On August 1, 1947, plaintiff, Amtorg Trading Corporation, the Soviet purchasing agency in New York, entered into a written contract with defendant’s predecessor in interest for the purchase of 30 printing presses, f.o.b. Milwaukee, for the avowed purpose of exporting them to Russia. The presses, designed for a special purpose— printing of currency — were to be manufactured according to specifications by the press manufacturing company to whose interests the present defendant has succeeded under circumstances not here pertinent. 1 The contract called for the delivery of 10 presses by February, 1948, 10 more by March, 1948, and the final 10 in April, 1948. The total price was $352,035.90, of which a down payment of 25 per cent or $88,008.97 was required and paid. The first lot of 10 presses was delivered in February, 1948, and Amtorg duly paid for the balance due upon it over the 25 per cent advance credited to that group. There remained a prepayment toward the remaining 20 presses of $59,946.47 still held by defendant, although delivery of these presses has never been made because of circumstances now to be related.
On March 1, 1948, there became effective regulations, 13 Fed.Reg. 1120-22, promulgated in January, 1948, of the Department of Commerce’s Office of International Trade pursuant to the Export Control Law of 1940, 54 Stat. 714, 50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 701, as amended, barring further export of these goods to Russia unless an export license therefor was obtained. While the parties applied for a license, it was ultimately denied in June. Amtorg refused tender of the remaining 20 presses; Miehle brought suit in the New York Supreme Court for the purchase price, less the prepayment of $59,946.47; and Amtorg counterclaimed for return of this latter sum. The state court granted summary judgment to Miehle and this was affirmed on appeal. Miehle Printing Press & Mfg. Co. v. Am
*105
torg Trading Corp.,
Amtorg thereupon brought this present action in the court below basing the jurisdiction of the court both on a federal question allegedly arising under the export regulations and upon the diverse citizenship of the parties. The court below rejected the former, but sustained the latter ground, which of course is adequate to support the suit, since plaintiff and defendant are corporations of New York and Delaware respectively. The complaint set forth six claims or “causes of action,” each in various ways laying claim to the down payment alone or together with the $18,765 profit. The court, construing New York law, held that plaintiff as a buyer in default was not entitled to recover and hence denied its motion for summary judgment and granted that of defendant. D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
On the first claim, frustration o£ the contract, the New York law seems-rather clearly against the plaintiff. See Bardons & Oliver, Inc., v. Amtorg Trading Corp.,
But on the claims for restitution for unjust enrichment, most inclusively stated in the second “cause of action,” we reach an issue of great interest and importance. The early view that a contract defaulter is barred from all recovery, even for a manifest benefit conferred, has called forth criticisms of telling force; one recalls the famous early decision of Parker, J., in Britton v. Turner, 1834,
In the federal courts the position of the Restatement has been accepted. See Schwasnick v. Blandin, 2 Cir.,
Among'the “Mitigating Doctrines” which the Commission finds have been applied in New York, see 1942 Report 27-31, 1952 Leg. Doc. No. 65(C), 12-13, are those of “substantial performance” used notably in the case of building and construction contracts and “severability” used primarily in employment contracts. So N.Y. Labor Law, McK.Consol.Laws, § 196 requires payment of wages every six days, while N.Y. Personal Property Law, McK.Consol.Laws, § 125(1) — the Uniform Sales Act § 44 — allows recovery for part performance by a defaulting
vendor
for goods retained by the vendee, and N.Y. Personal Property Law §§ 79, 80, 80-a, allows a defaulting buyer under a conditional sales contract any surplus on a compulsory or optional resale by the seller. Another ground relied on is that money advanced by a buyer or lessee may be treated, in the absence of definite specification, as merely security for the ultimate payment, rather than as a down payment, thus leaving any excess not required as security refundable. See cases such as Becker v. Rothschild, Sup.,
Because of the harshness of the doctrine, including the palpable discrimination between the defaulting seller and buyer, and between the latter and the conditional vendee, the Commission proposed the amendment to the Sales Act which was adopted, effective September 1, 1952, as N.Y. Personal Property Law § 145-a. By its terms the Act does not apply to any contract made before its effective date. It allows *107 the buyer in default restitution of the amount by which the payments made or the reasonable value of the goods exceeds either an agreed-upon sum in the contract which constitutes a reasonable liquidation in advance of the seller’s anticipated damages or, in the absence of such a clause, 20 per cent of the value of the total performance for which the buyer is obligated under the contract. The latter provision constitutes “in effect a statutory liquidated damage provision to be used only as an offset.” 1952 Leg.Doc. No. 65(C), 6.
Such is the developing New York law on this interesting issue. Where a changing public policy is so manifest, it would seem that the Court of Appeals of New York might well give some effect to it in cases not as yet regulated by the new statute. It is one of the appreciated defects of the famous Erie-Tompkins doctrine that it suggests a rigidity in the statement of state law by federal judges which is foreign to the habits and customs of their state colleagues, as well as to the development of the law generally. A statement by us of New York law in terms of the old cases might turn out to be more hazardous a course than boldly to try to look into the womb of time, however much that course may be decried. See L. Hand, J., dissenting in Spector Motor Service v. Walsh, 2 Cir.,
Under the circumstances here present, however, we do not think we need grasp the nettles of this dilemma. In the Foreign Aid Appropriations Act, 1949, approved June 28, 1948, P.L. 793, 80th Cong., 2d, Sess., c. 685, § 204, 62 Stat. 1054, at page 1059, U.S.Code Cong.Serv.1948, pp. 744, 745, Congress provided:
“Whenever an export license for a commodity, the production or shipment of which to a nonparticipating country was contracted for in good faith prior to March 1, 1948, is denied or cannot be obtained under section 6 of the Act of July 2, 1940 (54 Stat. 714), as amended, the Administrator shall provide for the procurement o E such commodity to transfer to a participating country in accordance with the requirements of such country, at not less than the contract price of such commodity to the producer or exporter, as the case may be, including any cost incurred in converting the commodity to meet the requirements of the participating country.”
In its complaint, plaintiff alleges that defendant’s profitable sale to the United States Bureau of Engraving and Printing was made by virtue of the relief here provided, while defendant counters that the statute had no bearing on the sale nor did the Administrator participate. But we do not see that this issue of fact need be resolved for our present purposes. What we are interested in is whether Congress has set forth, by implication or otherwise, a theory of contract law which in this localized and particular situation makes application of the earlier assumed New York law impracticable or improper. And this we think is the case.
We may perhaps assume that the primary object of congressional concern is the American producer. So it is planned to safeguard him from loss by the precipitate operation of the export license system before he has adjusted his business to it. But significantly the Act is not so limited. In terms it is also extended to an “exporter.” Surely there will be many cases where a producer sells to an exporter who is amenable to process in this country and who, under the existing law of frustration, is not entitled to repudiate his contract. It seems clear that the benefit of this remedy should be extended also to such an exporter by lowering the technical bars to contract recovery where the producer has already directly availed himself of the congressional relief. The Act, construed as the defendant would have it, would mean that Congress had provided a double recovery for any producer fortunate enough to deal with a purchaser suable and financially responsible. Nothing in the Act suggests such a result; the developing common law of the country indicates a contrary trend; and the result is not a necessary one under the precedents True, the plaintiff may not be technically an exporter (though perhaps it is). At any rate it is an American corporation trans *108 shipping goods abroad which is suddenly-caught in the operation of the export license system. Hence it should not be denied the intended remedial benefits under the Act after the producer has been wholly recompensed.
Under the precedents it is clear that the Erie-Tompkins principle of respect for state law yields to overriding national policy and law. The outstanding case is Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States,
The authorities therefore seem ample to justify giving effect to the 1948 relief legislation in the manner that must have been intended without the countervailing trend represented by what appears to be the current New York law. Plaintiff is therefore entitled to restitution of its payments beyond and above any injury suffered by defendant. This would not include the additional profit on resale obtained by defendant; no reason is apparent why defendant should not have the advantage it has been able to reap by this fortunate and frugal act. It appears further that defendant by counterclaim asserted certain offsets by way of expenses on its resale. If actually its expenses did eat up its apparent profits, it may deduct the amount of the excess from the prepayment before its refunding; but these should be duly proven expenses and not manufactured items, such as a claim for a commission on the resale to the defendant. Defendant cannot claim payment for its services rendered in its duty to mitigate damages. The case must be remanded for the determination of this issue and for entry of a judgment for plaintiff for refund of the prepayment, subject to deduction of any expenses proven by defendant if and only so far as they may exceed its profit of $18,765.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. In February, 1948, defendant, Miehle Printing Press & Manufacturing Company (of Delaware), took over the business of Miehle Printing Press & Manufacturing Company (of Illinois), which filed a certificate of surrender of authority with the Secretary of State of the State of New York.
