180 Misc. 249 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1942
Plaintiff moves for an order, pursuant to rule 103 of the Rules of Civil Practice, striking out paragraphs 1 and 2 of the defendant’s answer, and for an order, pursuant to rules 103, 104 and 109, striking out the first affirmative defense contained therein. Defendant, by way of counter-motion, seeks: summary judgment.
The complaint alleges that plaintiff was employed under a written contract executed on or about April 21, 1941, which by its terms was to continue for three years or until April 33,1944. The complaint also alleges that defendant employed plaintiff to handle sales of its products to New England, Washington, D. C., and the States of New York and Pennsylvania, and that under the contract plaintiff was to receive a salary of $5,000 per year with an override of two per cent commission on all sales made in the above territory by other salesmen, including the plaintiff. It is further alleged that defendant discharged plaintiff on or about April 21, 3942, without just cause or provocation.
Defendant has interposed an answer containing a first separate and distinct defense alleging that it is a corporation engaged in the manufacture, sale and distribution of laundry machinery and laundry machinery equipment and accessories, and that plaintiff was employed by the defendant as a salesman to sell its products. Further, that on or about April 38, 1942, the Government of the United States issued its General Limitation Order No. L-91 (7 Federal Register, April 21, 2942, p. 2938), which, as revised by amendment issued May 22,1942 (7 Federal Register, May 23, 1942, p. 3853), read in part &s follows:
“ (b) Restrictions on Delivery. Regardless of the terms of any contract of safe or purchase or other commitment, or of any preference rating certificate, no manufacturer, distributor, or other person shall accept an order for, or sell, deliver, or otherwise transfer, and no person shall purchase, receive delivery of, or otherwise acquire, any new commercial laundry or dry cleaning machinery, or tailors’ pressing machinery, of any value, or any of such kinds of rebuilt or reconditioned machinery of a value in excess of $100.00 except as follows: (1) To fill orders for the Army or Navy of the United States, the Army or Navy of Belgium, China, Czechoslovakia, Free France, Greece, Iceland, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia,
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“(d) Prohibition of production of commercial laundry and dry cleaning machinery. (1) Unless otherwise authorized by the Director of Industry Operations, on and after June 1, 1942, no Manufacturer shall produce any Commercial Laundry Machinery, except to fill orders for, and in accordance with, specifications of, the Army or Navy of the United States etc. # * #
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“ (h) Existing contracts. Fulfillment of contracts in violation of this order is prohibited regardless of whether such contracts are entered into before or after the effective date of this order. No person shall be held liable for damages or penalties for default under any contract or order which shall result directly or indirectly from his compliances with the terms of' this order.”
Defendant also alleges that under the terms and provisions of the aforesaid order the manufacture, sale and delivery, and transfer of, laundry machinery and laundry machinery equipment and accessories were prohibited.
No motion is addressed to the second separate defense which alleges a modification of the contract in question.
Plaintiff’s objection to that part of the allegations contained, in paragraphs 1 and 2 of the answer which admit execution of the contract in question, and which “ respectfully asks leave to refer to the original thereof at the time of the trial for the' terms and conditions thereof,” is well taken. These allegations are not good pleading and should be stricken out. (Cohalan v. New York World-Telegram Corp,, 172 Misc. 1062.)
Plaintiff also challenges the sufficiency of the first affirmative defense. It may be stated that the said defense in substance pleads impossibility of performance by reason of governmental
I come now to a consideration of the defendant’s cross motion for summary judgment based upon its defense of impossibility of performance within the purview of the doctrine stated in Mawhinney v. Millbrooh Woolen Mills (supra). In support of its motion defendant points out that the effect of order No. L-91 was to prohibit defendant from manufacturing and selling laundry machinery and plaintiff from selling the same. Plaintiff, on the other hand, categorically denies this to be the fact and alleges that the defendant’s contentions are contradicted by the very language of the order itself and also by the facts to which it refers in its affidavits. Parenthetically, I might state that I am not unmindful of the applicable rule of statutory construction to be applied in construing the governmental regulations here involved, which is set forth in Nash v. Southern Pacific Co. (260 F. 280, at p. 284): “It will readily appear, I think, that this contention of the plaintiff proceeds from a failure to apprehend fully the character and scope of the Federal Control Act, and more particularly the purpose to be subserved by section 10. In the first place, the act, as expressfy declared, is an emergency measure, to meet extraordinary conditions growing out of an actual state of war, and calling for an exertion of the most extreme and drastic powers of government to meet those conditions. It is accordingly to be construed, not with that meticulous nicety which might be dictated by other circumstances, but in a broad spirit of liberality, in keeping with the purpose intended to be accomplished and having in view its emergency character. ’ ’
In the light of such admonition, I am of the opinion that by the terms of the limitation order the sale and delivery of laundry machinery and equipment may be made without express authorization of the Director of Industry Operations to the armies or navies of the United States, Belgium, China, Czechoslovakia, Free France, Greece, Iceland, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Turkey, United Kingdom including its Dominions, Crown Colonies and Protectorates, Yugoslavia, as well as to the Maritime Commission or War Shipping Administration; also to fill
In addition, order L-91 provides that sale and delivery may be made to any private person or corporation or to anyone upon express authorization of the Director of Industry Operations upon form PD-418. In further proof of its claim that the limitation order does not prohibit the manufacture and sale of laundry machinery, plaintiff: asserts that the defendant in- its dealings with only one company, now the Acme Laundry Machinery Company, made sales in excess of $16,000 between April 18, 1942, when the limitation order was enacted, and September 19, 1942; also that this represents only a part of: the known orders of the defendant. Plaintiff further alleges that since the entry of the United States into the war the sales of laundry machinery and equipment to army and navy departments has exceeded by far the sales of such machinery previously made in a year to all civilian industries using such equipment. Plaintiff alleges further that during the time he was in the employ of the defendant it was engaged not only in the sale of new machinery but also used machinery; that he had sold a great deal of used machinery and that the sale of such machinery was not curtailed by the limitation order.
To controvert plaintiff’s averments, defendant alleges that at the present time it is engaged in the business of manufacturing laundry machinery, but that the entire output of its plant is used for the manufacture of such machinery for the various branches of the military service of the United States in accordance with the terms of the limitation order. That the defendant is not manufacturing or selling, nor can it manufacture or sell, any machinery to the general public. Furthermore, that the sales adverted to by plaintiff as having been made were of machinery already in existence at the time of the enactment of the limitation order. That these sales were made pursuant to PD-418 orders issued by the government, and that some of the other sales set forth in plaintiff’s affidavits were made to the United States Government or its agencies.
So much for the allegations contained in the various affidavits.
I am of the view that at best the foregoing controverted issues require a determination upon a trial and may not be disposed of upon a motion of this character. At common law it was well settled that what a party was bound by contract to perform he had to perform or pay damages upon his failure to do so.
This rule is reiterated in the later case of Cameron-Hawn Realty Co. v. City of Albany (207 N. Y. 377). The court said, at pages 381 and 382: “ Tt is a well-settled rule of law that a party must fulfill his contractual obligations. Fraud or mutual mistake, or the fraud of one party and the mistake of the other, or an inadvertence induced by the one party and not negligence on the part of the other, may relieve from an expressed agreement, and an act of God or the law or the interfering or pre
In view of the foregoing, both plaintiff’s motion to strike out the first defense and defendant’s motion for summary judgment are denied. Settle orders on notice.