Shemin v. A. Black & Co.

32 Misc. 2d 1046, 225 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3856
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 Misc. 2d 1046 (Shemin v. A. Black & 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
Shemin v. A. Black & Co., 32 Misc. 2d 1046, 225 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3856 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Birdie Amsterdam, J.

Plaintiff sues for damages for breach of an oral contract. Defendant disputes plaintiff’s version of that contract; claims an oral contract differing in terms and in time of making and asserts thereon a counterclaim for commissions; contends that if, in fact, the contract as alleged by [1047]*1047plaintiff was made, (1) plaintiff, as inducement, promised to pay and did pay a sum of money to defendant’s employee, without defendant’s knowledge and consent, in violation of section 439 of the Penal Law; and (2) that it was beyond the scope, actual and apparent, of its employee’s authority, hence not binding on defendant. Plaintiff admits giving a sum of money to defendant’s employee but claims it was paid as an advance commission to defendant.

The following facts are undisputed: Plaintiff was engaged in the business of growing and distributing plants and nursery stock. Defendant, a domestic corporation, was a commission merchant, representing nurserymen as sales agent, selling to the retail trade. In the latter part of March, 1960, one Harry Wheeler called at plaintiff’s nursery and introduced himself as a sales agent employed by defendant. Wheeler expressed an interest in one of plaintiff’s novelty-type holly plants, adorned with artificial berries, set in a four-inch square white plastic pot, and covered by a polyethylene bag. Told that the plant was a Christmas item and that plaintiff desired to sell such plants for the coming Christmas season, Wheeler stated that his company (defendant-corporation) sold to large chain and retail stores, and inquired whether it could act as plaintiff’s broker. Plaintiff informed him that the plants were being grown in Texas by a certain nursery company' — that the latter had offered to sell them to plaintiff — that before plaintiff could purchase them, 10,000 plants would have to be presold because the freight from Texas to New York would be otherwise prohibitive — that plaintiff would have to supply the grower with the plastic pots, berries and bags — that the plants would have to be presold by the first week in June to afford the grower adequate time to get them well established and rooted. Wheeler offered, for convenience, to order the berries and bags, since defendant’s place of business was located in the wholesale flower market where such berries were available and such polyethylene bags had been handled by defendant’s president, Abraham Black, who, on request, would order them for plaintiff and have them forwarded directly to the grower in Texas. Undisputed, too, is the fact that Wheeler was an employee of defendant.

Plaintiff testified that on March 29, 1960, defendant, through Wheeler, entered into an oral contract with plaintiff, defendant agreeing, as broker, to sell 10,000 holly plants for plaintiff for Christmas-time delivery, on a 10% commission basis, the selling-price to be $1 per plant or $1.10 if delivered to buyer’s place of business; that plaintiff was not to purchase the 10,000 plants for resale unless defendant advised him that it had procured firm [1048]*1048orders for the resale of 10,000 plants; that in April or May, plaintiff telephoned Wheeler, at which time Black, defendant’s president, identified himself and said the plant looked like a nice item; that during the latter part of May or early June, Wheeler told plaintiff that the entire 10,000 plants were sold by defendant, and he gave plaintiff the names of the customers and the amounts sold to each; that plaintiff thereupon closed his contract of purchase with the grower, bought 10,000 plastic pots, which were shipped to the grower; that in the latter part of November, defendant ordered 10,000 polyethylene bags to be shipped to Texas (the bill therefor, which was paid by plaintiff, is invoiced to plaintiff and the name A. Black ” appears thereon under the printed words “ Your order # ”); that Wheeler bought the berries, for which he was paid by plaintiff.

Plaintiff further testified that on a week end, to wit, on November 29,1960, Wheeler told him that he (Wheeler) had no money — that Black, his boss, was out of town. He asked plaintiff to advance him $200 on commissions and said he would take it up and straighten it out with Black; that plaintiff made out a check for $200 to the order of Wheeler, typed on the reverse side thereof the following indorsement: 1 ‘ Advance commissions on the sale of 10,000 holly plants ”, and gave the check to Wheeler (this check is in evidence, having been offered by defendant); that on December 9, when the plants were ready to be shipped from Texas, plaintiff telephoned Food Fair, one of the ‘ customers ’ ’ that Wheeler had told him had purchased 2,500 of the plants, to advise it that delivery was about to be made; that Food Fair denied ever having ordered the plants. Other ‘ ‘ represented customers” either denied ordering the plants or the quantity they were represented to have ordered. It was then discovered that only approximately 3,500 and not 10,000 had been sold. Efforts were made to sell the remainder, but were unfruitful except for the sale by plaintiff of a few hundred at 85^ each. On January 16, 1961, plaintiff wrote defendant that he was holding defendant accountable for 6,000 unsold plants. Plaintiff also testified that the unsold plants had to be stored at a rental of $40 per month and he incurred expenses for labor and their care at a cost of $200 a month for a period of five months; that in the latter party of May, plaintiff sold 5,000 at 60^ each and an indefinite amount perished.

The Texas grower testified that in July, 1960, he met Wheeler at a convention and Wheeler told him that 10,000 hollies had been sold.

Black, defendant’s president, testified that defendant represented growers and sold for a commission; that Wheeler was [1049]*1049employed by defendant at a weekly drawing account of $125 to charged against sales account; that Wheeler’s duties were to solicit nurserymen who produced the commodity and represent them as sales agent by selling to supermarkets, chain stores and retailers, many of which were defendant’s clients; that it was possible in June that Wheeler told him that defendant was going to sell holly for plaintiff; no amount was mentioned; that he knew that Wheeler, as an accommodation to plaintiff, bought berries and was purchasing bags to complete the orders. Thereafter, he said it was in March or April, 1960, that he knew that defendant entered into an arrangement with plaintiff whereby defendant was going to represent plaintiff as a selling agent at 10% commission to sell what plaintiff had to sell; that Wheeler had authority to enter into an agreement to solicit the plaintiff’s account. He testified, further, that defendant sold 3,500 or 4,000 holly plants for plaintiff and was entitled to “ estimated ” commissions of $340.

Wheeler testified that he did not agree that he would sell 10,000, but that defendant would try to sell 10,000, or as many of them as he could; that defendant was to get 10% commission after the plants were delivered and paid for; that he knew from whom the plaintiff was purchasing the plants and that they were to be shipped up here in time for delivery for Christmas; that at the start, plaintiff told Mm that there would be some extra effort of his (Wheeler’s) part to sell the hollies so there loould be something in it for Mm (Wheeler) too. He denied having told the Texas grower that 10,000 were sold.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Misc. 2d 1046, 225 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shemin-v-a-black-co-nysupct-1962.