Union India Rubber Co. v. Tomlinson

1 E.D. Smith 364
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 1 E.D. Smith 364 (Union India Rubber Co. v. Tomlinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union India Rubber Co. v. Tomlinson, 1 E.D. Smith 364 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

By the Court. Woodruff, J.

This action is founded upon an alleged sale and delivery by the plaintiffs to the defendant of certain goods, consisting of India rubber hammock beds; and the plaintiffs claim to recover for the amount of the goods, at the prices stated in the complaint, and interest thereon after the expiration of the alleged term of credit, sixty days.

The answer denies the sale and delivery by the plaintiffs to the defendant, and also denies the claim to interest. On the trial it appeared, and is without contradiction, that prior to the [369]*36922d of August, 1848, William. Ryder, Emory Ryder and John Ryder had been engaged in manufacturing India rubber goods; and although the firm-name is not positively proved, it is stated by one witness, without denial, that they went by the name of “ William Ryder & Brothers,” sometimes called “ Ryder & Co.”

On the 22d of August, 1848, William Ryder and Emory Ryder united with Jonathan Trotter and others in the proper certificate, and by complying with the statute in other respects, they became a manufacturing corporation, under the name of “The Union India Rubber Company,” (the plaintiffs in the action,) for the purpose of manufacturing and selling India rubber and other goods. Such India rubber goods as the Messrs. Ryder had on hand at¿the time went into the company at its formation; but the stock of goods embraced no hammock beds, and it appears that at this time no such beds had been manufactured.

William Ryder thereupon became the treasurer of the company, and Emory Ryder and John Ryder were in the employ of the company, and had charge of the manufacturing department of the company; and at the time of the transaction now in question, the Messrs. Ryder appear to have had no India rubber goods to sell except such as belonged to the company.

It further appears, that the store place of business of the company was at No. 19, in Nassau street, in this city; that they came to that store in January, 1849, and that at about the 1st of February, 1849, their sign was put up, with their corporate name in large letters, “ Union India Rubber Company,” extending the whole length of the store in front.

In February, 1849, one Samuel J. Seely, who, we are led to infer, had made some invention of hammock beds, and held a patent therefor, opened a"negotiation at the plaintiffs’ store for the manufacture of such beds, and in reference to the price at which they would be manufactured for him. This negotiation appears to have been had with William Ryder in person; but Seely, when examined as a.witness for the defendant, and in answer to the defendant’s question, “ Who manufactured [370]*370the beds under your patent ?” testified, “ I have known them as Ryder & Brothers, and The Union India Bubber Company ; I don’t know which to call them.” Other evidence showed that the plaintiffs did in fact manufacture the beds.

Evidence was given by the defendant, tending to show that one or more conversations were had in the plaintiffs’ store between William Ryder, (the plaintiffs’ treasurer,) the said Seely and the present defendant, in which the said Ryder refused to deliver beds upon the responsibility of Seely, and in which the defendant agreed to become responsible, and in which it was agreed by Ryder to let Seely have beds on the terms proposed by the defendant, it being a part of the arrangement that the goods were to be “ drawn on the defendant’s orders, and that he was not to be responsible for any thing but what he did order!”

Whether the responsibility which the defendant then verbally assumed, was an absolute liability as purchaser, or a guarantee of the payment by Seely, is a question which it may be necessary to consider hereafter; but for the present it is sufficient to state these preliminary facts, and that there was evidence warranting the general statement, that the agreement to deliver beds was upon some parol undertaking of the defendant to be responsible for such as should be delivered upon orders drawn by him. Under these circumstances, and under date of March 8th, 1849, the defendant wrote an order in the words following:

“Messrs. Ryder & Co.
“ Gent.—Please let Mr. Hill have one of Mr. Seely’s patent beds, which I will be responsible for, and oblige
“Your obt. servt.,
“T. E. Tomlinson.”
And the day following, in apparent reference to the same bed, wrote as follows:
“ Messrs. Ryder & Co.
“Please send the bed to Washington, per directions of H. D. Hill, and I will be responsible for the amount.
“ Tour obt. servt.,
“T. E. Tomlinson.”

[371]*371Which orders were presented at the plaintiffs’ store, and the bed delivered to Hill.

Subsequently, other orders were drawn by the defendant, which in their terms were less full and explicit; indeed, the subsequent orders were entirely silent regarding the subject of payment or responsibility, thus:

“ Messrs. Ryder & Co.
“ Gent.—Please let Mr. Hill have four beds of Seely’s
patent.
“ Yours, very truly,
“T. E. Tomlinson.”
“ Messrs. Ryder & Co.
“ Gent.—Please let Mr. Seely have one of the last made beds, and much oblige
“ Your obedient servt.,
“T. E. Tomlinson.”

It should be added, that the person named in a part of the orders, and by whom they were brought to the plaintiffs’ store, Mr. Hill, was in the employment of Seely, the patentee.

And further, that the orders were presented at the plaintiffs’ store to any of their clerks or agents indiscriminately, and the beds delivered in accordance with the orders.

It may also be suggested, that except the fact that the arrangement was made at the plaintiffs’ store, and that they had a large sign on the front of the store, there appears in the case no evidence that the defendant, when he drew the orders, had any actual knowledge that any such corporation as “The Union India Rubber Company ” existed, or that the parties who were known to some of the witnesses as William Ryder & Brothers, or “ Ryder & Co.” had given up business and become merged in the plaintiffs’ corporation, in whose employment they were, respectively, at the time these orders were drawn.

And on the other hand, it does not appear that either the-[372]*372defendant or Seely, the patentee, whom the defendant sought to assist, had ever had any business transactions or dealing with the Messrs. Ryder prior to the transactions above detailed.

The counsel for the defendant insists—and it is the ground mainly relied upon in urging a reversal of this judgment— that there was no legal evidence of a sale of goods by the Union India Rubber Company to the defendant, and that the referee erred in admitting the orders in evidence: because, however they might be evidence of a contract between him and Messrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 E.D. Smith 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-india-rubber-co-v-tomlinson-nyctcompl-1852.