Stern v. Ladew

47 A.D. 331, 62 N.Y.S. 267
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 A.D. 331 (Stern v. Ladew) 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
Stern v. Ladew, 47 A.D. 331, 62 N.Y.S. 267 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Hatch, J. :

In the view which we take of this case, it is not necessary that we examine in detail the complicated state of facts which surround the dealings between the parties to the action. A brief review of the general features of the case, and of that particular part of the testimony which controls our decision, is all that is essential to a disposition of the case, under the rules of law which we deem applicable thereto.

• ■ The plaintiff was a wholesale butcher and slaughterer of cattle, had been since 1858, and during the years covering the transactions which were the subject of investigation upon the trial, had on the average killed about 1,500 head of cattle weekly, being one of the four largest slaughterers and dealers in hides in New York city. He was also a purchaser of fresh hides from other • killers in the city, the extent of such purchases running about 150 hides per week. .The cattle which he slaughtered were divided into three' classes, known to the trade as natives, Texas and Colorados. The natives, for the most part, were cattle whose hides were free of brands. ■ The Texas. and Colorados were branded upon the sides and the buttocks, and were known to the trade as sides and butts. In price the natives were the highest • and the Colorados the lowest. The determining fact regulating the price, aside from the quality of the hides themselves, was the presence or absence 'of brands, the side brand being more damaging than the butt brand. The hides were also subject to other imperfections which detracted from their value, occasioned by grubs which were present in the hides during certain seasons of the year, and also by injuries, usually in the form of cuts made by the butcher in removing the hides. As the hides were removed they were salted and placed in what were termed beds, about 800 being placed in a bed. A shingled bed was made by lapping, in manner similar to shingles laid, upon a roof, so as to make one side lower than the other. This was for the purpose of removing the moisture from the hides ; the pressure excluded the blood and water and decreased the weight of the hides. Another method was to [333]*333lay . them flat in the bed, in which condition they retained more moisture and consequently weighed more. The hides remained in the beds from ten to fourteen days, when they were, removed and sold in the market.

The defendants were dealers in hides which they purchased from the various killers. The firm was originally composed of Daniel B. Eayerweather, Edward It. Ladew and Harvey S. Ladew. In 1889 Harvey S. died and Joseph II. succeeded as a member of the firm. In 1890 Eayerweather died, and the business lias been conducted by the defendants since that time. There was a market price for hides in the city of New York during all this time, which was made up by the number of hides furnished to the market in New York and Chicago, and was influenced by the number and character of hides offered for sale. There was quite a large number of brokers and dealers in hides in New York. The market price was arrived at to some extent by communication between those who dealt in the article, by reports of sales and prices quoted.. No regular public market quotations were introduced in evidence, but proof of such reports was given by at least one broker, and the use made thereof. The published reports offered in evidence were not received. The defendants were much the largest purchasers in the market, taking from seventy-five to eighty per cent of the output. Their statement of the market price was determined in the manner above stated.

The plaintiff’s first cause of action is based upon a contract which is alleged to have been entered into between the plaintiff and defendants prior to June 26, 1891, whereby plaintiff was to sell to defendants the hides of the cattle killed by him in his business, to salt them shingled, and dress in a careful manner, the defendants to remove the sanie from plaintiff’s premises, to render to the plaintiff on the last day of each week a statement of the hides so purchased and removed, and ytromptly to pay for such hides the highest market price, together with an additional sum of one cent a pound for bhingled hides and an additional sum of ten cents per hide for those carefully dressed; that subsequently, and on June twenty-sixth, the same was modified by reducing the additional sum which the defendants were to pay for salting and shingling from .one cent to three-quarters of a cent per pound ; that the defendants continued to take [334]*334plaintiff’s output of hides from the date of the agreement until about the 37th day of December, 1891; that during this period weekly statements of accounts and payments were made by the defendants and received and accepted by the plaintiff; that on or about December 27, 1891, the agreement was further modified by providing that the hides were to be salted , flat by the plaintiff, instead of being shingled; and the additional sum of three-quarters of a cent per pound for shingling, and ten cents per hide for careful dressing was discontinued; that the hides so salted flat were removed in the same manner by the defendants as prior thereto, and weekly statements and payments made as theretofore; that since the rendition of such, weekly statements the plaintiff discovered them to be mistaken or false and fraudulent in the items thereof, of which fact he was ignorant at the time they were received, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff has not received for his hides as much as he should have received by something over $15,000.

Plaintiff’s second cause of action arose out of the same state of-facts as the first, except that it embraced but one weekly statement, that of June 4, 1892, the correctness of which plaintiff denied, and notified the defendants that he accepted the check accompanying* the statement as payment upon account, and not in discharge of defendants’ indebtedness to him. The complaint was amended upon the trial, but not in such manner as to change the facts .as averred therein, except as to the amount which the plaintiff claimed to be entitled to recover, which exceeded the sum originally demanded.

After a trial the referee found upon the first cause of action stated in the complaint that the weekly statements were incorrect during the months of October, November and December, 1891, and that the plaintiff was entitled to have the same opened and corrected as prayed for in his complaint on the ground of a mutual 'mistake of the parties; and as to the second cause of action he found that the complaint should be dismissed. The decision proceeded upon the ¥ ground that the defendants in rendering to the plaintiff the weekly statements of account under the first modification of the agreement as heretofore stated, intended to pay the plaintiff the full market value of his hides; that the plaintiff trusted the defendants and believed that their weekly statements were true; that as matter of fact the amount - so paid, which was covered by the weekly state[335]*335ments from. October 3 to December 26, 1891, both inclusive, was less than the actual market value of such hides by the sum of $9,101.77; that the plaintiff was not guilty of negligence or laches and that the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A.D. 331, 62 N.Y.S. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stern-v-ladew-nyappdiv-1900.