181 A.D. 3 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
Lead Opinion
By the contract defendant agreed to furnish and deliver f. o. b. dock, New York city, 100,000 individual shelter tents intended for the Serbian government. The action is on a claim assigned by the A. B. Kirschbaum Company which I shall refer to as the assignor.
The theory upon which the action was brought and the relief has been awarded is that the assignor and defendant became mutually and jointly interested in obtaining a contract at a specified price per tent from Panagoulapoulos, hereinafter designated the purchaser, running to the assignor, which was to be performed by defendant at a lower specified price per tent, payable from the moneys to be received by the assignor, so that the profits of each were to be separate and distinct; that while negotiations, in which defendant was cooperating pursuant to the agreement, were pending and nearly consummated between the assignor and purchaser, the defendant secretly took up the negotiations and obtained the contract in its own name, and that, therefore, it should account to the assignor to the extent of the interest the assignor was to receive if the contract had been awarded to it. The defendant appellant contends that no agency, copartnership or joint adventure has been shown and that it was within its rights in taking the contract. It also contends that some of the findings unfavorable to it are not supported by evidence or are against the weight of the evidence, and that in any event they do not sustain the interlocutory judgment.
We have examined the evidence and are of opinion that all findings made by the trial court are amply sustained thereby and that other findings more favorable to plaintiff should have been made; but we think that these made are sufficient to sustain the decree for an accounting and, therefore, do not deem it necessary to make additional findings.
According to the credible evidence in the case, down to the time that negotiations for making the contract with the purchaser were thus secretly taken by the defendant’s representatives out of the hands of the assignor, the defendant had agreed to furnish the tents, with the exception that they were to be hemmed all around instead of on two sides only, for one dollar and seventy-four cents per tent; and the
There was here no agency, strictly speaking, but in a sense the defendant, in so far as it took part in the negotiations between the purchaser and the assignor, was acting in a capacity analogous to that of an agent and owed a duty of the utmost good faith and a duty to refrain from obstructing the negotiations between the assignor and the purchaser; and although defendant was not authorized to negotiate the contract for the assignor it was precluded from acting for itself in such manner as to deprive the assignor from obtaining the contract and became accountable to the plaintiff at its election precisely as an agent would have been accountable on the theory that the contract which the defendant thus negotiated with the purchaser is impressed with a trust in favor of the assignor. (Trice v. Comstock, 121 Fed. Rep. 620; Patterson v. Meyerhofer, 204 N. Y. 96; Merrill v. Sax,
The plaintiff claims on its appeal that defendant should not be allowed the additional cost of hemming the tents all around and of any other items covered by its contract with the purchaser not embraced in the draft contract which defendant was ready and willing to sign with the assignor. I am of opinion that plaintiff is not entitled to a more favorable judgment. The defendant did not agree to furnish the tents, so far as the requirements differ under the contract which it negotiated with the purchaser from the draft contract, for one dollar and seventy-four cents. Upon no theory was the assignor entitled to participate in defendant’s profits for throughout the negotiations defendant and it figured on separate profits. Therefore, to require the defendant to account to the plaintiff on the basis of one dollar and seventy-four cents per tent without any allowance for the additional cost referred to would be to give the plaintiff part of the defendant’s profits; but to require the defendant to account, as the interlocutory judgment does, for the difference between one dollar and seventy-four cents per tent plus such additional costs gives the plaintiff the benefit of the contract which the defendant thus secretly negotiated with the purchaser in violation of its duty to the assignor. That is, I think, the only theory upon which the action can be sustained.
It follows, therefore, that the interlocutory judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., and Smith, J., concurred; Scott and Dowling, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent because I do not consider that any partnership or joint adventure was shown between plaintiff’s assignor and defendant. They were not to share profits or losses. Plaintiff’s assignor seeing an opportunity to sell a quantity of tents to the Serbian government, and having no facilities for manufacturing such tents itself, sought to obtain from defendant a figure at which the latter would agree to manufacture the tents as subcontractor. This was in order to enable plaintiff’s assignor to fix a price for the delivery of the tents to the Serbian government so that it would be assured of a profit. In this profit defendant was to have no share. It was to manufacture the tents at a fixed price which it was to receive in any event, quite irrespective of the profit, if any, plaintiff’s assignor might make. I can see none of the elements of a partnership or joint adventure, in this arrangement. The defendant’s action, as shown by the evidence, was scarcely such as can be considered strictly honorable, but “ neither courts of equity or law sit to enforce mere moral obligations.” (Wood v. Rabe, 96 N. Y. 414, 421.) Therefore, no case was made for an accounting in equity.
Dowling, J., concurred.
Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs.