Taylor v. Citizens' Ice Co.

46 A.D. 491

This text of 46 A.D. 491 (Taylor v. Citizens' Ice Co.) 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
Taylor v. Citizens' Ice Co., 46 A.D. 491 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Smith, J.:

The defendant company was one formed for the purchase, sale and delivery of ice in the city of Buffalo. It was formed' by the representatives, of five different .ice- companies, one of which was the Buffalo Ice Company. The stock was all owned by these five companies, each of which had. a representative in its board of directors. The representative of the Buffalo Ice. Company was Harry Yates, the president of,that company. The preliminary, agreement made between the representatives of the five, companies, before the organization, provided for the amount of. stock that should he held by each company, and further provided that the defendant company should purchase ice from each company- in proportion to. the [493]*493amount of the stock held.- The Buffalo Ice Company held fifty per cent of the stock, and sold to tlie defendant fifty per cent of its ice. After the formation of the company, the defendant made similar contracts with each company for the purchase.of the ice.

One of these contracts ivas made with the Buffalo Ice Company as party of the first part and the defendant as party of the second part, which provided that the first party was to sell to the second party fifty .per cent of all ice used by the second party for a period of ten years from April 1, 1896, at the rate of seventy-five cents per ton from January first to May first, and one dollar and fifty cents from May first to January first in each year. There is no controversy as to the amount of ice sold under this contract; and if the contract prices are the measure of the defendant’s liability, the judgment is right.

The answer of the defendant alleges that, at the time these several contracts were made between the Citizens’ Ice Company and the different contributing companies for the purchase of ice, the price was discussed ; that it was there agreed that the price to be paid was to be regulated by the amount of the net profits, and was to be raised or lowered to correspond ; and that upon that basis the defendant company had fully paid for all the ice which it had purchased of the Buffalo Ice Company. The defendant asks to have the contract so reformed as to express such agreement. Claiming to have overpaid to the amount of about $450, it counterclaims for that sum. The referee has found that the contract expresses the agreement made; that there was no mistake of fact or law under which it was made, and that the defendant is not entitled to relief.

This finding by the referee is the only one warranted by the evidence. The contract was made understanding!}7, under no mistake, cither of law or fact. It was stated, and orally agreed, before the written contract was entered into, that if the net profits of the - defendant company did not warrant the prices named, new prices would be made which the net profits could pay. But those new prices were to be made by the parties, and, until made, the contract prices were to govern. Such, we think, is the clear import of the evidence. It is in. harmony, too> with thé purposes of the defendant’s incorporation. The five contributing companies, which were to furnish to the defendant substantially all the ice to be used, were [494]*494the-solei owners.<o.f -the-' defendant’sJ 'stack. -. The defendant’s - gain was their gain — the defendant’s loss, their loss. Presumptively reliance could be placed upon' this interest to regulate the prices to correspond with the net profits. But as far as the admitted evidence discloses, no change in'the prices was made. Without evidence of a subsequent modification, the contract price was properly held to determine defendant’s liability.

The defendant now claims that evidence of a modification of this contract was offered by it and rejected by the referee, and upon his exception to this ruling he bases, in part, his argument for a reversal of this judgment. The rulings upon which this exception was taken appear from folio 493 to 499. Defendant .offered in evidence a resolution passed by the directors of the Citizens’ Ice Company on the 15th day of June, 1897. It was stated that this resolution was offered “ for the purpose of showing that as soon as it was‘found by the Citizens’ Ice Company that it could not pay $1.50 and $.75 a ton for ice, without loss, that it passed a reso-. lution which provided that only such sums should thereafter: be paid each of the component companies as the net- earnings permitted.” The referee ruled that a resolution passed by the Citizens’. Ice Company, varying'tliis contract, could no’t be. binding upon the Buffalo Ice Company, and .excluded the evidence to which the exception was taken, which is here urged,

The defendant offered in evidence a record of a greeting of the board of directors of the Buffalo Ice Company on the 27th of December, 1895, at the office of the company, “ ratifying the act of Harry Yates in making and signing the contract dated December 20th, 1895, between the Buffalo Ice Company, L. B. Banks & Co., the Union Ice Company, Queen City Ice Company and American Ice Company, relating to the formation of the corporation ■ t® be called the Citizens’. Ice Company, and authorizing him to enter into any other agreements or contracts in any wise relating to .the subject-matter contained in said contract, changing, amending and reforming the same, and to do each and every act necessary to carry into, effect each and all of said contracts.” Defendant further offered in evidence, 'at- folio -503, the minutes of -the ■ American Ice Company and the Queen City Ice Company, showing the passage of a similar resolution. Both of these offers were objected to and [495]*495the objection sustained, and the-defendantexcepted. At folios--506 and 507 it appears that, after the 15th of June, 1897, the companies were paid, in accordance with the " resolution offered, their pro raid share of the net profits. It appears that this continued down to the time that the Buffalo Ice Company went into the hands of a receiver, with no objection or .protest on the part of the Buffalo Ice Company.

In these rulings we think the learned referee committed error. The contract made for ice at the given price could be modified by the contracting parties at any time, either by a written modification or by parol, or in any other way in which the parties chose to express tlmir intention. By the resolutions which were offered in evidence and rejected, it appears that the representatives of the different ice companies in the board of directors were given full power “ to enter into any other agreements or contracts in any wise relating to the subject-matter contained in said (combination) contract, changing, amending and reforming the same, and to do each and every act necessary to carry into effect each and all of said contracts.” Authority is also claimed from the nature of the transaction. The Citizens’ Ice Company was a combination of the interests of these five ice companies, who were solely interested therein. Each had a representative in the board of directors. His duty and authority -was to care for the interest of the company he represented. The representative of the Buffalo Ice Company was Mr. Y ates, its president. Considering the purpose of the formation of this company and the- ultimate purpose to distribute the net profits among the five companies contributing, and the general authority given to Mr. Yates by the resolution of the Buffalo Ice Company, we have no doubt of the authority of Mr. Yates and the other representatives of the different companies to vary the contract upon which the' plaintiff here sues, either by a resolution at the directors’ meeting or by a separate contract.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A.D. 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-citizens-ice-co-nyappdiv-1899.