205 A.D. 673 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The action was brought to recover damages by reason of the alleged default of the defendants and their refusal to accept and pay for a quantity of cotton flannel alleged to have been sold by the plaintiff to the defendants. The plaintiff is a converter of cotton fabrics, including shirtings. The defendants are manufacturers of shirts. Owing to war conditions and the high price of flannels, the plaintiff placed upon the market a line of imitation flannels made of cotton and known as “ cotton flannel.” The plaintiff alleges that on October 15, 1918, the defendants, by Max Nast, one of the defendant copartners, ordered of the plaintiff one thousand pieces of shirtings at the agreed price of thirty-eight cents per yard. The defendants deny that any contract was entered into between the parties, and plead that, in so far as there was any contract, it was verbal and unenforcible by reason of the Statute of Frauds. The evidence disclosed that a few days prior to October 15, 1918, a salesman of the plaintiff by the name of Fox called at the defendants’ place of business and displayed certain samples of plaintiff’s line of cotton flannels which the plaintiff then had for sale. Among these samples was a style known as “ Defender,”
The evidence shows that Hawkins, the representative of, and for many years a buyer for Montgomery, Ward & Co. of Chicago, came to the defendants’ place of business with a view to entering an order for 2,000 dozen cotton shirts, and that on October 15, 1918, in company with the defendant Nast, Hawkins went to the plaintiff’s place of business and there called upon Fox, plaintiff’s salesman, to display the line of cotton flannel goods which he had theretofore shown to Nast. This was done, several different grades of goods being shown, and Nast and Hawkins going over the same carefully for the purpose of picking out goods suitable to be made into the 2,000 dozen shirts order which the defendants were expecting to receive from Montgomery, Ward & Co. The plaintiff’s salesman, Fox, testified that, after examining very carefully the goods thus displayed, Nast suggested that he (Fox) leave the room, as he would like to confer with Mr. Hawkins. Fox complied with Nast’s request, and returning a short time thereafter, was informed by Nast that the defendants thought they could use the “ Defender ” and “Aurora ” styles, and asked Fox if he had an order blank there. Fox testified that he handed Nast an order-blank of plaintiff’s regular form, and which plaintiff kept for that purpose, and that Nast thereupon wrote out the order himself on said order blank of the plaintiff. These order blanks were in pad form, carbon paper being used for making a duplicate copy, in accordance with the usual custom- of the plaintiff. Fox testified
The evidence presented a sharp dispute of fact, which was left to the jury to determine under a very fair and impartial charge. The plaintiff was allowed to prove his damages, based upon the loss of profits through the failure of the defendants to carry out the contract, plus the difference between the cost of the goods in the gray and their market value at the time of the breach, besides interest. No proof whatever was offered by the defendants on the question of damages, and no objection was made to the reception of the proof as to the measure of damages which was offered by the plaintiff. The court charged the jury that, if they found that the parties entered into a contract as claimed by the plaintiff, then the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for $6,372, with $1,179.66 interest, making in all $7,551.66. The jury rendered a verdict in that amount in plaintiff’s favor. The evidence clearly shows that there was a fall in prices owing to the signing of the armistice agreement on November 11, 1918, within a month from the time this order was given, and that following that the order which" Montgomery, Ward & Co. gave the defendants for the 2,000 dozen shirts, was canceled. The evidence shows that, immediately following the making of the alleged contract on October 15, 1918, and on the same day, Montgomery, Ward & Co. ordered the 2,000 dozen shirts from the defendant, made from the “ Defender ” cloth which had been selected and ordered of the plaintiff. As before stated, the testimony presented nothing but a question of fact as to whether or not the parties entered into the contract in suit, and the jury resolved such question of fact in accordance with plaintiff’s contention.
It is the claim of the defendants, appellants, that the verdict was
No objection whatever was made by the defendants to the proof of damage offered by the plaintiff. The defendants offered no proof of damage to meet the same, nor did they make any objection upon the trial to the rule adopted by the trial justice in submitting the case to the jury. The plaintiff proved without objection that the cost of manufacture of the goods covered by the contract was thirty-two and eighty-one one-hundredths cents per yard, and that the contract price was thirty-eight cents per yard, leaving a profit of five and nineteen one-hundredths cents a yard to the plaintiff and a total profit upon the 60,000 yards covered by the contract of $3,114; that as soon as possible after the breach the goods were disposed of by the plaintiff at the highest market price obtainable for eighteen and thirty-two one-hundredths cents per yard, the plaintiff thereby sustaining a loss of five and forty-three one-hundredths cents a yard, and a total loss of $3,258. This made plaintiff’s aggregate loss §6,372, which, with added interest, amounted to $7,551.66. The jury found in favor of the plaintiff in that amount. I think the correct measure of damages was adopted. Subdivision 2 of section 145 of the Personal Property Law (as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 571) provides that: “The measure of damages is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting, in the ordinary course of events, from the buyer’s breach of contract.”
There can be no question that by reason of the defendants’ refusal to accept and pay for the goods the plaintiff lost the profit which he would have received had the defendants performed, and surely the plaintiff was entitled to recover the difference between what he paid for the goods and what he was able to obtain upon a sale thereof after defendants’ default. Subdivision 4 of section
I think no error occurred by the inclusion in the verdict of interest on plaintiff’s claim. No objection was made by defendants when proofs were offered by the plaintiff as to the amount of interest upon his claim, nor was any exception made to the charge of the court that the jury might include such interest, the amount thereof being stated by the court. After the rendition of the verdict, counsel for the defendants moved to set the same aside upon the ground that all items of interest embodied in or incorporated in the verdict were upon unliquidated and not upon liquidated damages. The Court of Appeals in a recent case has held that “ The test is not whether the demand is liquidated. Was the plaintiff entitled to a certain sum? Should the defendant have paid it? ” (Faber v. City of New York, 222 N. Y. 255, 262.)
In Blackwell v. Finlay (233 N. Y. 361) the recovery was upon the exact amount of plaintiff’s demand for professional services as an attorney. With reference to interest the Court of Appeals in that case said (at p. 363): “ It would indeed work great injustice if one who renders ordinary services, whether professional or otherwise, or sells ordinary commodities, could not, by presenting his bill and demanding payment, put the debtor in default and start interest running. The rule is a sound one, and commendable in its application here, where the plaintiff has recovered the exact amount demanded by him from defendant.” (Italics are the writer’s.)
In this case the jury has found for the plaintiff for the exact amount for which he sued. That amount was subject to ascertainment by computation, and interest was properly allowable.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Smith, Finch and McAvoy, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.