Dugas v. Bashwitz Bros. & Co.

179 A.D. 156 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917

She arm, J.:

In this case, brought to recover commissions upon a contract to supply the Italian government with uniforms, two causes of action are pleaded. In the first, plaintiff alleges an agreement to pay a commission of five per cent upon the purchase price of any goods that the Italian commission might buy or upon any and all contracts or orders that the commission might give which were obtained or procured directly or indirectly through the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff presented an offer on behalf of the defendant to the commission, - which was ready and willing to purchase upon the defendant’s terms as stated in the offer, but that the defendant wrongfully refused to consummate the contract. In the second cause of action, plaintiff alleges that subsequent to the refusal of the defendant to carry out its offer and on or about September 10, 1915, a contract was duly made between the commission and the defendant, together with the H. B. Rosenthal-Ettlinger Company, which contract was procured through the introduction of the plaintiff; that the H. B. Rosenthal-Ettlinger Company was introduced into the transaction to defraud the plaintiff out of his commissions and had only a nominal interest in the contract and that by reason thereof the plaintiff was entitled to the commission upon the amount of said contract.

There is no question but that the plaintiff was defendant’s *158broker and introduced the parties and brought the negotiations to the point of consummation. Price, material and quantity were agreed upon, but the essence of the matter, so far as the commission was concerned, was time of delivery. The defendant had not actually secured or tied up ” the cloth necessary for the manufacture of the uniforms and was sparring for time. The commission insisted upon a definite proposition and on August 30, 1915, the defendant signed and delivered to the plaintiff, for delivery to the commission, a letter stating the price and agreeing to make deliveries at periods therein stated, namely, third week after signing contract 10,000 suits, fourth week after same, 12,000, fifth week 15,000, and sixth week 25,000. This was not satisfactory to the commission and the commission wrote on the letter opposite third week “ 24 Sept.,” opposite fourth week “ 30 Sept.,” opposite fifth week 7 Oct.,” and opposite sixth week 15 Oct.,” and informed the plaintiff that it accepted the proposition with those dates for deliveries. It was expected that the contract would be signed within the next day or two, at least by September third. A formal contract was to be entered into and defendant prepared a proposed contract and submitted it to the commission, but defendant neither signed the contract nor put in the dates insisted on by the commission. The commission continued to insist on specific dates for delivery. The reason for so doing is obvious, for, as defendant was not yet ready to sign either form of contract, a provision fixing delivery a certain number of weeks “ after signing contract ” left the dates for the deliveries entirely uncertain. The commission refused to sign the proposed contract and defendant’s president went away to the country. Owing to this material difference with respect to the dates, which was an essential matter, there cannot be said to have been any meeting of the minds of the parties and the contract was not secured. The first cause of action was, therefore, properly dismissed.

On September 10, 1915, however, a contract was entered into between the parties, the one in which the H. B. Rosenthal-Ettlinger Company was introduced. It was essentially the same contract that had,been agreed upon, except as to the dates, which were specified as October tenth, fifteenth, twen*159tieth and thirty-first. In other words, the commission had withdrawn from its position and accepted a proposal which was identical with defendant’s original proposal, except that it gave defendant two weeks more time on each delivery. The defendant went into said contract, as the evidence shows, on equal partnership basis with the H. B. Rosenthal-Ettlinger Company and performed the contract. There is no evidence warranting an inference that the H. B. Rosenthal-Ettlinger Company’s interest was nominal or that that company was introduced to defraud the plaintiff, but, giving the plaintiff the benefit of the inferences to which he is entitled on this appeal, it is readily to be inferred that the plaintiff was the procuring cause of that order. He was to get a commission if he procured an order that eventuated into a contract; he did get an order and the order eventuated into a contract. It may appear on a new trial that the H. B. Rosenthal-Ettlinger Company or somebody else was instrumental in consummating the contract, but on the case as it now stands, it was error to nonsuit the plaintiff.

The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.

Scott, Dowling, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.

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