Rubin v. Dairymen's League Co-Op. Assn.

29 N.E.2d 458, 284 N.Y. 32, 1940 N.Y. LEXIS 859
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 458 (Rubin v. Dairymen's League Co-Op. Assn.) 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
Rubin v. Dairymen's League Co-Op. Assn., 29 N.E.2d 458, 284 N.Y. 32, 1940 N.Y. LEXIS 859 (N.Y. 1940).

Opinion

*35 Lewis, J.

The action is in equity. The plaintiff demands of the defendant an accounting for commissions alleged to have been earned under an oral contract by which the plaintiff agreed to develop certain territory as a market for the defendant’s milk products in consideration for which the defendant was to designate him as its exclusive distributing agent within such territory and pay him as commissions one-half cent for each quart of milk and one and one-quarter cents for each quart of cream sold therein.

Cross-appeals have been taken by leave of the Appellate Division from its order affirming an interlocutory judgment *36 which directed the defendant to account for sales made by the plaintiff during the contract period which has been decreed to have terminated on April 9, 1935. Having denied the existence of the oral contract pleaded by the plaintiff, the defendant challenges upon this appeal so much of the order affirming the interlocutory judgment as directs it to account for commissions upon sales made by the plaintiff prior to April 9, 1935. The appeal by the plaintiff requires us to review only that part of the order which denies him an accounting by the defendant for commissions on sales made subsequent to that date.

In granting leave to appeal the Appellate Division has certified for each appellant a separate set of questions. For the plaintiff the questions certified are:

“ 1. Where a verbal agreement was entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant whereby the plaintiff agreed to develop the sale of the defendant’s products in the Towns of Thompson, Fallsburg and Bethel in the County of Sullivan and the defendant, granted to the plaintiff in consideration thereof the exclusive agency for the sale of such products in such towns and agreed to pay to the plaintiff in connection therewith a commission of one-half cent a quart for all milk sold and one and one-quarter cent per quart for all cream so sold and such agreement was to continue in effect so long as defendant sold its products in such territory and the plaintiff fully performed said agreement on his part, did the defendant so long as it continued to sell its products in the said territory developed by the plaintiff, have the right to terminate the contract on April 9, 1935 and not allow plaintiff commissions beyond that date?

“ 2. Was the agreement terminated by the defendant on April 9, 1935 by virtue of the letter sent that date, Defendant’s Exhibit I?

“ 3. Does the plaintiff have the right to an accounting up to the date of the trial? ”

For the defendant the following questions are certified:

*37 “1. Is there evidence in the record to sustain the finding that the contract set forth in Question No. 1 as certified for the plaintiff, was entered into?

“ 2. If there is evidence in the record to sustain such a finding, is the contract legal and enforceable? ”

Upon the trial a jury was impaneled by Special Term to render an advisory verdict upon the issue of fact whether the oral contract alleged by the plaintiff was made. Without analyzing the vast amount of evidence presented upon that issue, it is enough for present purposes to state that we find in the record sufficient evidence to justify the adoption by Special Term of the jury’s finding that the contract was made substantially as pleaded by the plaintiff, subject, however, to the qualifying fact set forth in the additional finding made by Special Term that such contract was terminated on April 9, 1935.

We are told in support of the defendant’s position that the plaintiff’s alleged promise “ to open up and develop ” the territory within the townships of Thompson, Fallsburg and Bethel in Sullivan county as a market for the defendant’s milk products was so illusory and indefinite as to be unenforceable. It is also said that, if an exchange did occur of a promise by the defendant “ to pay ” certain commissions for a promise by the plaintiff “ to open up and develop ” certain territory, such an exchange of promises was of no legal consequence because it was “ lacking in mutuality.” Such an argument disregards the rule that Even when the obligation of a unilateral promise is suspended for want of mutuality at its inception, still, upon performance by the promisee a consideration arises ' which relates back to the making of the promise, and it becomes obligatory.’ ” (Grossman v. Schenker, 206 N. Y. 466, 468.)

The record proof is not sufficient to warrant our conclusion as matter of law that there was such an exchange of promises between the parties as would support a contract by which the plaintiff agreed to open up and develop ” the prescribed territory and therein to act as defendant’s exclusive agent for a definite term in return for commissions *38 to be paid by the defendant upon sales thus made. Upon the question of duration of the arrangement between the parties the courts below have ruled, upon evidence which we regard as sufficient, that the contract was unilateral as to time.” We treat that phrase as referring to an agency cancelable at will — an arrangement not unlike that which was considered in Winslow v. Mayo (123 App. Div. 758; affd., 195 N. Y. 551), of which it was said (p. 762): “ * * * the agency was one at will, and might be terminated by either party upon the payment by the defendant of any commissions which had been earned up to the time that notice of termination was given.” (See, also, Martin v. New York Life Ins. Co., 148 N. Y. 117, 121; Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Co. v. Ewing, 141 U. S. 627; Schnerb v. Caterpillar Tractor Co., 43 Fed. Rep. [2d] 920, 921; certiorari denied, 282 U. S. 898; 89 A. L. R. 252, 258.)

We cannot go behind the finding of fact by Special Term that the agreement was “ unilateral as to time and could be terminated by either party at any time.” From this fact it follows that the defendant could not have required the plaintiff to proceed to open up and develop ” the prescribed territory. There is an abundance of proof, however, that, after preliminary conferences between the plaintiff and representatives of the defendant which gave rise to the agreement which Special Term has found existed, the plaintiff made persistent efforts to create in the three townships a market for the defendant’s products. Those efforts^ by the plaintiff, which were known to the defendant and received its co-operation, contributed to a marked increase over a period of years in the defendant’s local sales. They constituted performance by the plaintiff in response to the defendant’s promise and thus gave rise to a consideration which relates back to the time of, and makes obligatory, the defendant’s original promise. (Grossman v. Schenker, supra, p.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 458, 284 N.Y. 32, 1940 N.Y. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubin-v-dairymens-league-co-op-assn-ny-1940.