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Denzer v. Grewen

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jul 13, 1909
133 App. Div. 706 (N.Y. App. Div. 1909)

Opinion

July 13, 1909.

Fred. Linus Carroll, for the appellants.

Joseph M. Proskauer [ Abram I. Elkus with him on the brief], for the respondents.


The complaint sets forth two causes of action in separate counts. The first is to recover the sum of $1,729.01, with interest, for a breach of a contract made between the parties on the 22d day of August, 1907, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to sell and deliver to the defendants, for the consideration therein expressed, four cases of peach bloom black taffeta goods, and defendants agreed to purchase the same, which it is alleged the defendants violated in that before the goods were shipped they gave notice to the plaintiffs that they would not accept the goods, and refused a tender of delivery thereof and gave notice that they canceled the contract; and it is further alleged that thereafter and on or about the 16th day of December, 1907, the defendants again promised to accept and pay for the goods and to supply plaintiffs with a cut for a particular label to be used on the goods, which the defendants failed to do, and thereafter refused a tender of delivery of the goods duly made by the plaintiffs, whereupon the plaintiffs stored the goods for the account of the defendants and gave them due notice thereof, and have since held the goods subject to the order of the defendants. The second count is for damages for a breach of a contract made on the 28th day of May, 1907, by which the defendants agreed to accept and pay for ten cases of frou frou taffeta, one case to be delivered every ten days, commencing with October tenth that year, under which, it is alleged, plaintiffs delivered one case of goods and thereafter exchanged it for another shipped on the 19th day of October, 1907, which defendants received and accepted but failed to pay for and requested plaintiffs on said last mentioned day not to ship any more goods until further notice, which has never been given, notwithstanding the fact that plaintiffs repeatedly requested shipping instructions from the defendants for the balance of the goods, and on or about the 22d day of October, 1907, plaintiffs duly tendered the delivery of the entire balance of the goods, which tender was met with a notice by the defendants canceling the contract, whereupon plaintiffs stored and held the goods in the manner the other goods were stored as herein stated.

It appears without dispute that the plaintiffs were and are copartners as wholesale dealers in drygoods in the borough of Manhattan, New York. The defendants allege in their answer that prior to the time of making the contract mentioned in the first count of the complaint, they purchased of the plaintiffs a quantity of peach bloom taffeta from samples exhibited to them by the plaintiffs, which represented sound and merchantable goods, suitable for the manufacture of skirts, and which the plaintiffs agreed should be equal to said samples; that the goods shipped by the plaintiffs were greatly inferior in quality to the sample; that the contract upon which the first cause of action is based was negotiated with the defendants at their place of business in Johnstown, N.Y., by a traveling sales agent of the plaintiffs, and that the contract to purchase four additional cases of peach bloom black taffeta was conditioned upon the plaintiffs replacing goods sent on the prior order, which the defendants claimed were not equal to the sample by which they were purchased, with goods equal to the sample; that thereafter the plaintiffs shipped goods in attempted fulfillment of said agreement with respect to the prior order, which were not equal to the sample, but were inferior thereto in color, shade and finish, whereupon the defendants canceled the order. With respect to the second count of the complaint the answer of the defendants is to the effect that the goods were sold to them at Johnstown by a traveling salesman in the employ of the plaintiffs by sample, and on the express agreement that the goods to be shipped would be equal to the sample in every respect; that the first case shipped was found, on examination after its receipt by the defendants, to be inferior to the samples, and not in accordance with the agreement, and the defendants thereupon reshipped the same to the plaintiffs; that the second and third cases of goods shipped by the defendants pursuant to the contract set up in the second count of the complaint were received and accepted by the defendants in reliance upon the prior agreement that they should be equal to the sample, which agreement the defendants claim was a warranty, and the defendants relying upon the alleged warranty, used part of the third case so shipped, but that thereafter these goods were found not to be in accordance with the sample, and to be of an inferior quality, and unfit for use in the defendants' business, for the reason that they were coarser in quality and of rotten or unsound and imperfect fabric or materials, and were wholly unfit for use in the manufacture of skirts, and of no value therefor; that the defendants have paid for the amount of these goods used and returned the balance, which the plaintiffs received and accepted, and that, upon discovering that the goods were not in accordance with the samples, the defendants duly notified the plaintiffs of that fact, and on account thereof canceled the contract, and gave notice that they would not receive any further shipments from the plaintiffs.

The defendants also pleaded a counterclaim for damages caused by the plaintiffs' breach of the contract sued upon in the second count of the complaint.

This is not a case where the contract for the sale of the goods was negotiated in the county of the residence of the vendor. The plaintiffs sent their agent to the defendants' place of business to solicit these orders, and the orders were negotiated there unconditionally. The mere fact that the plaintiffs, on receiving the order from their salesman, wrote the defendants confirming the order does not show that the contract was made in New York. The contract is silent with respect to the place of delivery, but the defendants were manufacturing skirts at Johnstown, N.Y., and that was, therefore, the place of delivery. The principal controversy arises over the terms of the contracts and the quality of goods received by the defendants under these contracts or under the prior contract. In view of these facts, the moving papers sufficiently show that the convenience of witnesses and the ends of justice will be subserved by changing the place of trial to the county of Fulton.

It follows that the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion granted, with ten dollars costs.

INGRAHAM, McLAUGHLIN, CLARKE and HOUGHTON, JJ., concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.


Summaries of

Denzer v. Grewen

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jul 13, 1909
133 App. Div. 706 (N.Y. App. Div. 1909)
Case details for

Denzer v. Grewen

Case Details

Full title:THEODORE R. DENZER and JOSEPH NATHAN, Respondents, v . JOHN A. GREWEN and…

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department

Date published: Jul 13, 1909

Citations

133 App. Div. 706 (N.Y. App. Div. 1909)
118 N.Y.S. 230

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