68 N.Y.S. 781 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The plaintiff, a foreign corporation, sought to-recover in this action the damages sustained by the breach of a contract to sell "German mirror plates” made with the defendants’ co-partners doing business under the firm name of United Bavarian. Looking-Glass Works. The contract in question was dated February 8, 1897, and was as follows:
*782 “It is hereby agreed that, in consideration of W. P. Fuller & Co. buying all their supply of German mirror plates from the United Bavarian Looking-Glass Works for a period of six months from this date, the said United Bavarian Looking-Glass Works agree to the following: To sell delivered f. o. b. New York” certain plain and beveled mirrors at prices named.
The execution of this contract was admitted, and the defendants filled all orders given by the plaintiff up to the 15th of June, 1897. Upon the 15th of June and subsequent days the plaintiff sent to the defendants certain additional orders, which the defendants refused to fill, the last order being dated July 19, 1897; and it is to recover for a failure to fill these orders that this action is brought. The plaintiff’s manager testified as to the giving of these orders; that all of the goods ordered of the defendants had been actually resold by the plaintiff, except a small portion; that these amounts ordered by the plaintiff were for the supply of the plaintiff for the six months subsequent to the date of the contract; that, prior to the time these orders were given, most of the goods ordered from the defendants had been sold, and had to be delivered as soon as received; and that such sales which had been made by the plaintiff were not outside of the ordinary business of the plaintiff’s house. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the difference in the value of the articles ordered and the market price at the time of the failure of the defendants to perform their contract, to which the defendants excepted. There was a general request by the defendants to go to the jury, but no question to be submitted to the jury was specified.
The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint upon two grounds: First, that the plaintiff cannot recover because it has not been shown that this plaintiff, a foreign corporation, has complied with the requirements of law permitting it to do business in this state or to bring an action in this state; and, second, that there was no mutuality in the contract, as the plaintiff was not bound to give an order during the whole six months.
As to the first ground, the illegality of the contract is not pleaded. No such defense is raised in the answer. The statute relied on is section 15 off the stock corporation law (chapter 687 of the Laws of 1892). That statute provides that:
“No foreign, stock corporation, other than a monied corporation, shall do business in this state without having first procured from the secretary of state a certificate that it has complied with all the requirements of law to authorize it to do business in this state. * * * No foreign stock corporation doing business in the state without such certificate shall maintain any action in’ this state upon any contract made by it in this state until it shall have procured such certificate.”
The only penalty for a violation of this provision is that a corporation doing business without such certificate is prohibited from maintaining an action in this state upon a contract made by it in this state until it shah have procured such certificate. The contract is not abrogated or made incapable of enforcement because of a failure to comply with the provisions of the statute. The right of a corporation to maintain an action to enforce such a contract is suspended until such a certificate is procured. The objection to the maintenance of such an action to. enforce a legal cause of action is an
We think the second ground of the motion to dismiss the complaint was equally without merit. The contract signed by both of the .contracting parties provides that:
“It is hereby agreed that, in consideration of W. P. Puller & Co. buying all their supply of German mirror plates from the United Bavarian Looking-Glass Works for a period of six months from this date, the said United Bavarian Looking-Glass Works agree to the following: To sell delivered f. o. b. New York” the articles mentioned.
Thus the contract is that, in consideration of the plaintiff buying all its supplies of the German mirror plates from the defendants, the defendants agree to sell to the plaintiff. The mutual covenant implied in such contract is that the plaintiff will buy and. the defendant will sell, and the law thereby implies an expressed agreement of the plaintiff to buy, as the basis of the agreement of the defendant to sell. The form of the obligation is not material, so long as the intention of the parties can plainly be gathered from the instrument. The phrase "in consideration of the plaintiff buying” clearly implies an agreement of the plaintiff to buy, as a consideration of the promise of the defendant to sell; and thus the cqntract becomes a mutual contract, executory in its nature, but imposing upon the buyer the obligation to buy and the seller the obligation to sell. This question was considered by this court in Baker Transfer Co. v. Merchants’ Refrigerating & Ice Mfg. Co., 1 App. Div. 507, 37 N. Y. Supp. 276, and the determination in that case sustains the rulings of the court in this case.
The material question, however, arises from the refusal of the court to allow the defendants to prove the negotiations and conversations between the plaintiff’s manager and the agent of the defendants prior to and at the time of the execution of this contract. After the plaintiff had rested, the agent who signed this contract on behalf of the defendants was called as a witness, and asked to state what conversation he had with the plaintiff’s manager on February 8,1897, the day the contract was signed. That was objected to on the ground that the defense set up bv the defendants as a second defense does not constitute any defense, or any ground for a reformation of the contract. That objection was sustained, and the defendants excepted. Various other questions were asked, tending to show the negotiation which led up to this contract, and the representations made by the plaintiff’s manager at the time of the execution of the contract, all of which were excluded upon the objection of the plaintiff.
“The plaintiff offered to prove a conversation Between’ Mrnseif and Mr. Shepard, when the contract was presented: to- JMbb amsE before’ execution, in which Mr. Shepard, in reply to an inquiry made By the plaintiff as to the meaning of the word ‘incompatibility’ in the contract, said’ that ‘it meant that he should have the right to discharge you if at any time- you were mssmted to newspaper work or tired of newspaper work, and that is-all’ St meant/ The judge excluded the evidence, and the plaintiff excepted1. The ruling, was proper. The plaintiff, by the evidence offered, sought to- limit tlie meaning of a word in eommon'use, the only indeflniteness' of meaning consisting, io its wide application,”'—and it was held the evidence was not competent..
It was said in Pindar v. Insurance Co.,. 47 N. Y. 117:
“Evidence of surrounding circumstances and’ other parol1 evidence- is, isn some cases, admissible to show the meaning of language employed ira a contract,, or the sense in which it has been used, but never to show the' intent of the parties, as contradistinguished from what the' words express.”'
'See, also, Thomas v. Scott, 127 N. Y. 136, 27 N- E. 961, where this question is discussed; and after an examination of the question the court said that evidence of what was said between the- parties to a valid instrument in writing, either prior or at the time of its execution, cannot be received to contradict its terras. In that ease it was held that where a contract appears on its face to be complete, with mutual obligations to be performed, you can. no more add to or contradict its legal effect by parol stipulations preceding or- accompanying its execution than you can alter it through the same means in any other respect. The evidence of such oral agreement as alleged in this case would not tend to explain what the parties meant by this contract, for that appears on the face of the contract itself, but would introduce a modified and different understanding, which would contradict the written contract, and change it from an absolute contract to furnish the plaintiff with all its supplies for a period of six. months into a contract by which the defendants would furnish, not ill the plaintiff’s supplies for the period, but the amount of such supplies that plaintiff had ordered during a prior period. Such an oral agreement, therefore, would not be one supplementary to the contract as actually made, but would he contradictory thereto; and, as it would not he such evidence as tended to explain an ambiguity or the meaning of some provision in the contract, it is not admissible. Such evidence “is received, where doubt arises on the face of the instrument as to its meaning, not to enable the court to hear what the parties said, but to enable it to understand what they wrote, as they understood it at the time. Such evidence is explanatory, and must be consistent with the terms of the contract.” Thomas v. Scott, supra. We think, therefore, that the evidence was properly excluded,
The defendants insist that the court should have submitted the question of the amount of the plaintiff’s damages to the jury, as the only testimony Ss to the value of the materials at the- time of the purchase was the evidence of an employé of the defendants. There was no request, however, to submit such a question to the jury. No objection seems to have been taken to the testimony offered by the-
We have thus considered all of the questions presented upon this appeal which require notice. We think no error was committed which justified a reversal of the judgment, and it is affirmed, with costs. All'concur.