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Ferguson v. Chuck

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 29, 1923
140 N.E. 225 (N.Y. 1923)

Summary

In Ferguson v. Chuck (236 N.Y. 149) the court said: "Of course there is nothing to the point somewhat referred to, although scarcely argued, that defendants canceled this contract after they had collected this installment.

Summary of this case from Rosenthal Co. v. Brilliant Silk Mfg. Co., Inc.

Opinion

Argued May 2, 1923

Decided May 29, 1923

Clarence J. Shearn and Arthur L. Davis for appellants.

Joseph Force Crater, Joseph P. Segal and I. Gainsburg for respondent.


The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the failure of defendants to deliver goods under a contract of sale. The defense is that the defendants were justified in annulling their contract and in refusing to deliver the goods in question by the willful and inexcusable delay of the plaintiff in paying $1,298.60 for a prior installment of goods which had been delivered under the same contract.

The plaintiff was a manufacturer of shirts, having his factory at McKeesport, Pa. Defendants were converters of cotton goods, having their offices in New York city. In November, 1917, the parties entered into a written contract which provided for the sale and delivered by the defendants to the plaintiff of about 75,000 yards of merchandise in convenient installments during April and May, 1918. The contract contained the following provisions:

"Partial deliveries to be paid for at contract rates upon maturity of bills therefor.

"This order is given and accepted subject to a limit of credit determinable at any time by Chuck, Davis Co. (the defendants).

"The acceptance by railroad or other carrier shall constitute delivery."

In accordance with the contract defendants shipped to plaintiff three installments of goods before the one which has led to this controversy. The latter shipment was made under an invoice dated April 8, 1918, and concededly the bill therefor became due June 17, 1918. Under the clause in the contract which has been quoted defendants prior to said last date had insisted that plaintiff's line of credit should be reduced to $4,000 and after some correspondence this seems to have been agreed to. Nevertheless the plaintiff was somewhat delinquent in paying bills for invoices of goods shipped before the one in question.

The payment for the installment of goods under consideration not being paid on June 17 when it became due defendants drew upon plaintiff two drafts for the amount. The first one was drawn June 21st through a bank used by plaintiff at Wheeling, West Virginia, but payment was refused on the ground that plaintiff did not pay his drafts at that bank. The second draft, drawn June 26th upon and through a different bank and of which plaintiff was specially notified by letter, was returned unpaid and without the assignment of any reason for such non-payment so far as appears. Still later the bill remaining unpaid was placed in the hands of a collecting agency and finally payment thereof was obtained or forced 30 or 31 days after it became due. After payment had thus been obtained defendants notified plaintiff that they would deliver no more goods under the contract.

On this appeal the plaintiff urges as a reason and sufficient excuse for his non-payment of defendants' bill that his factory was destroyed by fire on June 3d and his affairs thrown into such confusion as excused his default in payment for the period mentioned. Concededly the plaintiff's factory was destroyed by fire on the date mentioned but so far as concerns defendants' bill for their goods it appears that plaintiff's books were saved which showed a credit to defendants for the installment in question and the date when due; that long before the fire plaintiff received duplicate bills of lading which showed that the goods had been delivered to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company which, under the contract, made a good delivery to him; that on June 21st he made numerous proofs of loss by the fire in question which showed that he had received one package of the goods in question and that the other was still in transit. He claims to have sent out a circular letter after the fire notifying creditors of the fire and asking for duplicate invoices, and receipt of which by the defendants is denied. He did, however, write a letter on June 7th referring to the fire and expressing an intention to take up with defendants other payments about which they had written, and subsequently and on June 17th he did make payment for two other installments of goods, apparently relying upon the same ledger which contained the credit for the installment in question.

Out of these facts under the issues framed by the pleadings two decisive questions emerge. The first is the one whether a failure for thirty days to pay when due a substantial sum for an installment of goods, if willful and inexcusable, was such a breach of plaintiff's obligations as authorized the defendants to refuse to go farther forward with the contract. The second is the one whether the facts of this case did furnish such a justification for plaintiff's default as cleansed it of inexcusable characterstics and put defendants rather than him in the wrong. We think that both of these questions as matter of law must be answered unfavorably to the plaintiff.

The payment due from plaintiff to defendants was a substantial one of several hundred dollars and unquestionably due on a definite date. It had been fixed by the parties with all of the formalities of a written contract and if, as we are now assuming, the plaintiff for a month without excuse or reason ignored his obligation, we do not think that a jury should be permitted to say that such a failure was one of those inconsequential slips or inadvertent defaults which ought to be overlooked in the interest of reasonable and fair mercantile dealings. It is not a matter of bare facts; motives are of consequence and if it be the truth that this default was the result of deliberate purpose or of careless indifference we feel entirely clear that the other party to the contract had a right to decline further to deal with a person thus disregarding his obligations. Therefore, the question becomes one for careful scrutiny whether there was justification or excuse, because it is obvious that in almost every case the character of the default is to be decided by the peculiar circumstances of that case. (Personal Property Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 41], sec. 126.)

As stated, the plaintiff seeks to find the excuse for his shortcomings in the fire which destroyed his factory, but while a general and superficial view of that event and its consequences seems to sustain this excuse that view does not survive when we substitute a careful analysis of the facts for generalities.

Several weeks elapsed between the shipment of the goods of which plaintiff was assured by bills of lading and the fire. Two weeks elapsed between the fire and the date when his indebtedness to defendants became due and during substantially all of this time he had access to his books showing the amount and due date of the indebtedness. By his proofs of fire loss filed four days after this due date he in effect acknowledged receipt of one case of goods and described the other as still in transit. Thus so far as we can see he was amply advised of and fully understood his obligations. He was not left uninformed of defendants' desire that those obligations should be met. The prior correspondence requesting under the provisions of the contract a curtailment of his indebtedness and the two drafts drawn for this installment, one of them reinforced by special notice that it was being drawn, were not mere colorless hints that defendants would be gratified by the payment of their claim. Added to the contractual due date of that indebtedness they were very forceful signs that payment was important to defendants and imperative demands that plaintiff should meet his obligations. They left no opportunity for inadvertent oversight or anticipated indulgence. They certainly made it incumbent on plaintiff as a matter of prudence and fairness at the time to urge upon defendants the consideration of any good excuse for his delay. It casts a significant light upon his present excuses that he did not do this. If we assume upon the pretty unsatisfactory evidence that defendants, although denying it, did receive a copy of his circular letter sent out June 7th after the fire asking his creditors for duplicate invoices, they were entitled to conclude when on June 17th in response to a dunning letter he paid two other invoices that he was quite supplied with the means of determining what he owed and when due, and this view was reinforced by the fact that the excuse for the failure to pay the first dishonored draft was simply and solely that plaintiff did not pay drafts through that bank. So, we are convinced that there was no adequate excuse actually existent, or at the time claimed for plaintiff's default in payment of this installment; that the default was substantial and willful and important to the defendants and that under such conditions plaintiff had no right to insist that defendants should overlook it and go on with the contract. ( Helgar Corp. v. Warner's Features, Inc., 222 N.Y. 449. )

Of course there is nothing to the point somewhat referred to, although scarcely argued, that defendants canceled this contract after they had collected this installment. The installment was due to them and they certainly had a right to collect and receive it. Such acceptance of their due was in no manner a waiver of or inconsistent with a refusal further to deal with the plaintiff.

For the reasons stated we think that the judgments should be reversed and the complaint dismissed, with costs in all courts.

HOGAN, CARDOZO, POUND and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; McLAUGHLIN and CRANE, JJ., dissent.

Judgments reversed, etc.


Summaries of

Ferguson v. Chuck

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 29, 1923
140 N.E. 225 (N.Y. 1923)

In Ferguson v. Chuck (236 N.Y. 149) the court said: "Of course there is nothing to the point somewhat referred to, although scarcely argued, that defendants canceled this contract after they had collected this installment.

Summary of this case from Rosenthal Co. v. Brilliant Silk Mfg. Co., Inc.
Case details for

Ferguson v. Chuck

Case Details

Full title:HERMAN B. FERGUSON, Respondent, v . RAYMOND H. CHUCK et al., Appellants

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: May 29, 1923

Citations

140 N.E. 225 (N.Y. 1923)
140 N.E. 225

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