127 Misc. 461 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1926
Plaintiff, a French corporation, negotiated through Goldschmidt, a French broker, with defendants for the purchase of sugar. Prior to these specific negotiations Goldschmidt had notified the defendants: “ Sellers must produce certificate of origin stipulating that the Production Refinery does not work bounty-fed sugars. This is demanded by the Customs here and if buyers failed to produce this certificate a heavy duty would be charged * * * For all the future business it will be understood.” He further advised defendants that “ Sellers must deliver certificates of origin stipulating that the Production Refinery is not working bounty-fed sugars; as already explained this certificate must be produced on all the sugars imported into France or a heavy duty would be charged so we want you to understand that all the sugar that we have bought from you so far or that we shall buy in the future will have to be accompanied by these certificates and we beg you to take note of this.” In the transaction in suit a series of cablegrams interchanged between Goldschmidt and the defendants culminated in two cables, evidencing agreement. Defendants cabled: “ Cannot accept Marseilles offer without Havre
If the broker’s notes were the contract, the defendants clearly breached it. They specifically called for “ Cuba fine granulated refined sugar 100%,” and if this had been delivered no penalty would have been imposed. The date of the receipt of the broker’s note in New York is not disclosed. It was mailed on July second in Paris; the sugar was on July 8, 1915, placed on ship, the documents presented to the Guaranty Trust Company and payment received about July 12, 1915.
Generally where a bought and sold note is retained without objection and acted upon by a party, such retention is a recognition of the authority of the agent. (Childs v. Riley Co., 186 App. Div. 775.) Here the defendants not only retained the nóte without
These extra-judicial admissions are made conclusive by the admissions in the pleadings. In paragraph 9 of the complaint it is alleged that Goldschmidt negotiated a contract for the sale of “ 500 tons of Cuba fine-granulated refined sugar 100% * * * and also deliver certificates of origin of said 100% Cuba fine-granulated, refined sugar issued by the American customs authorities from which it would appear that said 100% Cuba sugar was the production of a refinery not working bounty-fed sugar.” It is further alleged that “ said brokers thereafter on the conclusion of this sale delivered to their principals, the plaintiff and the defendants, brokers’ bought and sold notes.” The answer admits that “ Goldschmidt negotiated the contract stated in said paragraph of the amended complaint and delivered the bought and sold notes as mentioned therein.” In paragraph 7 of the answer the defendants admit and allege “ that the sugar so delivered was Cuba cane fine-granulated refined 100% sugar.” In paragraph 8 they deny “ that there was any substitution by them of sugar in place of Cuba fine-granulated refined 100% sugar contracted for ” (italics mine), and in paragraph 9 they allege that the sugar delivered was the equivalent of “ Cuba fine-granulated refined 100% sugar.”
For these reasons the broker’s note must be regarded as the contract.
Even if the cables be regarded as constituting the contract, however, the defendants none the less failed to carry out their agreement. They were specifically advised that their delivery must be accompanied by a certificate that the sugar was not bounty fed, of a character to satisfy the French customs authorities.
The parties argued at length whether the French or the American
I am called on to determine also the date as of which the damages suffered in France should be transmuted into dollars. The rule is thus stated in an article by Professor Drake in the May, 1925, Michigan Law Review (p. 714):
“ (1) In suits to redress a wrong the sum given as damages in the domestic judgment should be transformed into the foreign currency at the date of the breach of contract or of the conversion. * * *
“ (2) In the late English case of Peyrae v. Wilkinson (L. R. [1924] 2 K. B. 166), although it was brought, not to redress a wrong, but to enforce a right, the Court of the King’s Bench adopted the ‘ breach day ’ rule * * *.
“ (3) In suits to enforce a right the subordinate Federal courts in New York and the subordinate courts of the State of New York have adopted the ‘ judgment day ’ rule.”
The 3d paragraph of this statement refers to the cases of Sirie v. Godfrey (196 App. Div. 529), Metcalf Co. v. Mayer, No. 1, (213 id. 607) and Orlik v. Wiener Bank Verein (204 id. 432). The last case followed the “ breach day ” rule; the first followed the “ judgment day ” rule; neither of the first two was an action for breach of contract; both of them were in effect actions on the contract. Whether this distinction be sound or not, there is no case in New York which holds that in an action to redress a wrong, such as breach of contract, the “ judgment day ” rule should be enforced. The Court of Appeals said (Per Curiam) in Hoppe v. Russo-Asiatic Bank (235 N. Y. 37, 39): “ In an action properly brought in the courts of this State by a citizen or an alien to recover damages, liquidated, or unliquidated, for. breach of contract or for a tort, where primarily
The latest decision upon this subject is Hicks v. Guinness (269 U. S. 71), where Mr. Justice Holmes declares generally for the “ breach day ” rule even in a case on an account stated.
The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to the following damages: 73,938 francs at 5.92, $12,430.67, with interest thereon from August 14, 1916; 2,114.42 francs at 5.84, $344.93, with interest thereon from October 9, 1916; and the reasonable value of the lawyer’s services 4,750 francs at 6.075, $781.89, with interest thereon from April 13, 1917. Verdict is directed accordingly, with exception to defendants. Thirty days’ stay; sixty days to make a case.