54 N.Y.S. 72 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
On the 17th of July, 1894, the firm of -which the plaintiffs are members sold to the defendants, who are partners in business in Baltimore, in the State of Maryland, 500 bags of coffee, to arrive in New York from Rio de Janeiro by the steamship Catania. By the terms' of the contract half of the coffee was to be of a grade equal in average to about standard No. 8, and the other half to be about equal in average to standard No. 9 of the Coffee Exchange of the city of New York. The manner in which the coffee was to be graded was prescribed in the contract, and it was further provided that if the grading by the selected graders should be unsatisfactory, the matter of grading should be submitted to-other persons, to be selected in tbe manner prescribed by contract. ■ The coffee arrived in New York as expected, and it was tendered by the seller to the buyer. The defendants claimed that about half of the coffee which, was claimed to be in grade No. 9 was artificially colored, and was, therefore, not salable coffee within the provisions of the Public Llealth Law of the State of New York, and because of this fact they required that graders should be selected under those
At the trial the plaintiffs objected, in the first place, to any examination of the question whether the coffee was in'fact adulterated; Their claim was that. as the contract provided for a regrading by arbitrators to be selected by the parties in case the original grading . was unsatisfactory, and as it appeared that this regrading was had and the arbitrators had graded the coffee in accordance with the contention of the plaintiffs, the award necessarily operated as a final determination by a selected tribunal that the coffee complied in all respects with the requirements of. the contract. It was urged that
The question is thus presented whether the coffee was in fact adulterated, within the definition of the statute of the State. The statute-is found in section 41 of the Public Health Law, being chapter 661 of the Laws of 1893. It provides that “ no -person shall within the State, *. * * sell or offer for sale, any adulterated food or drug.” The statute then goes on to say that “ an article shall be deemed to be adulterated within the meaning of this act * * * if it be colored * * * whereby- damage is concealed, or it is made to appear better than it really is, or of greater value.” It is plain that under the provisions of this statute the mere fact that an article is colored is not of itself sufficient to make the sale-of it illegal. The sale of a colored article is not forbidden unless by means of the coloring damage to the article is concealed, or the article is made to appear better than it really is, or of greater value. The intent with which the coloring is put upon the article is of no importance. The law deals solely with the effect, and it forbids the sale of the colored article only when, after the coloring shall have been put upon it, one of the effects mentioned in the law shall have been produced. Unless that has taken place the sale of the article is not illegal. In this case it was not disputed that the coffee had been artificially colored, and that fact was admitted upon the trial; but whether that artificial col
It must be assumed that no one would attempt to change the color Of coffee with a view to make it appear worse, or to diminish its value or to add to it anything which actually decreased its usefulness, but that whenever anything of that kind was done, the act .had for its object, either actually to make the coffee better, or to make it appear better or of greater value. It needs no argument to establish the fact that such a change in the appearance of the coffee would have no other object, but, as we have said, the intention with which the coffee was colored is not material within the purview of the statute. The statute looks not at the intention, but only at the effect which has been produced. It appears, and is uncontradicted in the case, that the coloring of -coffee was not an unusual thing, but, on the contrary, that colored coffees were very largely imported, into the United States and very largely dealt in for purposes of sale in certain portions of this country. The coloring of coffee, therefore, was quite familiar to dealers, and it must be assumed, as was stated, that the object of it was to improve it, either in actual value or appearance, and not to make it worse. That being so, it was. clearly within the province of a dealer in coffee who was familiar with colored coffees to say whether the addition of a yellow coloring sub^ stance to the coffee bean would produce the intended effect and enhance its value. For that reason this testimony should .have been admitted, and the witness should have been permitted to say what was the usual effect of such a coloring of coffee as this, and the ruling was erroneous "and the exception was properly taken.
But it may be said that the defendants had been allowed to give testimony as to the effect of this coloring matter upon this coffee. That is very true, but where the question is one of fact, as.is the case here, and where that question of fact is the serious and only question in the case, a party shoúld be permitted to give all the testimony that he has upon the litigated question. It will not do to say that it did no harm to the defeated party to exclude certain evidence which he he offers upon a hotly litigated question of fact, because other testi
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event.