Smith v. Coe

55 A.D. 585, 67 N.Y.S. 350
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 A.D. 585 (Smith v. Coe) 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
Smith v. Coe, 55 A.D. 585, 67 N.Y.S. 350 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

O’Beien, J.:

That the bicycles were manufactured and delivered under some kind of binding contract, with ascertained'terms and definite obliga[588]*588tions, appears from, the pleadings and the proof. The answer admits that the defendants entered into an agreement with the plaintiff whereby the goods mentioned in both causes of action were to be manufactured and delivered; and the conditions and stipulations of this contract are to be gathered from the correspondence between the parties.

The first exception we are called upon to consider relates to the rejection by the trial judge of part of the correspondence which the defendants insist should have been admitted in evidence as necessary to a proper understanding, of the ultimate agreement between the plaintiff and the defendants. The defendants claim that, as the result of all the correspondence referred to, it would have been made to appear that the contract was for the sale of goods by sample, with 'a collateral contract of warranty; that they were entitled to recover on the counterclaims for the breach of that warranty, and that they also had a good defense to the plaintiff’s claim on the ground of non-performance of the contract by him.

All of the rejected letters appear in the record, and as the learned trial judge directed a verdict, we can examine them, determine their competency, and (if they are admissible) their bearing upon the rights of the parties. We think they were competent and will consider them, but, as we shall attempt to show,- they confirm the legal conclusion reached by the trial judge as to the nature of the contract, and, therefore, the appellant was not injured by the exclusion.

The evidence shows that in the negotiations leading up to whatever contract was made, between the parties, a specimen of a bicycle was exhibited by ■ some one connected- with the plaintiff to the defendants, and that it was understood in a general way that the goods, the subject of the contract, were intended for shipment abroad to purchasers from the defendants. One McDonald was connected with the plaintiff, and he seems to have been the person who exhibited the specimen bicycle to the defendants. His declarations concerning the subject-matter of the contract before the correspondence was entered into were excluded on the trial of the action, and we think properly so.

The correspondence from which the contract is to be made out was begun on the 19th of January, 1898, when the defendants wrote a letter to the Worcester Cycle Company stating that they had just [589]*589received letters from. England in regard to the bicycles and that they had received a copy of an order and contract from persons abroad, and they asked that the papers be looked over carefully and proposed that there should be a talk about the matter. Accompanying that letter was a memorandum of order and contract for 3,000 bicycles, “ cycles same as sample submitted,” but with specified directions relating to tires and to handle bars and a number of other very minute details of specified requirements in manufacture. That letter was followed by another from the defendants addressed in the same way and dated January 31, 1898, specifically directing the manufacture as to name plates, pedals, chains, brakes, wood rims, tires, axles and cones , and other particulars, and on the same day another letter was sent by the defendants to the same address stating that in addition to the alterations for the specification sent that morning the bicycles would also have to be made in accordance with conditions and changes specified in a letter written by the cycle company to the defendants on January 20, 1898. On the 1st of February, 1898, the plaintiff 'wrote to the defendants a letter stating that in reply to theirs of the nineteenth and thirty-first of January, their order for 3,000 of the machines was accepted under the conditions and specifications as outlined by you in yours of the 19th of January.” But in the same letter it was stated that certain changes-could not be made without extra charge. On the next day the defendants wrote the plaintiff that they could not consent to this extra charge, and thereupon there followed several letters relating to the extra charges and what the specifications called for, all of which were rejected. Finally, on February 11, 1898, the defendants wrote to the plaintiff in one of the rejected letters that they were in receipt of a communication from the plaintiff dated a day before and were glad to know he had at last fully accepted our order for 3,000 bicycles as set forth in our previous correspondence, to be delivered as per specifications with no extra charges whatever, consequently we fully confirm our contract to you.”

There are no changes in the specifications in any of the rejected correspondence from those originally required; and while it may have been a technical error to exclude all this correspondence, yet the substantial contract of the parties was left as it was made by the plaintiff’s acceptance of the original order of the defendants with [590]*590the. specifications accompanying that order. This rejected correspondence being before ns, we are unable to see that had it been admitted in evidence the nature and terms of the contract would have been varied, for by the last of the letters in the series it is quite plain that the defendants understood that the manufacture was to be under their original proposition with the specifications, and as the plaintiff proceeded to manufacture and deliver after the receipt of that last letter, he also must have had the same understanding.

What then was the nature and- legal character of this contract as evidenced by the entire' correspondence ? If it was purely and simply a sale by sample with a warranty of correspondence in quality of the goods to be manufactured with the sample exhibited, the defendants would have been entitled to recover on their counterclaims. It is impossible, however, to hold that there was any express warranty made of the goods to be manufactured and delivered under the contract. hTor was there an implied warranty, for we do not consider this to have been a sale by sample. “ Such a sale contemplates that the goods are m esse, that the sample is taken from, the bulk and that the latter is equal in quality to the sample.” (Gurney v. Atlantic & Great Western R. Co., 58 N. Y. 364.) That is a general definition of a sale by sample. We do -not mean to say that a case' could not arise in which, even in executory contracts for the manufacture of goods, a warranty of quality might not be implied, but in the case before us it is evident that the' great number of- changes and variations and differences between the article to be manufactured and the specimen bicycle indicated that there could not have been an understanding on the part of the defendants that' the goods to be manufactured should conform to the specimen exhibited. That general similarity of style might be expected is' probable, but there is no ground for the inference that with -all the-modifications and departures from the specimen exhibited, there should be in the manufactured goods an identity of quality with that of the specimen. As said by the plaintiff’s counsel, “ There is, of course, no magic in the words equal to sample.’ They may be used to indicate the type or pattern, while the details of construction may be set forth in specifications.”

If the sale had, been strictly one by sample, the purchaser [591]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 A.D. 585, 67 N.Y.S. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-coe-nyappdiv-1900.