103 A.D. 316 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
Action to recover damages for the breach of a contract. The complaint alleges that on or about the 6th of December, 1899, the plaintiff sold to the defendant and' the defendant purchased from the plaintiff 2,000 tons of No. 2 Sloss iron, to he delivered^ at the pier of the defendant in the city of New York on or before July 1, 1900, and for which it agreed to pay $45,500; that the plaintiff, within the time specified in the contract, offered to deliver the iron, which the defendant refused to accept, and thereupon it elected to treat the same as its own property ; that the market value of the iron at the place of delivery on July 1, 1900, was $39,500, and by reason of the defendant’s refusal to accept the same plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $6,000, for which judgment was demanded.
The answer was substantially a general denial. At the trial the only question seriously litigated was whether the plaintiff had, within the time specified in the contract, offered to deliver the iron to the defendant. At the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant and ordered that plaintiff’s exceptions be heard in the first instance at the Appellate Division.
I am of the opinion that plaintiff’s exceptions to the direction of the verdict must be sustained. At the conclusion of the trial, upon all the evidence, a question of fact was presented which should have been submitted to the jury, as to whether the plaintiff had offered to deliver the iron and same had been refused by defendant. It appeared that the plaintiff had another contract, which was to be completed in May, 1900, for delivery to the defendant of the same kind of iron, and that the defendant, notwithstanding the iron was offered from time to time, did not accept all of it until November,
It also appeared that iron, at the time the contract was made, was worth twenty-two dollars and seventy-five cents a ton, and between that time and the 1st of July, 1900, the price dropped to between eighteen dollars and nineteen dollars a ton.
Criticism is made of the proof establishing plaintiff’s damage, but upon this branch of the case it is sufficient to say there was enough evidence to go to the jury, and had the jury found the other ques
It follows, therefore, that the exceptions must be sustained and a new trial ordered, with costs to the plaintiff to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Exceptions sustained, new trial ordered, costs to plaintiff to abide event.