defendant, who represented himself to be a manufacturer of tools and to have in his employ skilled labor, would .furnish the plaintiff its requirements in such tools and fixtures in consideration of the payment to defendant for the material used and forty cents per hour for skilled mechanics engaged in the manufacture plus fifty cents per hour to cover overhead charges, such as power, superintendence, inspection, etc. In short, Fitzgerald testified that defendant was to receive, as full compensation for furnishing such tools and fixtures, in addition to the actual cost of material, ninety cents per hour for such mechanics as were engaged in the manufacture thereof. Fitzgerald testified that about three months subsequent to the making of the original contract, and in the fall of 1915, defendant represented that there had been an advance in the cost of labor, and it was agreed that he should receive for said goods an advance of ten cents per hour, and that the agreement was that thereafter he should be paid one dollar per hour for the time spent by skilled mechanics.

The defendant denies the making of any such contract as that claimed, by the witness Fitzgerald in behalf of the plaintiff. Defendant testified that the contract which he made with the plaintiff was negotiated with one Wells, its equipment engineer, at 'Bridgeport, Conn., and one Palmer, its purchasing agent at its Bridgeport plant. The defendant denies ever seeing Fitzgerald until some months after the contract in question was made. Some correspondence was offered and received in evidence which throws some light upon the arrangement between the parties. It is not claimed by [603]*603either party that these letters constituted any contract, but that they were merely steps in the negotiations between the parties. From the correspondence it is clear that the contract, whatever it was, was negotiated at Bridgeport, Conn., and that Wells, the equipment engineer, and Palmer, the purchasing agent of the Bridgeport plant, participated therein.

Fitzgerald testified that he talked with the defendant in June, 1915, and that the defendant then represented that he had a manufacturing plant of his own wherein he could manufacture the gauges and other tools required by the plaintiff, and that it was then and there agreed that defendant should furnish the tools in question upon plaintiff’s order upon the consideration aforesaid, and that no charges were to be made for inspection, or for foremen not engaged in the actual mechanical work, and that no charge was to be made for apprentices learning the trade in defendant’s plant. All overhead charges, according to Fitzgerald’s testimony, were to be borne by the defendant, and defendant was to charge only the cost of materials used and the actual time spent by mechanics in the work.

The defendant denies in toto the making of the contract claimed by Fitzgerald, and testified that the contract under which he furnished the plaintiff its tools was made by the said representatives of the plaintiff’s plant at Bridgeport, Conn. Upon the trial the defendant sought to prove the conversations and transactions which he had with Wells and Palmer, of the Bridgeport company. The evidence shows clearly that there was but one contract between these parties, and that the goods furnished thereunder, amounting to $72,625, were furnished pursuant to a single contract. These goods were paid for by the Remington Arms Company of Eddystone, the plaintiff herein, but it clearly appears by the evidence that the contract itself was made at Bridgeport. Fitzgerald testified to the negotiations being carried on and the contract being made with the defendant at Bridgeport, Conn. The defendant testified that the contract was made at Bridgeport, Conn., but was not made with Fitzgerald, but was, in fact, negotiated and closed with Wells and Palmer of the Bridgeport plant. Under objection of counsel for the plaintiff, defendant was not permitted to testify to the conversations or transactions [604]*604which he had with the representatives of the Bridgeport corporation. The court at Trial Term held that the plaintiff could not be bound by any conversations or transactions had between the defendant and the Bridgeport company. It seems to me that the court was in error in excluding this testimony which defendant sought to introduce. The answer of the defendant denies the making of the contract as the result of which the plaintiff seeks to recover.' Concededly there was but one contract, and as bearing upon the question as to whether or not the defendant entered into the contract with the plaintiff to which Fitzgerald testified, I think the defendant should have been permitted to show just what the contract was under which the tools in question were furnished to the plaintiff.

The plaintiff claims that the defendant presented certain fraudulent bills; that the defendant charged against the plaintiff the expense of supervision as well as the time of foremen and apprentices, in violation of the terms of his contract. The plaintiff further charges that bills from subcontractors to whom defendant sublet the manufacture of certain of the tools in question, not only contained charges for supervision, foremen and apprentices, but false entries as to the hours devoted to the manufacture of the tools, and that when the defendant presented his bills to the plaintiff that he himself proceeded to add on additional hours and additional charges for inspection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A.D. 600, 180 N.Y.S. 486, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remington-arms-co-v-cotton-nyappdiv-1920.