209 A.D. 540 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
Lead Opinion
This is an action for damages for breach of an alleged contract whereby the defendant agreed to sell to the plaintiff certain canteens and mess kits. The plaintiff alleges non-delivery and claims the difference between the contract and market prices as his damage. The alleged contract was signed by both parties and is as follows:
“ Jos. L. Vieser,
“ 3223 Berks Street, Phila., Pa.
“ To D. S. Bellows * * *
“ Terms Freight * * * <j
“ 100 (-uses Canteens 75 to a case 2.25...... 225.00
“ 100 (-ases Mess Kits 2.25...... 225.00
450.00
“ Deposit........................... 60.00
“ Balance................................ 390.00
“ Received 60 Deposit
“ Balance S/D SDB/L
“ S. BELLOWS JOSEPH L. VIESER.”
The answer contained a general denial of all of the material allegations of the complaint, which includes the making of the contract,, and as a separate and distinct defense sets up that the plaintiff and the defendant made an agreement of a totally different kind, namely, an agreement by which the articles were to be sold at two dollars and twenty-five cents per dozen and not at two dollars and twenty-five cents per case, as appears in the writing. A majority of the Appellate Term has held that the defendant has sufficiently set up in its answer the defense of mutual mistake and that due to the error of the bookkeeper the minds of the parties did not meet on the contract as alleged in the complaint and hence the defense is good. This was the defense which the defendant sought to establish by evidence at the trial, namely, that the items were sold to the plaintiff at two dollars and twenty-five cents per dozen and that the bookkeeper in entering the agreement made the error. That thus no contract as alleged in the complaint ever came into being, the defendant could show. (Hume v. United, States, 132 U. S. 406; Madison v. Benedict, 73 App. Div. 112; Ross v. McCaldin, 195 N. Y. 210; Juilliard v. Chaffee, 92 id. 529.) In Meyer v. Lathrop (73 N. Y. 315) the court, in affirming the parol evidence rule, said with reference to oral testimony showing mutual mistake: “ Such testimony was, however, competent upon a,nother
In addition, the plaintiff testified at length to the negotiations and conversations between the parties leading up to the written contract. The court, over repeated objection and exception, excluded testimony offered on the part of the defendant which contradicted the oral testimony given by the plaintiff, giving for its reason that it would be a violation of the parol evidence rule. The evidence offered op behalf of the defendant was admissible either on the ground that it was in support of the defendant’s defense that no contract came into being by reason of the mistake of the bookkeeper in reducing the agreement to writing or because the plaintiff, by himself giving oral testimony of the negotiations and conversations leading up to and embodied in the written agreement, prevented the plaintiff from relying on the parol evidence rule. The defendant should have been permitted to introduce his version of the negotiations and conversations, not only for the purpose of contradicting this testimony op the part of the plaintiff, but also to show what the true agreement was. In 17 Cyc. 753, it is said: “ Where one party has introduced evidence of the conversations and negotiations leading up to a written agreement, the other party may give evidence as to the same matters, notwithstanding an objection that the evidence offered by him tends to vary or contradict the writing.” (Shaw v. Stone, 1 Cush. 228, 242; Mowry v. Smith, 9 Allen, 67, 68.)
Even without deciding the above questions, the determination of the Appellate Term in granting a new trial will have to be affirmed, since the trial court was in error in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. The request of the defendant to go to the jury on the question of damages should have been granted. The witness Sherman testified on behalf of the plaintiff: “ Q. You say that the fair and reasonable value of that merchandise was $12.50 per case? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. You are the man that agreed to pay $10 a case for these goods? A. Yes, sir. Q. And, notwithstanding that you agreed to pay $10 a case, at that time, you say you heard of other sales at $2.25? A. Yes, they were sold at that time for $2.50 per case.” Since this witness admittedly bought the goods from the plaintiff for ten dollars a case, and had not yet settled with the plaintiff on his uncompleted contract, he was an interested witness and his testimony was for the jury. (Steele v. Hammond, 136 App. Div. 667.) It was also a fair inference from the testimony that the market value of the goods was only the value which this actual
It follows that there was an error upon the trial in directing a verdict and that the determination of the Appellate Term granting a new trial should be affirmed, with costs, and in accordance with the plaintiff’s stipulation judgment absolute is ordered for the defendant.
McAvoy and Mastín, JJ., concur; Glasee, P. J., and Dowling, J., dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
Plaintiff brings suit to recover damages for the breach of an agreement in writing between him and defendant, as follows:
“ Telephone Canal 0948 New Yobk, Mar. —, 192 “ Jos. L. Vieses “ 3223 Berks St.
“ Phila. Pa.
“ To D. S. Bellows “ Jobber and Exporter of “ General Merchandise
“ Entire Stocks, Manufacturing Plants and Surplus Stocks Bought for Cash.
Terms Freight 402 Broadway
“ 100 Cases Canteens 75 to a case 2.25...... 225.00
“ 100 Cases Mess Kits 2.25...... 225.00
“ 450.00
“Deposit............................... 60.00
“Balance............................... 390.00
“S. D. B./L.
“ Received JOSEPH L. VIESER
“ 60 Deposit “ Balance S /D
“ S. BELLOWS ”
The complaint alleges that at the time of making the agreement plaintiff paid defendant the sum of $60 on account of the purchase price, leaving a balance of $390 still due; that such balance was payable upon the delivery of the merchandise; that plaintiff duly demanded the merchandise of the defendant and duly offered and was at all times ready, able and willing to pay defendant the said balance of $390, but defendant in violation of the agreement refused
The testimony offered by plaintiff supported the allegations of his complaint, and showed that the written agreement was drawn by defendant’s bookkeeper after defendant spoke to him; and that defendant asked plaintiff to sign the paper and the defendant signed it-also.
The letters “ S. D.” appearing on the paper were testified to mean “ sight drafts,” and the letters “ B. L.,” bill of lading.
The proof of damage was given by a qualified witness, one Sherman, a dealer in the very goods in question, who swore that the market value on March 23, 1922, was twelve dollars and fifty cents a case, and that he had made a sale at that price. He admitted he had bought them himself as low as fifty-five cents a pound from the government, and that he knew of sales as low as two dollars and fifty cents a case; but he could not get them on the market in March, 1922, for less than twelve dollars and fifty cents a case, and he had bought these very goods in suit from plaintiff at ten dollars a case, having an order himself for their resale at twelve dollars and fifty cents a case. He swore he thought he was getting them cheap when he bought them from plaintiff at ten dollars per case. There was no contradiction of the testimony of this witness.
The answer of the defendant was first a general denial of the allegations of the complaint, except an acknowledgment that plaintiff had paid him the sum of $60. It then set up as a first defense the making of an entirely different agreement between the parties, by which 100 cases of canteens were to be sold at the price of $2.25 per dozen, each case to contain six and one-quarter dozen of canteens, and 100 cases of mess kits at $2.25 per dozen, each case to contain five dozen, making a total for the 200 cases of $2,531.25, on which plaintiff has paid $60 on account, leaving a balance of $2,471.25, which plaintiff has failed to pay, though defendant was ready, willing and able to deliver the merchandise. The defense concludes: “ * * * and that the agreement as made between the parties on said day relating to the sale of said cases of canteens and mess kits was and is as stated in this defense and n,ot as stated in the complaint.”
It thus clearly appears that what defendant was seeking to do by this pleading was to entirely ignore a written agreement of purchase and sale, complete in all its details and signed by both the .parties thereto, and to substitute for it an alleged oral agreement. The contract in suit was clear and unambiguous, no errors appear upon the face thereof, and there was no error or inadvertent mistake
There is no claim of fraud or deceit upon the part of plaintiff in the making of this contract. It was drawn by defendant’s own employee. There is no claim of mutual mistake, and plaintiff stands upon the contract and seeks to enforce its provisions.
The answer sets up no claim of a mistake of any kind in the writing sued on, nor are any facts alleged upon which any court could grant equitable relief by reforming this contract. It simply calmly ignores the written agreement of the parties, sets up a different oral agreement as having been made, and says that was the real contract of the parties. If such a pleading is sufficient to dispose of a written contract, then the unbroken succession of cases upholding the prohibition of parol evidence to vary or contradict a written contract becomes of no further value, and written contracts possess no further vitality. As was said by Mr. Justice Laughlin writing for a unanimous court in Ward v. Union Trust Co. (166 App. Div. 762, 765): “ None of those authorities, however, sustain the contention made in behalf of the respondent that a defendant may admit the execution and validity of a contract in writing and at the same time, without reforming it, show in defense to the action at law thereon, not that there was no agreement at all on a particular subject embraced in the contract, but that the agreement thereon negotiated by the parties was not as evidenced by the writing; and all of the authorities aré, I think, to the contrary. [Born v. Schrenkeisen, 110 N. Y. 55; Studwell v. Bush Co. 206 id. 416; Thomas v. Scutt, 127 id. 133; City of New York v. Matthews, 156 App. Div. 490; Rubenstein v. Radt, 133 id. 57; Johnson v. Johnson, 157 id. 289; Kraus v. Smolen, 46 Misc. Rep. 463.]
“ If the doctrine for which counsel for the respondent contend were to prevail, then in every action at law based on a contract in writing it would be open to the defendant to claim before a jury that certain agreements upon which the minds of the parties met in the preliminary negotiations were through inadvertence or by mistake omitted from the formal contract, and thus contracts, without being reformed, would always be subject to such defenses, and no contract which a jury would consider inequitable or unjust or harsh could ever be enforced. There is no precedent for such
I believe the learned trial judge was right in refusing to receive evidence to contradict or vary the written contract of the parties, and in directing a verdict for plaintiff upon the undisputed facts in the case; and I, therefore, dissent from the affirmance of the détermination of the Appellate Term and vote to reverse the same and to reinstate the judgment of the City Court.
Clarke, P. J., concurs.
Determination affirmed, with costs, and judgment absolute ordered in favor of the defendant, in accordance with plaintiff’s stipulation, dismissing the complaint, with costs.