Senner & Kaplan Co. v. Mills

185 A.D. 562, 173 N.Y.S. 265, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7544
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 20, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 A.D. 562 (Senner & Kaplan Co. v. Mills) 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
Senner & Kaplan Co. v. Mills, 185 A.D. 562, 173 N.Y.S. 265, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7544 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Merrell, J.:

This action is brought by the plaintiff, a New York corporation, to recover of the defendant, a New Jersey corporation, damages which plaintiff claims to have sustained by reason of defendant’s alleged failure to perform three separate contracts which plaintiff claims to have made with it for the delivery of certain merchandise.

The plaintiff is engaged in the business of manufacturing ladies’ dresses. The defendant is a manufacturer of dress goods. The defendant employs a New York firm as its selling agent. The alleged contracts are claimed to have been made between the plaintiff and a traveling salesman representing the defendant corporation.

[564]*564The complaint alleges three separate contracts for the sale of serge, the first of said contracts having been made and entered into on July 31, 1916, for the sale of fifty pieces; one for the sale of twenty-five pieces on or about August 7, 1916; and the third, also for the sale of twenty-five pieces of the serge, claimed to have been made on or about September 18, 1916. That defendant’s traveling salesman called upon plaintiff, solicited and obtained the orders for the goods mentioned upon said several dates, is not disputed. The goods were ordered upon a credit of seventy days, with certain discounts dependent upon time of payment.

The point at issue between the parties is as to whether or not any of the aforesaid orders were accepted by the defendant, and thereby a contract obligation created to furnish the goods ordered by the plaintiff of defendant’s salesman. The orders taken by its traveling salesman were eventually canceled by the defendant, and but a small portion of the goods ordered was ever delivered.

Plaintiff brings this action to recover damages which it claims to have sustained by reason of defendant’s failure to deliver the goods ordered.

The defendant’s position is, that the contracts set forth in the complaint, and for a breach of which plaintiff complains, were never, in fact, made; that while the orders were received by defendant, it never confirmed nor accepted the same, and consequently the orders never ripened into contracts, and defendant, never having accepted said orders, made no default in refusing to deliver the goods.

Defendant’s course of business was to solicit orders for goods, which it manufactured and sold, through traveling salesmen or “ drummers.” When orders were taken by these salesmen, they were first submitted to defendant’s merchandise department, and it was there determined whether the defendant was in a position to furnish the goods at the prices at which the order was solicited. When the order was favorably passed upon by the merchandise department, it was then submitted to the credit department, and the question as to the credit and financial responsibility of the purchaser was there passed upon. Until the order had been approved by the merchandise and credit departments, it was never deemed [565]*565accepted by the defendant. This course of business seems to have been a general one and well understood by the parties. The ratification of the order by the credit department, owing to the long term of credit accorded to customers, was a matter of prime importance. It is undisputed in this case that the initial order in question was solicited by defendant’s salesman, and through him transmitted to the defendant. There is no evidence, however, that defendant’s credit department ever approved of either of the orders, and, therefore, the same were never specifically or in terms accepted.

It is claimed, however, on the part of the plaintiff that defendant, by reason of the delivery of a small portion of the first order of goods, ratified said order and unmistakably manifested an acceptance thereof, and that the third order was accepted in a similar manner. The plaintiff, respondent, bases its contention in this respect upon two deliveries of the goods ordered of defendant, one of eight pieces, delivered August 4 or 5,1916, on the first order, and the second delivery of five pieces of the serge made on October 6, 1916, claimed by plaintiff to be a part delivery of the bill of goods ordered on September eighteenth. It seems that the first shipment of goods was made by the defendant in response to an insistence upon plaintiff’s part that it must have some goods with which to carry on its business, and the same were furnished merely as a matter of accommodation. The shipment, in value, amounted to only about $625. Soon after the shipment was made — indeed, on the next business day after the goods were shipped — defendant’s credit man visited plaintiff and insisted upon payment being at once made for said eight pieces of goods shipped, and also for three other small lots which had been delivered prior thereto, but which three shipments had no connection with the alleged contracts here. Thereupon plaintiff paid defendant for the goods so shipped. I do not think that from this transaction any acceptance can be inferred. Indeed, the transaction with reference to these shipments would seem to indicate a refusal on defendant’s part to accept plaintiff’s orders. The deliveries were certainly not made at the times or under the conditions of the alleged contracts under which plaintiff claims. There is no claim that any part of the second order of goods was ever delivered. [566]*566The delivery upon the first order was entirely for the accommodation of the plaintiff, and evidenced no determination to accept the order of July thirty-first. The fact that plaintiff did not insist upon its credit of seventy days, to which it would have been entitled had the order been accepted, but paid for these eight pieces two days after they were delivered, negatives any assumption that defendant intended or that plaintiff understood that such accommodation evidenced an intention to accept that order.

Plaintiff likewise contends that the defendant, by delivering five pieces of the goods on October sixth, evidenced an acceptance of the third order. This delivery was clearly made, like the former one, as an accommodation to the plaintiff, which had repeatedly importuned defendant for the goods in order to continue its business.

On September ninth defendant notified plaintiff that no goods would be delivered under any of the orders, unless a cash payment was made therefor before delivery. Thereupon plaintiff voluntarily gave to defendant its check for $1,000 on account. This $1,000 unquestionably was to cover future shipments, and defendant’s insistence on the delivery of said check and plaintiff’s willingness to accede thereto clearly indicate that there, was no intent or understanding that the orders solicited by defendant’s salesman upon a seventy-day credit had ever been accepted. After the delivery of plaintiff’s check, four deliveries of goods were made, on September ninth, thirteenth and fifteenth, and on October sixth, amounting in all to $661.79. The last of these deliveries was of the five pieces claimed by plaintiff to have been made upon the third order. After said four deliveries were made, defendant decided to close the account, and paid to the plaintiff the balance of the $1,000 advanced, over and above the purchase price of the goods actually delivered. All of this negatives any assumption that there was an acceptance of the orders taken by defendant’s representative or that the same ever ripened into contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
185 A.D. 562, 173 N.Y.S. 265, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senner-kaplan-co-v-mills-nyappdiv-1918.