244 A.D. 6 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1935
Plaintiff brings this action to recover for goods sold and delivered. The underlying transaction involves two orders given by defendant Falk in October, 1929, on behalf of the Republican-Fusion committee, for banners to be put on automobiles
The Appellate Term ordered a new trial stating that numerous issues other than the individual pledge of credit by the defendants should have been left to the jury. No requests involving these issues were made to the learned trial justice and there was no evidence to support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff on any of them.
Plaintiff’s president, one Lee, conceded that he had solicited orders from defendant Falk at Fusion headquarters. He testified as follows: “ I asked Mr. Falk if he was giving the orders for the printing this year of the Republican-Fusion Committee. He said he was. I said, ‘ How about getting some orders? ’ He said, ‘ What are your prices? ’ I submitted prices; and he told me he would let me know.” Lee, furthermore, acknowledged that he had dealt with Falk in prior campaigns managed by Falk and that he occasionally had to wait to be paid until contributions came in after election. He conceded that Falk had never had any personal dealings with him. The record discloses that bills were submitted and claims were made to the Fusion committee, that the committee acknowledged, ratified and adopted these orders which had been given by Falk, and used the banners for campaign purposes. The committee acknowledged the indebtedness and reported it after the election as a liability. Lee never made any claims personally against these men at the time that the transaction occurred. It is manifest from his testimony that he extended credit to the committee as such. The most that can be said against these defendants is that the budget for the campaign which they arranged was too ambitious in view of the later failure to receive contributions.
Under the decided cases in this State, we think that there is no evidence here to support a judgment against either the committee
We think, moreover, that there is no distinction between such members of the committee as actually ordered the goods expecting to pay out of a fund that was to be contingently raised and members of the committee who sat idly by while others gave the orders. In McCabe v. Goodfellow (supra) the situation presented was one of a transitory organization representing what the Court of Appeals called a “ spasmodic moral movement ” which gave rise to an organization that was necessarily transitory in its nature. The court said (1) that the circumstances made it improbable that the people who joined it ever intended to authorize the transaction of business upon their individual credit, and (2) that since the resulting organization was not in any sense a partnership, the liability of the members must be proved by the person asserting it. None would be implied by the mere fact of the existence of the association. It was pointed out in the opinion that there is a plain distinction between associations formed for the purpose of pecuniary profit and those formed for other objects. The holding was that the plaintiff, who was one of the members of the organization, must have clearly understood that his compensation was to be raised by funds voluntarily contributed for that purpose and placed at the disposal of the committee and that the committee did not intend that there should be any debts contracted in excess of those funds. The record in the case at bar establishes beyond dispute that Lee contracted with as much knowledge of the situation as was possessed by the plaintiff in McCabe v. Goodfellow (supra). To the same effect, see Hale v. Hirsch (205 App. Div. 308) and Siff v. Forbes (135 id. 39).
Martin, P. J., Merrell, Glennon and Untermyer, JJ., concur.
Determination reversed and judgments of the City Court affirmed, with costs to the appellants in this court and in the Appellate Term.