146 N.E. 618 | NY | 1925
Plaintiff sues for breach of contract, alleging that the defendants undertook for a term of six months to manufacture his material into shirts and blouses for a stated compensation. The defendants admit that there were treaties between the parties looking toward the formation of a contract in the future, but deny that there was more. They say, too, that any promises they made were conditioned upon performance by the plaintiff of a promise on his part to loan them $2,000 in order to enable them to install a plant and set themselves up in business. The trial judge ruled that one of the documents in evidence was as matter of law a contract, and excluded all conversations at the time of the signing or before, though admitting those that followed. He thus held for the plaintiff, except that he left to the jury the assessment of the damages. The Appellate Division ruled that as a matter of law there was no contract, and dismissed the complaint. The plaintiff now appeals. *335
We think enough was proved to justify a finding that treaty and discussion had ripened into contract. The plaintiff was a dealer in shirts and blouses. The defendants held themselves out as able, either then or presently thereafter, to make up the completed garments if supplied with the material. The correspondence starts with a letter of July 2, 1919, in which the plaintiff is informed that the defendants make all grades of shirts, and that if the plaintiff's representative will call they will be pleased to show him samples and make all necessary arrangements. This is followed by their letter of July 11, 1919, in which they state that they have discussed prices with the plaintiff's father, and "have come to an understanding." They then incorporate a list of prices which they say are the prices decided on at the conference. They end by asking the plaintiff, if he finds the conditions satisfactory, to come to them at once. On his coming, they "will sign a contract," and "be ready to start work" for him "at the end of this month." Plaintiff came to the defendants in response to this request, and the result was the preparation of the writing put before us as a contract. It is dated July 14, 1919. It begins by repeating the list of prices offered in the letter. Having thus confirmed the schedule, it states these new provisions: "All prices are made for a period of six (6) months, week commencing Aug. 1, 1919, and terminating week ending Feb. 1, 1920, after which time they will be subject to change. It is understood that not less than 300 doz. per week should be sent in by either party. It is understood that we pay freight only on the work sent out from here, namely, Lehighton or Mauch Chunk. No extra charge for button holes in facing sleeves. Plain sleeves less .12 per doz. Bills must be paid upon receipt of B/L." The writing is subscribed both by plaintiff and by defendants.
We cannot say as matter of law that there is here, not a contract, but only the indefinite and fragmentary *336
memorandum of a contract to be made thereafter (Ellis v.Miller,
If there was error in the ruling of the Appellate Division that the complaint should be dismissed, there was error also in the ruling of the trial judge whereby the defendants were precluded from showing forth the transaction in all its length and breadth. The defendants say that in July, 1919, they were still without a plant and that their situation was known to the plaintiff, though this he denies. They contend, and tried to prove, that the writing was delivered upon a condition whereby it was to have no existence as a contract unless or until the *337
plaintiff made a loan of $2,000 to supply them with factory and machinery. They contend also, and tried to prove, that by a further condition the writing was to be ineffective until embodied in a formal contract which was to embrace the terms set down and others. The questions and offers of proof were not as precise as they might well have been, but they were sufficient to make the defendants' position reasonably apparent. Upon the new trial which is necessary, evidence will be admissible that by force of a condition attached to the delivery the writing was not to come into being as a contract except upon the making of the stipulated loan (Grannis v. Stevens,
The judgment of the Appellate Division in so far as it dismisses the complaint should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur; McLAUGHLIN, J., absent.
Judgment accordingly. *338