W. R. Grace & Co. v. Nagle

275 F. 343 | 2d Cir. | 1921

HOUGH, Circuit Judge.

This action is to recover a balance due upon an agreement between the litigants correctly described by the trial judge as one partly of barter and partly of sale.

Nagle is a manufacturer of steel plates—that is, he “rolls steel plates from steel slabs”—and he specializes in that branch of industry. Grace & Co., in the summer of 1917, had many tons of “slabs” which they wished to have turned into “plates,” apparently for export.’ Thereupon an admitted arrangement was made between the parties, by which Grace shipped to Nagle slabs at one price, it being agreed that Nagle would convert them as ordered into plates, and bill the plate? to Grace at another price. Under this admitted agreement some 600 tons of slabs were turned into plates, and there remained in Nagle’s possession some extra slabs.

Then followed a lengthened correspondence between the parties as to whether and at what price about 400 more tons of slabs would be taken by Nagle, and at what price Nagle would sell the material back to Grace after he had turned it into plates of the shape and size required from time to time by Grace.

In result Grace shipped to Nagle all the 400 tons of slabs, but never gave directions for the making therefrom of more than about 76 tons of plates, and ultimately refused to give any such directions. This action was brought by Nagle alleging that a contract had been made by which said 400 tons of slabs were to become plates, and that Grace had broken the contract, in that he “neglected and refused to furnish sped*345Ecations” for the manufacture of all the material except 76 tons, although Nagle was “ready and willing to mamifacl ure the same.”

if any contract between these parlies was ever' made, it is to be spelled out of a lengthened correspondence; them was substantially no other evidence before the court.

At the close of the testimony both parties moved for a verdict, which was awarded to the plaintiff below.

'['he 'points here argued are: (1) That the parlies “never' entered into an express contract in writing, complete in ils essential elements”; (2) the contract as spelled oui from the correspondence, of the parties is insufficient under the statute of frauds; (31 plaintiffs damages were iuconecily assessed.

¡[2, 2] Thai there cannot be selected from among the lei tecs and 1 degrams in evidence any7 one document that can he labeled the contract 'beiv/een the parties Is true enough. Bui ibis is immaterial. Whether the paper writings introduced evidence a roidrart complete hi it;. es~ senliaiu was n question of fact, in ike serse oí lut'emiice from admitted or vuiconfradictal events; and that (when, both parties moved for a direction) the resolution of this fact inqüñy was for the count Is a. cutter too well settled to require dirtio». We are of opinion that the court below drew the correct inference, hut certainly no error of law v/ss committed in declaring that these writings constituted a coulract.

¡3] Assuming now that '¡here was a written contract complete in all essentials, there is no rnedt, in th;: contention that the statute of frauds was not complied with. Tht applicable statute, was that of New York (Personal Property Law ¡Consol. Laws, e. 41 j § 85), and that statute is either satisfied or avoided (it mokes no difference which word is used) if the buyer “accepts part of iLe goods or chose:; in action so cuntí.acted to be sold,” or if he “give:-; something in earn ;st i.o i"b:d the contract, or in part payment.” Than.-: is no sort of doubt that Grace made a part payment for the plates by clsdivering -100 ions of slabs, and it is equally certain tisat Groce accepted iTotu Nagle 76 tons of plates made out of some of those slabs. 'fids was enough.

The objection to the method oí assessing damages is that the court below allowed to plaintiff the diil’evence between 1he coni reel price and market price of plates, whereas it is contended that ¡he award should have been of the difference (if any) between the cost of production and the coni r;ict price.

Li] The argument rests on such cases as Hinckley v. Pittsburgh, etc. Co.. 121 U. S. 264, 7 Sup. Ct., 875, 30 L. Ed. 967, and Kingman v. Western, etc., Co., 92 Fed. 486, 34 C. C. A. 489. ]o all such cases the contract was for the making by ¡lie vendor of a peculiar or especial kind of goods for which it could not be said that there was any market value except such as was produced by the efforts oi the vendor alone. Linder such circumstances it is plainly dangerous, and usually unjust, to let the vendor esvablish his own market; hence the ruling.

Jin this case the slabs were to be made into plates of such sizes as should be directed, but the evidence is clear and uucontradieted, that all the contemplated sizes were articles widely dealt in in the open market and quoted from day to clay in trade publications of authority.

*346Under such circumstances the rule adopted by the court below was correct, and is indeed expressed in Personal Property Law of New York, § 145, which declares that “in the absence of special circumstances, showing proximate damage of a greater amount, the difference between the contract price and the market price” is the normal measure of damage.

There were no special circumstances here, the contract was for a standard article, and the judgment below is affirmed, with costs.

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