90 N.Y.S. 998 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
This action was brought to recover damages for the breach of an alleged contract to deliver 38,000 cases of canned salmon. The defendant denied the making of the contract. The evidence adduced at the trial was directed towards this issue, and at the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ case the complaint was dismissed, the learned trial justice holding that the plaintiffs had failed to establish the execution of a contract.
The judgment appealed from cannot be sustained. At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ case, upon the proofs as they then stood, it was for the jury to say whether or not a contract had been executed. The proof bearing upon the question was substantially as follows: The defendant, a corporation, on and prior to 1900 was engaged in commission business and in handling canned salmon, with headquarters at Chicago. Prior to 1900 it had dealt quite extensively with the plaintiffs, and had sold to them at different times large quantities of such product. Some time during the early part of the year 1900 it sent to the plaintiffs a circular advising its purchase at that time. In this circular attention was called to the fact that there was a shortage of canned salmon in both the English and American markets, and would-be customers were advised to buy “double their usual supply.” After this circular had been sent, and on the 31st of August, defendant telegraphed the plaintiffs, calling attention to the fact that there was a shortage in the “world’s pack” for that year of canned salmon, and on the same day wrote them substantially to the same effect, only more in detail. After the telegram and letter had been received, Mr. Stubbs, who was at that time defendant’s salesman in New York City, and who shortly
Armsby was sworn as a witness in behalf of the plaintiffs, and admitted that he made “an actual sale verbally,” and proof was offered from which the jury might have found that when he made such sale he not only knew it was for export, but that he intended the salmon should be exported. On the way to Boston, after the typewritten statement had been prepared, according to the testimony of Mr. Carey, he stated to him (referring to the contract made with the plaintiffs), “We put the knife into Balfour, Guthrie & Company good and hard this time.” Balfour, Guthrie & Co. had the sole agency in Great Britain for the sale of salmon of the brands claimed to have been purchased by the plaintiffs, and the remark made by Armsby, if true, can
This being the condition of the proof at the close of plaintiffs’ case, we do not believe it can be seriously questioned but what it was at least a question of fact for the jury to say whether Stubbs was authorized by the defendant to make the contract which he did. The fact that the plaintiffs took the order instead of the acceptance is of no importance, if, as claimed, it was a mistake. In any view, this, also, was a question of fact. Both parties, it seems, acted upon the assumption that a contract had actually been made, at least until complaints were made to the defendant by Balfour, Guthrie & Co. that the plaintiffs were selling canned salmon, bought from the defendant, in competition with them in the English market, in violation of an agreement which it had as to the sale of canned salmon in Great Britain, and it was then for the first time that the defendant seems to have entertained the idea that no contract had been made.
The judgment appealed from, therefore, must be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellants to abide event. All concur.