91 N.Y.S. 464 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
■On January 11, 1900, Fisher and the defendant , made an agreement in writing whereby Fisher was to sell and deliver -to" the defendant iron of certain qualities at certain prices, as required by specifications of the defendant. This action is to recover a price -named in the contract for one shipment of 32,537 pounds delivered to the defendant on or .about April 12,1900, and used' by him, less 3,079 pounds returned in July, 1900. The defendant answers that this iron was rejected by him as not .up to the standard 'of, the •contract; that Fisher acquiesced in such rejection and promised to
The appellant relies upon only two errors, disavowing any attack upon the rulings admitting or rejecting testimony or upon the charge as to the burden of proof, or upon-the respondent’s contention as to the effect of defendant’s omission to renew the motion for dismissal at the close' of the case. First, it. is contended that there was error in this instruction to the jury :x “ The 'question for you to decide between these two sets of witnesses is, was this iron what the contract called for? If it was, then the defendant must pay what the price stated in this contract is.”. The learned and able counsel for the appellant says that this instruction was properly excepted to, but he fails to refer to any specific exception and I cannot find one. On the contrary, I read in the colloquial part of the charge that the counsel said: “ Then your Honor did .say this, in which I think you left out something. You said if the iron was ordered and if the defendant received it and kept it he was bound to pay the price agreed upon. The Court: If it were equal to the contract. Mr. Benedict: Your Honor left that out when you first said it. The Court: I think I said it again and again ‘if the iron was the same.’ The jury understood me as meaning that, if the goods were as called for ■ in the contract.” There was neither exception nor objection taken to this statement. Nevertheless I will consider the instruction. The court had first discussed the testimony as to the quality of- the iron delivered in comparison with that ordered. The instruction is susceptible of the construction that if the jury decided that the iron was of a quality called for by the contract the defendant must pay the price named in the contract for such iron. But this did not necessarily follow. For the defendant contended that he had rejected the iron under the contract; that Fisher had accepted that rejection
But the point of the appellant’s contention is different. He insists that the court by this instruction permitted the jury to award the price of the contract for iron of a quality inferior to that required by the specifications of the contract. If, hoAvever, the jury found that the plaintiff delivered this iron ordered under the contract, and the defendant finally accepted it under the contract, the plaintiff was entitled to the contract price for iron of the •kind which the defendant ordered and which the plaintiff shipped to fill that order, irrespective of its actual inferiority. (Brown v. Foster, supra.) But the appellant’s contention is based upon the proposition that his contention that this iron was rejected under the contract, that such rejection was accepted by Fisher, that a second list was sent to Fisher to replace the iron thus condemned, and (if I do not mistake, notwithstanding an allegation in the answer) that it was replaced, is undisputed. He insists that thereupon the order under the contract was fulfilled without regard to this shipment, and that thereafter the court could not permit the jury to assess the value of this inferior iron at the contract price. The proposition of the defendant necessarily is that in vieAV of the alleged “ undisputed ” proof the court Avas not justified in submitting the question of a recovery of the contract price to the jury. Though perhaps I might rest by pointing out that the defendant after all the evidence was in did not renew his motion to dismiss (Hopkins v. Clark, 158
On the other hand, there is evidence that Fisher, while asserting his desire to fulfill his .contract to the .satisfaction of the defendant, maintained that the iron would be “ all right,”’ that some defects were natural in a large shipment and that both defendant’s superintendent and blacksmith had told him that the rolled iron^-two-thirds of the shipmentwas of proper quality and some of the,rest likewise. Although Fisher admits that in the conversation over the telephone the defendant complained and that he finally requested the defendant to try to use the iron and to return the remainder, he denies that either then .or at any time was the question of the price thereof even discussed. Fisher testifies also that sometime thereafter the defendant told him that he had ,used all .of the iron- save about 4,000 pounds which lie wished him to take back and -that he agreed to do so.. It'appears that the letter of May fwenty-fifth was written by the defeii-dant’s superintendent, Eaton,' who gave - as his reason for the statement regarding replacement therein,' “ because we required the iron to go on with the work,” and who also testified that he did not remember whether the defendant told him of the telephonic conversation, ,or whether he said anything about the iron'
Second. Without notice to the defendant, the' plaintiff entered judgment for $810.53, with costs, and $171.40 interest; $810.53 was •the contract price. Thereafter the defendant, asserting the absence •of notice, and his understanding that the entry of judgment was -stayed, moved to set aside the judgment or to reduce it by a deduction of the interest, on the ground that the verdict did not afford it„ At the hearing the counsel read his affidavit that one of the jury-, men had told him that the verdict was a compromise, and that the interest was intentionally excluded. The plaintiff relied upon the •charge of the court. The clerk’s minutes of October 21,1903, show,
But interest was incident , to the award , of. the contract price. (Dana v. Fiedler, 12 N. Y. 40; De Lavallette v. Wendt, 75 id. 579; Peetsch v. Quinn, 7 Misc. Rep. 6, and authorities cited.) In Martin v. Silliman (53 N. Y. 615) the court held that if the plain- ; tiff was entitled to .a sum liquidated and certain, lie had the right to the interest thereon; and the fact that the jury arbitrarily reduced • his claim to the amount of the verdict did not,¡either in law or in equity, affect his right to interest upon the amount actually recovered. The practice in the -case at bar was upheld in Lowenstein v. Lombard, Ayres & Co. (2 App. Div. 610), the court saying that “ the sole question for ns to determine, therefore, is whether or not the - court on .the trial distinctly held as a matter of law that the plain- . tiff was entitled to recover the amount of the damage and interest
The judgment and orders should be affirmed, with costs.
Hirschberg, P. J., Woodward and Hooker, JJ.s concurred.
Judgment and orders affirmed, with costs.