185 A.D. 529 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
This is an appeal from an order granting plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, consisting of the complaint and a demurrer thereto, which demurrer set forth that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The complaint alleges that on or about the 6th day of August, 1917, the plaintiff and defendants entered into an agreement in writing which was thereafter renewed on January 2, 1918, to continue until December 31, 1918. The contract in substance was that the defendants would furnish to the plaintiff certain samples of ladies’ and misses’ coats and suits identical with those furnished to salesmen for the defendants in order that plaintiff might take orders therefor, and that upon the sale of such coats and suits by plaintiff to its customers the plaintiff would be entitled to the difference between the cost price to be stipulated and the price at which the plaintiff and his customers should agree as the sales price. Bills of all merchandise manufactured and shipped were to contain a statement that payment was to be made at the place of business of the defendants at 142 West Twenty-fourth
•The agreement also contained a stipulation that the defendants should not directly or indirectly “ drum ” customers of the plaintiff, and that if any goods should be sold by defendants to any of said customers the same should be sold in the name of the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff should receive the difference between the price at which the goods were to be sold to such customers and the price determined upon as the basis of allowance for cost of material and labor and for profit, the same as though the order had been given in the first instance to the plaintiff. A copy of the agreement in question is annexed to the complaint.
The complaint further set forth that the plaintiff entered upon the performance of the terms of the agreement and duly performed the same. It then alleges that the defendants, “ without just cause prevented plaintiff from fulfilling the terms and conditions of said contract,” in that defendants dispossessed plaintiff from space occupied in defendants’ place of business and refused to deliver any of the merchandise to be delivered to the customers of the plaintiff, as set forth in the agreement and wrongfully and unlawfully “ converted checks for merchandise sent by customers to plaintiff at the address of the defendants in payment of bills for merchandise manufactured and shipped by defendants to plaintiff’s said customers which were sent by said customers to No. 142 West 24th Street, Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, to the order of the plaintiff; ” and that defendants secretly solicited trade or “ drummed ” the customers of plaintiff, and did not charge same to plaintiff, nor bill same in plaintiff’s name; all to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $4,000.
It is apparent that the contract was unilateral and consisted merely of an offer on the part of the defendants to
While in certain special contracts courts have implied promises sufficient to create mutuality, the contract in the present case is not subject to any interpretation which would warrant the court in implying that the plaintiff in any way agreed to take any particular amount of merchandise or to endeavor to sell or sell any of the designs of the defendants. Plaintiff did not even agree to pay anything to defendants for they were to receive all the checks and pay the difference between cost and selling price to plaintiff.
The learned trial justice in the case at bar seems to have laid stress on the allegation in the complaint that the agreement had been performed on the part of the plaintiff. While the Code authorizes a general allegation of due -performance by plaintiff of the conditions precedent to a right of recovery on certain contracts without stating all of the facts constituting performance (Code Civ. Proc. § 533), still the complaint in the case at bar sets forth no facts which show that plaintiff had done anything under the contract which called for action upon the part of defendants or imposed any duty or obligation upon them under the contract.
The complaint wholly fails to state that the plaintiff obtained any customers whatever for defendants’ goods, or ever notified defendants of its alleged orders.
The learned court at Special Term upheld the complaint upon the ground that it set forth a cause of action in conversion, but plaintiff admits upon this appeal that it sets forth no such cause of action, nor could such a contention be successfully urged inasmuch as under the contract defendants were expressly given the right to receive all checks for
The order appealed from will be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion for judgment on the pleadings denied, with ten dollars costs. The demurrer is sustained, with leave to plaintiff to serve an amended complaint on payment of said costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Page and Merrell, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs, and demurrer sustained, with leave to plaintiff to amend complaint on payment of costs.