279 A.D. 286 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1952
The complaint was dismissed upon the law at the close of plaintiff’s case, upon the ground that plaintiff had failed to prove that it had suffered damages arising from nondelivery of merchandise contracted to be shipped by defendant f.o.b. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
There is no evidence that the market value of these goods exceeded the contract price at point of delivery, viz., on board steamship for export at Rio de Janiero. But there is evidence that other goods of similar nature were not available for export from Brazil to the United States; and no contention has been made that plaintiff’s proofs were deficient in failing to establish lack of an available export market in Brazil.
Plaintiff’s theory is that it may recover special damages, due to a situation resulting from the existence of price control at that time in the United States. Plaintiff is a manufacturer of bathrobes. It did not use in its business the variety of textile which it contracted to buy from defendant. Plaintiff’s business required a kind of domestic cotton piecegoods which it had been accustomed to buy from a corporation in the United States, named Aleo Mills, Inc. (hereafter called “ Aleo ”). The latter kind of material, which plaintiff would manufacture into bathrobes, was in short supply at Office of Price Administration (O. P. A.) ceiling prices. So, also, were imported textiles of the type which defendant agreed to sell to plaintiff in Brazil. Upon this occasion, Aleo was unwilling to sell to plaintiff the quantity of domestic piecegoods which it required, for the reason that to
Without considering other questions, we think that the trial court was right in dismissing the complaint upon the ground that the exchange agreement which plaintiff had made with Aleo was illegal under 0. P. A. regulations then in force. There being no available market for the goods purchased by plaintiff from defendant, plaintiff bases its claim to damage upon “ the loss directly and naturally resulting * * * from the seller’s breach of contract ”. (Personal Property Law, § 148, subd. 2.) Plaintiff could recover against defendant only upon the theory that its failure to obtain the bathrobe material from Aleo was in consequence of defendant’s failure to deliver the Brazilian material to plaintiff. Plaintiff is, therefore, committed to the view that its resale of the Brazilian goods to Aleo was tied into the sale by Aleo to plaintiff of the material for bathrobes. If this exchange agreement between plaintiff and Aleo was illegal, it could not become the foundation of a claim against defendant for special damage (International Spangles Corp. v. Marrow Mfg. Corp., 294 N. Y. 295; Matter of Kramer & Uchitelle, Inc.,
Plaintiff contends that inasmuch as the goods to be exchanged were to be sold respectively at 0. P. A. ceiling prices, there could be no violation of the price fixing regulations. That might have been true under the Maximum Price Begulation under consideration in Kraus & Bros. v. United States (327 U. S. 614) holding that Revised Maximum Price Begulation No. 269 was not broad enough to prevent tie-in sales, unless the extra goods required to be purchased were valueless. The regulation sub judice in the Kraus case did not expressly forbid tying agreements. The mere circumstance that the purchaser did not want the extra articles which he was required to buy if he were to be allowed to purchase the other articles that he did desire, was held in the Kraus case to be insufficient to bring the transaction under the condemnation of that regulation. The United States Supreme Court said, however (p. 622): “ For purposes of this case we must assume that the Administrator legally could include tying agreements and combination sales involving the sale of valuable secondary commodities at their market value among the prohibited evasion devices.”
Maximum Price Regulation No. 118 of the Office of Price Administration was in force at the time of the transaction in suit, respecting “ Cotton Products”, reading as follows: “ The price limitations set forth in this Maximum Price Regulation No. 118 shall not be evaded, whether by direct or indirect methods, in connection with an offer, solicitation, agreement, sale, delivery, purchase or receipt of or relating to cotton products, alone or in conjunction with any other commodity or by way of commission, service, transportation, or other charge, or discount, premium or other privilege, or by tying-agreement or other trade understanding, or otherwise.” (Italics supplied.) (7 Fed. Reg. 3038, 3040.) A similar regulation was construed by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in Anchor Liquor Co. v. United States (158 F. 2d 221) holding that a tie-in sale or combination agreement was prohibited, if the purchaser did not want to buy the extra commodity, notwithstanding that it" was worth the ceiling price at which it was sold. Sullivan v. Porter (160 F. 2d 648) held that no violation of a similar regulation was involved if the purchaser desired both commodities, even though the seller refused to sell the one without the other.
The exchange contract in the case at bar did not require plaintiff to buy any commodity other than the textile which it wanted to manufacture into bathrobes, but plaintiff was
Being either an unwilling buyer or an unwilling seller of an extra commodity, in order to procure the commodity desired, would appear to make the transaction a tying agreement within the meaning of the regulation.
That is sufficient to classify the exchange contract with Aleo as a tying agreement within the meaning of the regulation by the Federal Price Administrator.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Peck, P. J., Dobs and Callahan, JJ., concur; Shientag, J., dissents and votes to reverse in the following memorandum: I dissent and vote to reverse and grant a new trial. The complaint was improperly dismissed. The agreement which plaintiff had made with Aleo Mills, Inc., was not illegal.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.