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Flower City Plant Food Co. v. Roberts

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Third Department
Mar 1, 1903
81 App. Div. 249 (N.Y. App. Div. 1903)

Opinion

March Term, 1903.

Daniel J. Finn, for the appellant.

T.W. McArthur, for the respondent.



The defendant declines to pay for these goods on the ground that they were not delivered and received under a contract of purchase and sale, but under what his counsel, in his points upon this appeal, terms a "conditional sale, or rather a consignment;" and to sustain that theory he insists that the statement indorsed on the back of the copy left with him by the agent was a part of the contract which he made with the plaintiff.

The paper which he signed begins with the following statement: "Positively no Goods on Consignment." A short distance below are printed the terms of payment and the agreement that this order shall not be subject to countermand. Immediately over the place where he was required to sign, and so that it was in plain view and necessarily became a part of the contract, was printed this statement: "Our agents are not allowed to vary from printed terms of this contract." Immediately under the defendant's signature was a printed statement for the agent to sign, and which he did sign in this case, viz.: "I guarantee this order to be sold according to contract."

There was, therefore, over the signature of the defendant a complete contract that, if the plaintiff would send him the goods therein named, he would pay the prices therein stated at the expiration of 120 days, less five per cent if paid in 10 days. There was also his further agreement that he should not be at liberty to countermand the order when once delivered to the agent, and also, in substance, that the agent had no authority to make any other or different terms, and particularly that he had none to let him have any goods on consignment.

Such was the contract signed by the defendant, and such was the only one which he delivered to the agent, and under which the plaintiff acted when it shipped the goods. The indorsement on the copy left with the defendant, if operative, is a clear nullification of the contract so signed. Instead of being a purchase and sale, upon the terms therein specified, it is a mere consignment of the goods to the defendant, to be sold for the plaintiff. At least, such is the clear effect of it; and I am at a loss to understand upon what theory it can be claimed to be a part of the contract with the plaintiff. Certainly, in the face of the provisions in the contract which the defendant signed, he had no right to assume that Baker acted for the plaintiff in thus varying the terms of such contract. He had direct notice that Baker's authority to act for the plaintiff was limited to the terms printed in the order which he was asked to sign. If he was not willing to contract with the plaintiff upon those terms, he could not contract with it at all through Baker; and when he signed and permitted Baker to send to the plaintiff that printed order, he must be deemed to have contracted with the plaintiff to that extent and no more. Whatever was his purpose in signing such a contract with the plaintiff, and then receiving from Baker an entirely different one, it is not important to determine. But it is clear that he had no right to consider the paper that he received from Baker as binding upon the plaintiff, or as being any part of the contract he had made with it; and, in my opinion, as matter of law, he cannot be allowed to plead that paper as a defense to the contract which he in fact did make. He was not deceived by the agent. There is no proof that any representation whatever was made to him, and indeed, in the face of the writing he signed, no representation whatever could have deceived him. The paper which he did sign was not accompanied by any such modifying agreement, and by it the plaintiff evidently was the party deceived. The defendant does not even claim that he supposed the modifying contract was indorsed on the one he signed. He seems to have made a clear contract with the plaintiff to purchase the goods in question, at the prices and upon the terms therein stated; and the collateral agreement made with Baker, but not with the plaintiff, is insufficient to change it. The plaintiff should have recovered upon that contract, and, therefore, the judgment for the defendant should be reversed.

Moreover, concede that the indorsement made by Baker was binding upon the plaintiff, on the defendant's own claim he was liable to the plaintiff for the sum of one dollar and forty-nine cents, being the value of such of the goods received as he had sold within the four months. That amount, under the terms of the contract, as he claims it to have been, was due and owing to plaintiff. This judgment is a bar to its ever recovering that amount. Evidently it is erroneous in that respect, and for that further reason it must be reversed. It is said that defendant has always been ready to pay that amount. If so, he should have offered upon the trial that judgment go against him for that amount. We cannot sustain a judgment against plaintiff that clearly should have been in his favor.

The judgment of the justice and of the County Court must be reversed, with costs in both courts and of this appeal.

All concurred.

Judgment of County Court and of Justice's Court reversed, with costs in both courts and of this appeal.


Summaries of

Flower City Plant Food Co. v. Roberts

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Third Department
Mar 1, 1903
81 App. Div. 249 (N.Y. App. Div. 1903)
Case details for

Flower City Plant Food Co. v. Roberts

Case Details

Full title:FLOWER CITY PLANT FOOD COMPANY, Appellant, v . GEORGE ROBERTS, Respondent

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

Date published: Mar 1, 1903

Citations

81 App. Div. 249 (N.Y. App. Div. 1903)
80 N.Y.S. 1060

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