Case ID: ad_100/html/0019-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Williams, J.: McLennan, P. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Fisher Textile Company, Respondent, v. Edward N. Perkins and Harry A. Van Bergen, Appellants.
    
      Action by one of .three parties of the first part to a contract, against the third parties thereto—where the terms of the contract are such, in form, as to signify a joint interest in the parties of the first parrt, it must be alleged and proved to be several.
    
    Where the language of a contract, made between three parties of the first part, one party of the second part and two parties of the third part, is such as in form to signify a joint and not a several interest in the three parties of the first part, one of such parties of the first part cannot, without joining with him the other parties of the first part, maintain an action upon the contract against the parties of the third part thereto unless he alleges and proves that, notwithstanding the language of the contract, the nature of the interests of the three parties of the first part in the contract was several and not joint.
    When the complaint in such an action does not show that the interests of the parties of the first part in the contract were several and not joint, considered. McLennan, P. J., and Stover, j., dissented.
    Appeal by the defendants, Edward N. Perkins and another, from an interlocutory judgment of the Supreme Court, in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county-of Oneida on the 9th day of March, 1904, upon the decision of the court, rendered after a trial at the Oneida Special Term, overruling the defendants’ demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint.
    
      Arthur Mayer and Sholes, Ferris & Foley, for the appellants.
    
      J. DePeyster Lynch, for the respondent.
   Williams, J.:

The judgment should be reversed, with costs, and the demurrer sustained, with costs, with leave to plaintiff to plead over upon payment of such costs within ten days after service of a copy of this decision and the taxation of the costs.

The important question raised by the demurrer was whether there was a defect of parties plaintiff in the action.

The action was upon a contract in writing, a copy of which was annexed to the complaint. There were three parties of the first part, one party of the second part and two parties of the third part to the contract. One of the parties .of the first part brought this action against the parties of the third part, and the defendants insist, hy their demurrer, that the other two parties of the first part' were necessary parties plaintiff in the action.

The two parties of the first part, not made plaintiffs, are by the agreement styled, £< The Sealback Underwear Company ” and “ The Fisher Knit Goods Company.” There is no statement in the agreement nor allegation in the complaint as to these two concerns, how they were organized, except that they are corporations,' the nature of their business, or what connection they or their business had with the plaintiff or its business, aside from the business referred to in the contract. The complaint, in fact, makes no reference to the two parties omitted, in any way, aside from annexing a copy of the contract to the complaint. It alleges it is itself a corporation, the nature of its business, and that the plaintiff, the defendants and Browne, the person named in the contract, as party of the second part, made the agreement, a copy of which is annexed to the complaint, and that-under that contract sales of goods were made by Browne as agent of plaintiff, amounting to $14,573.02, upon which payments had been made amounting to $9,465.22, leaving a balance of $5,107.80, for which judgment is demanded. The defendants claim this contract was joint and not several or joint and several as to the parties of the first part, and, therefore, one of the parties alone cannot maintain this action. In form the contract is a joint one. There is nothing in its terms from.the commencement to the end of it that suggests a several liability, and there are no allegations in the complaint suggesting a several liability, unless it be the allegation that the plaintiff made the contract "with the parties of the second and third parts instead of alleging the contract was made by the three parties of the first part, and that the goods were sold by the plaintiff instead of the three parties of the first part. The contract was made by the three parties of the first part and provided only for sales by the three parties jointly. The sales being under the contract the allegations must be regarded as following the terms of such contract.

It may be well to suggest that many statements made in respondent’s points with reference to the three parties of the first part are of facts not appearing on the record. The record fails'to show that the three parties of the first part are separate arid distinct corporations manufacturing separate and distinct classes of underwear. The rule of law by which this class of cases is to be governed is correctly stated in Emmeluth v. Home Benefit Association (122 N. Y. 130, 134): “ The action follows the nature of the interest, and when that is several, separate actions may be maintained even if the language of the promise is joint.” In that case the language of the promise was construed to be several, or at least joint and several, and, therefore, the action was properly brought by one only of the several promisees. Here, however, the language was joint, and cannot be construed as several or joint and several. In order, therefore, to permit an action to be maintained by one alone, it should appear by the allegations of the complaint and proof on the trial that the nature of the interests of the three parties of the first part to the contract was several and not joint. No such allegations were found in the complaint. In Spencer v. Wabash R. R. Co. (36 App. Div. 446) the complaint alleged a several contract with each member of the theatrical company for the transportation of his baggage, and, therefore, it was a good pleading in the action brought by one member of ,the company only. In Booth Bros. v. Baird (83 App. Div. 495) the question was not one of pleading, but arose on appeal from the judgment after a trial. The contract was in form joint. It was contended, however, that upon the evidence the liability was several only. The court held it joint only and rendered judgment accordingly. It may very well be that allegations may be inserted in the complaint in this action truthfully that will enable the plaintiff to maintain the action without making the other concerns parties plaintiff, but in its present form the complaint is objectionable in that it shows a joint contract by the three concerns and only one is made a party plaintiff.

The demurrer was, therefore, improperly overruled, and the judgment must be reversed.'

Spring and Hiscock, JJ., concurred ; McLennan, P. J., dissented in an opinion in which Stover, J., concurred.

McLennan, P. J.

(dissenting): It seems to me that the demurrer to the complaint upon the ground that it appears upon its face that there is a defect of parties plaintiff, and that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, was. properly overruled, and that tlie interlocutory judgment appéaléd from should be affirmed. ' .

In the complaint it is alleged in substance :■

I. That the plaintiff is a domestic corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of knit underwear, having its principal office in the city of Utica.

II. That the defendants are copartners engaged in the commission business, having their office in New York city.

III. That on the 13th day of November, 1902, tim plaintiff and the defendants, together with one Bro'Wne, entered into an agreement in writing, a copy of which is marked Schedule “A” and made' a part of the complaint. , ■

TY. That by the terms of said agreement, said Browne was to act as selling agent for the plaintiff and was to sell its goods at prices fixed by one M¡ J. Fisher, plaintiff’s manager ; that such goods as were sold by Browne were to be charged to and delivered by plaintiff to the defendants, and that after deducting six and one-half per cent commission for guaranteeing feueli sales the defendants were to pay to the plaintiff' the purchase price of said goods within ten days, from the date of delivery. . ■

Y. That said defendants delivered to the plaintiff orders.for knit goods which the defendants represented had been sold by Browne, and that the plaintiff, relying upon such representations, charged and delivered the goods to defendants. - !

Then follows an itemized. statement of the goods sold and the. purchase price, amounting to $14,573.02; also' of the payments made by the defendants to the plaintiff, amounting to the sum of $9,465.22, leaving a balance of $5,107.80. It is then alleged that more than ten days have elapsed since the delivery of the goods by the plaintiff to the defendants; that payment of the ..same was demanded. Judgment is demándbd "for the balance unpaid, with interest." '. "

. Except for the contract, Schedule ■“ A,” which" was made a part. . of the complaint, no question could arise upon the fáce of the com"plaint as to the proper party plaintiff. Independent of such schedule, or contract the action is simply one for goods sold and delivered by the plaintiff to. the defendants, at an agreed price, to be paid for at a certain time. The goods were manufactured by the. plaintiff and sold by it to the defendants upon their order and they neglected to pay for them when and as they agreed to. Under the allegations of the complaint the plaintiff is the only party who is in any manner interested in recovering the balance of the purchase price of the goods sold by it. The goods sold were its goods, they were ordered and bought of it directly by the defendants, and the purchase price and all of it belongs solely to the plaintiff.

It is urged, that Schedule “ A ” in some manner affects plaintiff’s right to recover as for goods sold and delivered by it to the defendants, under the allegations of the complaint; that with such schedule added to and-made a part of the complaint, it is apparent that parties other than the plaintiff are interested in the cause of action ; that some portion of the purchase price of the goods sold by the plaintiff belongs to such other parties, viz., the Fisher Knit Goods Company and the Sealback Underwear Company. We think such agreement in no manner affects plaintiff’s right of action, does not indicate that the plaintiff is not the sole party interested in the recovery of the purchase price of the goods in question. It was made between the Fisher Knit Goods Company, the Sealback Underwear Company, and the Fisher Textile Company, this- plaintiff, parties of the first part, one Benjamin Browne, party of the second part, and the defendants, parties of. the third part, and provides, in substance, that Browne is to be the sole agent for one year of said three companies for the sale of certain goods manufactured by' them. Browne agreed to act in that capacity and to sell their goods at the prices fixed by one M. J. Fisher, the manager of the corporations who are the parties of the first part. It is then provided “ that such goods as may be sold from time to time by the party of the second part (Browne) are to be charged to and delivered by the parties of the first part to the parties of the third part (the defendants), and that the parties of the third part are to deduct six and one-half per cent from such bills as commissions for guaranteeing such sales, after deducting the usual discounts and allowing for dating, and that the said parties of the third part are to pay the parties of the first part the amount of said bills, less such deductions as aforesaid, withiri ten days from the date of the delivery of such goods to the parties of the third part.” It also provides that all orders which may be obtained by Browne for the parties of the first part must.be satisfactory to'the parties of the third part.and must be signed by the parties of the third part, and unless so signed, that the parties of the third part are not to be liable in, any way for such orders or for the payment of such bills. In other words, the agreement simply provides that, Browne shall have the sole right, .to sell the goods of a certain class manufactured by three manufacturing concerns, of which the plaintiff was one, at a price to be fixed by Fisher, the general manager of each; that the orders obtained by Browne for such goods should be turned over to the defendants, and if .satisfactory,. such orders were' to be sent by the defendants to the manufacturer of the goods and were to be filled' by shipment directly to the defendants by such manufacturer, and they, after ten days, became liable to pay the purchase price, less the commissions, etc. It would seem clear that by this agreement the plaintiffs did not become joint sellers. The plain intent of the contract was that any sale made by Browne was to be the sale df the company who inamifactured the particular goods sold, and so far as such goods were, concerned the defendants dealt only with that company. It was not a joint enterprise and no joint liability was assumed by the plaintiffs in any manner. That such was the intent appears clearly from the fact that of this bill of over $14,000 worth of goods the defendants paid some $9,000 directly to the plaintiff.

The case of Spencer v. Wabash R. R. Co. (36 App. Div. 446) is directly in point and correctly states the rule: “ Contracts are joint Where the interest in them for the parties for whom they are created is joint, and separate where that interest is separate; that the circumstances of each case and the situation and relation of the parties and the nature of the consideration, are all to be looked into to see who is interested and who has sustained damage arising from a breach of the contract, and whether such damage was" joint or several.”

In Emmeluth v. Home Benefit Association (122 N. Y. 134) Judge Yaw says: The action follows the nature of the interest, and when that is several, separate actions may be maintained, even if the language of the promise is joint.”.

By the terms df the contract, Schedule A, the Fisher Knit Goods Company and the Sealback Underwear Company had no interest in. the sale of any goods manufactured and sold by the plaintiff, and reference to it in the complaint was only necessary because it fixed the price and time of payment of the goods purchased from the plaintiff by the defendants; for that .purpose it was properly made a part of the complaint; only by reference to it could the purchase price and the manner of payment be determined. It was wholly unnecessary for the plaintiff to allege in the complaint that the other corporations named in Schedule A, as parties of the first part, were not interested in the goods sold by the plaintiff or in the sale made by it. That would have been a conclusion pure and simple and not a proper allegation to be. set forth in the complaint.

Even if the form of the contract in the case at bar were such as might create a joint liability, as soon as it appears that the plaintiff is the only one interested, that fact is controlling. We think the complaint clearly shows that the interest of the plaintiff in the alleged sales was separate and distinct from that of the other two corporations which were parties to the agreement, and that the plaintiff is the only one entitled to recover for the goods sold.

The interlocutory judgment overruling the demurrer should be affirmed, with costs.

Stover, J., concurred.

Interlocutory judgment reversed, with costs, and demurrer sustained, with costs, with leave to plaintiff to plead over upon payment-of such costs within ten days after service of a copy of this order, together with notice of- entry thereof and the taxation of the costs.