Whitney v. Hop Bitters Manufacturing Co.

2 N.Y.S. 438
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 2 N.Y.S. 438 (Whitney v. Hop Bitters Manufacturing 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
Whitney v. Hop Bitters Manufacturing Co., 2 N.Y.S. 438 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Dwight, J.

The action was to recover the’balance of the contract of several hundred gross of glass bottles sold and delivered to the defendant under an oral contract by which the goods were to be delivered on board the cars at Glassboro, íí. J., and the price was payable on delivery; also a balance of the contract price of several thousand gross of bottles manufactured and shipped by the plaintiffs to the defendant under a written contract by which the plaintiffs agreed to manufacture and deliver 5,000 gross of bottles according to a sample and description, in quantities as called for by the defendant, within one year from August 25, 1883,—for which the defendant agreed to pay within 60 days from the delivery of each shipment, or (at the option of the defendant) within 10 days after such delivery, in which case the defendant was to be allowed a discount of 2 per cent. The answer admitted both the contracts, with the qualification, in respect to the first, that it included a stipulation for the repacking of the bottles in a particular manner; and denied that either of the contracts had been performed by the plaintiff, and denied that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff in any amount. It also contained appropriate averments for the recoupment of damages for breakage, resulting from the failure of the plaintiffs to repack and properly place on board the cars the bottles purchased under the first contract; and also for the breakage of same; and for imperfection in weight and color of others of the bottles manufactured and delivered under the second contract. The questions presented by these defenses are mainly questions of fact, and have been passed upon by the referee on evidence which seems to us to support his several findings in respect thereto. The bottles sold under the first contract were seen and examined by the president of the defendant at the time the sale was made to hiig, and the manner in which they were packed in trays was plainly to be seen. We think the finding of the referee was sustained by the evidence, to the effect that the packing of these bottles was in conformity with the contract, and that they were properly stowed in the cars at the place of shipment, so that the risk of breakage in transportation was the defendant’s.

Much the largest part of the evidence in the case relates to the defenses sought to be established to tne claim of the plaintiffs to recover for the bottles [440]*440which were shipped to the defendant under the written contract for the manufacture and sale of the 5,000 gross. These defenses were, in effect, that, of the few hundred gross of bottles actually received by the defendant under the second contract, a portion were broken, and a portion did not conform in weight or color to the sample and description mentioned in the contract; that the great bulk of the 5,000 gross of bottles had never been delivered; and that the refusal of the defendant to accept the delivery attempted to be made of nearly 4,000 gross of those bottles was justified by the fact that they were not shipped in time, and that a portion of them did not conform to the contract in the respects above mentioned. The facts relating to these questions found by the referee, and, as we think, established by the evidence, are briefly as follows: The defendant ordered, during the year mentioned in the contract, less than 500 gross of the bottles, in separate orders, which were promptly shipped as ordered, and for.which partial payments were made. Complaint was made by the defendant that some of these bottles were broken, and that some did not conform to the contract, and, with the consent of the plaintiffs, the defendant returned to them all the bottles rejected, and the price of such rejected bottles was credited to the defendant. All the bottles manufactured under the. second (written) contract had the name of the Hop Bitters Company blown in the glass, and were consequently unsalable to anybody else. The last of the orders above mentioned was given by the defendant, August 6, 1884. On the 26th of August, the day after the expiration of the year mentioned in the contract, the plaintiffs wrote the defendant as follows: “The remainder of the bottles manufactured for you under contract of August 25, 1883, are now ready, awaiting your orders for shipment. If an order is received from you before August 30th, we will ship; if not so received, we will store, at your risk, and charge all expenses to you. After August 30th, any /bottles shipped to you we will deliver f. o. b.; freight and all risks of road must be borne by you. ” To this communication they received answer by telegraph, in the evening of August 28th, as follows: “You may deliver remain<der of bottles here on or before August 30, 1884,-on terms of contract of August 25,1883.” The plaintiffs at once set about procuring the necessary cars {of which 27 were required) for the transportation of the bottles on hand, amounting to nearly 4,000 gross; and on August 30th completed the shipment, consigned to the defendant at Rochester, H. Y. On the 2d day of September, before any,of the bottles had arrived at Rochester, the defendant telegraphed the plaintiffs as follows: “We will receive no bottles from you delivered here after August 30, 1884, not inspected here at your expense, and perfect, and in such quantities as we hereafter order,” to which the plaintiffs answered: “Bottles shipped on receipt of your message of the 28th, and now in transit. We cannot agree to conditions in message of 2d. See contract,” On receipt of this message, and before the arrival of any of the bottles at Rochester, the defendant wrote the Hew York Central freight agent at that place: “If any cars of bottles come to you from Whitney Bros, or others, marked or billed to us, you will not do anything with them for us, or in our name, or presume that we have anything to do with them whatever.” This direction seems to have been communicated by the officials of the Hew York Central road to those of a connecting line over which the bottles were being transported, and an inquiry on the part of the latter as to why-the bottles were ref used was answered by the defendant on September 11th: “The bottles are not according to contract.” The president of the defendant had, after giving the direction for the refusal of the entire shipment, examined some of the bottles, which, in the mean time, had arrived at the depot of the Hew York Central Railroad at Rochester. The last of them arrived on the 18th of September. The whole shipment was at first unloaded and stored in the railroad freight depot, but they were afterwards removed by the railroad company to a warehouse in the city, where they remained stored at the time [441]*441of the trial; the defendant having refused to receive any part of them. They were then liable to be sold for charges, and, whenever sold, were likely to fall into the hands of the defendant at a low price, because of little or no value to •anybody else.

The referee finds that the bottles so shipped by the plaintiffs were in substantial compliance with the contract under which they were made, being as nearly of the uniform weight and color prescribed by the contract as it was practicable to make them; and that they were well made and shipped, and arrived at Rochester in good condition. We think this finding is warranted by the evidence. The case is quite, full and instructive on the subject of the manufacture of colored glass bottles. We learn that the bottle is blown in an iron mould, the interior conformation of which gives form to the exterior of the bottle. To accomplish this purpose a small quantity of the material of the glass, fused at a great heat, is gathered from the crucible or smelting pot on the end of the blow-pipe. The

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 N.Y.S. 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-hop-bitters-manufacturing-co-nysupct-1888.