44 N.Y.S. 249 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1897
The defendant authorized the plaintiff to sell 100 kinetoscopes, for which plaintiff was to receive 25 per cent, of the profit after deducting the cost to defendant. The evidence produced by plaintiff is to the effect that he procured a purchaser able and willing to buy the 100 kinetoscopes at $436.25 a piece; that the cost to defendant was $200 for each machine; that the profit to defendant was $236.25, and that the plaintiff’s commission was $59.06 for each machine, or $5,906 for the 100 machines, from which plaintiff deducts some .money belonging to defendant and in plaintiff’s possession, or under his control, which plaintiff applies as part payment of his commissions, and sues defendant for $4,982.69, with interest. The defendant’s evidence is to the effect that before plaintiff had procured any purchaser, or performed his part of the contract, the defendant, in good faith, revoked the authority to sell and terminated the contract; and-defendant also calls in question the responsibility of the purchaser alleged to have been procured by plaintiff. Under the evidence, the jury had but two alternatives, i. e., either to find for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed, or to find for the defendant. Either the plaintiff procured a purchaser able and willing to buy the 100 machines at a price satisfactory to defendant before the termination of the contract, or the contract was in good faith terminated before plaintiff had procured such purchaser. The plaintiff was entitled to his whole claim, or nothing. There could be no recovery on a quantum meruit in this action. The jury brought in a sealed verdict in favor of the plaintiff, but, instead of fixing the amount of the recovery at the sum called for by the evidence, they arbitrarily fixed it at less than a quarter of that sum. Had the plaintiff objected to this verdict, it would clearly have been the duty of the court to refuse to accept the verdict, and to direct the jury to retire again, with instructions that, if they fotind a verdict for the plaintiff, they should find it for the full amount claimed; for while the question as to whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to recover was one of fact for the jury, still, when this was found for the plaintiff, the measure of damages was the amount claimed, and this he was entitled to recover. See Hatch v. Attrill, 118 U. T. 384. But neither party made the request, and the plain
Motion granted on payment by the defendant to plaintiff of the costs of the trial.
Ordered accordingly.