198 A.D. 788 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The pleadings consist of the complaint and answer. The motion was made and granted on the ground that the complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The complaint shows that on the 3d day of October, 1919, the plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement in writing whereby the plaintiff agreed to purchase of the defendant the apartment house known as 3915 Broadway in the borough of Manhattan, New York, and to pay therefor, as therein provided, $265,000, and pay in addition thereto $9 per ton for the coal on the premises when title passed, which was to be on the first of December thereafter; that it was expressly provided in the contract that the quantity of coal so to be taken over and paid for by the plaintiff was “ to be determined by an appraisal to be made by Farrel & Son; ” that before title was to be closed, on the twenty-fifth of November, Farrel & Son made a survey of the amount of coal supposed to be on the premises and, without measuring the same accurately, roughly estimated the quantity to be one hundred and ninety-seven tons of pea coal and two tons of egg coal; that on the closing of the title a deduction of five tons, as the estimated amount used during the intervening five days, was made, and that with that modification plaintiff paid the defendant according to the estimate made by Farrel & Son; that the plaintiff was induced to accept the appraisal made by Farrel & Son with respect to the quantity of the coal on the defendant’s representation that no survey thereof had been made before; that shortly after the plaintiff came into possession of the premises on the 1st day of December, 1919, he discovered for
Respondent endeavors to hold the judgment on the theory that this was an arbitration by Farrel & Son with respect to the quantity of coal; but plainly it was not. There was no dispute or controversy between the parties with respect to the quantity of coal. The contract obligated plaintiff to pay a specified price per ton for the coal actually left on the premises by the defendant when title passed to the plaintiff. It was doubtless expected that the quantity of coal could be ascertained approximately by Farrel & Son by measurements without actually handling and weighing it, and plainly that was the sole object in providing that the quantity should be determined by an appraisal to be made by Farrel & Son. It was the duty of Farrel & Son to measure the coal, and plainly that was not an arbitration. (Hale v. Handy, 26 N. H. 206.) The case is clearly distinguishable from those such as Molloy v. Village of Briarcliff Manor (145 App. Div. 483) and Sweet v. Morrison (116 N. Y. 19), and analogous cases, on which the respondent relies, in which an engineer is by contract made an arbitrator with respect to controversies arising between
Clarke, P. J., Smith, Merrell and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Determination and judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.