Opinion
June 16, 1926.
Gibbons Pottle, for the plaintiff.
Falk, Phillips Schlenker [ Frederic R. Twelvetrees of counsel], for the defendant.
Plaintiff sues to recover damages for the breach of a contract existing, as he claims, between him and the defendant. The defendant denies liability on the ground it is not a party to the contract and that there is no privity of contract between the plaintiff and defendant. The case was tried before the court and a jury. At the close of the evidence it was stipulated that the jury be discharged, and the questions of law and fact be determined by the court.
The defendant is a domestic corporation organized under the laws of this State, having its place of business in the city of Buffalo, N Y, and is engaged in the business of dealing in automobiles. On January 17, 1924, it entered into a contract with the Studebaker Corporation of America to purchase, sell and deal in the cars manufactured by the Studebaker Corporation. It was provided in this contract that when the word "company" was used it referred to the Studebaker Corporation of America, and that when the word "dealer" was used it referred to the defendant.
This contract, among other things, provides:
" Infringement of Territory. — Dealer agrees to solicit no trade nor sell Studebaker Automobiles to persons residing in any incorporated village, town or city in which is located a place of business of a regularly appointed Studebaker dealer at the time of said sale, except that should said persons come unsolicited to Dealer's place of business to buy Automobiles off the floor for immediate delivery, Dealer may sell such persons, but in every such case Dealer must pay the Studebaker dealer located in the incorporated village, town or city in which the customer resides, 10% of the list price at which the Automobile was purchased from Company f.o.b. Factory. * * * It is understood and agreed that this paragraph shall be construed as an agreement between Dealer and all other Studebaker dealers who have signed a similar agreement and that nothing herein contained shall be construed as a liability on the part of Company to Dealer for territorial infringement by any other dealer." (¶ 20.)
It was further provided such contract should supersede all former agreements between the parties and "should become effective as upon the 2nd day of January, 1924, and expire on December 31, 1924," and by its terms granted to the defendant the exclusive right to purchase automobiles from the company for resale within the city of Buffalo and adjacent territory, all of which being within the State of New York and designated therein as "dealer's territory."
On February 18, 1924, the plaintiff entered into a contract with the Studebaker Corporation of America containing the identical provisions quoted or recited herein from the defendant's contract with the company, except that the "dealer's territory" described in the plaintiff's contract was the city of Ridgway, Penn.
Subsequent to the execution of said contracts between the company and the plaintiff and between the company and the defendant, respectively, and during the lifetime of the same, the defendant sold a Studebaker sedan car to one F.C. Smith of Ridgway, Penn., and sold a Studebaker chassis to one L.G. Hall of Ridgway, Penn. The list price in 1924 of the sedan sold to Smith was $2,685, and that of the chassis sold to Hall was $1,450. Plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the breach of the contract.
The question presented here is whether the contract between the company and the defendant is one on which the plaintiff may maintain an action against the defendant for a breach thereof, and I am of the opinion it must be answered in the affirmative.
The defendant and plaintiff here each expressly agreed that the provisions of paragraph 20 of the contract "shall be construed as an agreement between" him and "all other dealers who have signed a similar agreement." There was a good and valid consideration moving to both parties to these agreements, viz., the agreement of each not to solicit trade in the other's territory. While these contracts as a whole were between the company and the dealer, the provisions of paragraph 20 of the contract, under the conditions here, were agreements between the dealers themselves and in this case were between the plaintiff and the defendant, and, therefore, the plaintiff has a right to sue the defendant direct. Furthermore, when the defendant signed its contract with the company, under the circumstances it made the company its agent to secure similar agreements from other dealers. The same was true of the plaintiff.
Defendant's contract is dated January 17, 1924, and plaintiff's is dated February 18, 1924. Because of the difference in the dates, defendant claims the contract is unenforcible because not made concurrently with that of the plaintiff's.
I do not think the principle of law invoked is applicable here. The fact that the particular person who is to benefit from the promise is not known when the promise is made, is immaterial. ( Traver v. Snyder, 35 Misc. 261, affg. 34 id. 406; Riordan v. First Presbyterian Church, 6 id. 84; Coster v. Mayor, 43 N.Y. 399.) He may be one of a class of persons, if the class is sufficiently described or designated. ( Burton v. Larkin, 36 Kan. 246; Linz v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 111 Wis. 198.) The fact that the person for whose benefit a promise may inure is uncertain at the time it is made, and that it is dependent on a contingency, will not deprive the person who afterward establishes his claim to be the beneficiary of the promise of the right to recover. ( Whitehead v. Burgess, 61 N.J.L. 75; Connor Co. v. AEtna Indem. Co., 136 Wis. 13; Fanning v. Murphy, 126 id. 538.) The party benefited need not have known of the contract at the time it was made if he afterwards adopted it. ( Beattie Mfg. Co. v. Clark, 208 Mo. 89; Crone v. Stinde, 156 id. 262; McDonald v. Finseth, 32 N.D. 400.)
Plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to recover ten per cent of the sum of the list prices of both cars, amounting to $413.50, with interest.
Prepare decision accordingly.