The pleadings show a written contract, dated April 10, 1919, by which the plaintiff agrees to buy and the defendant to sell two hundred piecеs of tricotine at $3.02§ per yard, delivery to be completed by June 1, 1919. The plaintiff is given the “ privilege * * * to confirm more of the above if M. Lurie Woolen Company [the defendant] can get mоre.” The two hundred pieces were delivered and paid fоr. The plaintiff, exercising its option, demanded as much more оf the cloth as defendant could procure. The defendаnt confirmed the exercise of the option, and deliverеd sixteen additional pieces with the *114 statement that it could procure no more. In fact, it had procured five hundred pieces, which it withheld. The plaintiff suffered damage for which judgment is demanded..
We find no lack of consideration for the concession of an option. The privilege to order more is coupled with the promise and obligation to accept а stated minimum (1 Williston on Contracts, secs. 44, 140).
Schlegel Mfg. Co.
v.
Cooper’s Glue Factory
(
The defendant, then, is bound, unless its promise is to be ignored as meaningless. Rejection on that ground is аt best a last resort
(Matter of Buechner,
*115
A former judgment, stated in the answеr and admitted in the reply, is pleaded as a bar. We think it fails of that effect. The former judgment was oh demurrer. The defects in the first pleading have been corrected in the second
(Gould
v.
Evansville & C. R. R. Co.,
The order of the Appellate Divisiоn should be reversed, and that of the Special Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
His cock, Ch. J., Hogan, Pound, McLaughlin and Andrews, JJ., concur; Crane, J., dissents.
Ordered accordingly.
