14 N.Y.S. 155 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1891
About June 8, 1887, the defendant, the Alabama National Bank, having its office in Birmingham, Ala., by its president, gave to the plaintiff’s assignor, the August Gast Bank-Note & Lithographic Company, doing business in St. Louis, Mo., an order to make 50,000 steel-plate drafts, to be delivered and paid for in two lots of 25,000 each,—the first delivery by November 15,1887. This order was given upon the solicitation of a traveling salesman of the lithographic company, and was in writing, and contained a provision that it was given upon the understanding that the president of the
The contract now under consideration is one for work involving a matter of taste and personal preference in the design to be engraved for the drafts for the bank, and the contractor agreed to furnish a design which should be satisfactory to the president. Under the authorities no recovery can be had unless it be shown that the president was satisfied with the design. The appellant does not quarrel with the rule, but claims that the president did not honestly entertain the opinion that the design was unsatisfactory, because he allowed the plaintiff to go on and make alterations, (as I understand the charge,) with the preconceived intention not to approve the design, because he had given the order to other parties; and also contends that the plaintiff should recover because the president had expressed his satisfaction with the proof presented, and had required certain alterations to be made, on complying with which instructions he was bound to accept and the defendants became liable to pay. I think that the rights of the parties were fixed by the transaction as to the third proof submitted on September 8th. That proof was rejected in the letter of September 12th, set out in full above. The rejection held out no encouragement to the bank-note company to continue its efforts. Ho further suggestions for alterations were made. It was a definite rejection of the proof; and, if the company chose to go on after that, and make further efforts, it was at its own risk. The defendant, after such rejections, gave the order to other parties; and it cannot be said that he in bad faith permitted plaintiff’s assignor thereafter to go on with the work. It is claimed that the defendant, in a conversation with the salesman, expressed himself as satisfied with one of the proofs except in one particular,—the taking off the scroll,—and that, having directed this to be done, and thus substituted his judgment for that of the engraver, he cannot be held to say that he was not satisfied, or that the company has failed to perform the contract on its part.