
    (87 Hun, 558.)
    MANN et al. v. NATIONAL LINSEED OIL CO.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, Fifth Department.
    June 21, 1895.)
    1. Contracts—Interpretation.
    A contract for the purchase by defendant from plaintiff of linseed oil in certain quantities, which provides “that the oil tendered to the defendant should be pure, raw linseed oil, well settled, and in good cooperage,” does not mean that the oil must be in wooden barrels at the time of a tender, in order to make it effectual, but it is sufficient to put it in barrels when shipping instructions are received.
    2. Sale—Refusal to Accept—Resale by Seller.
    A resale where the buyer of goods refuses to accept, so as to charge him with the loss in the price, need not be on notice to him, nor at auction.
    Appeal from circuit court, Erie county.
    Action by John A. Mann and others against the National Linseed Oil Company. From a judgment entered on a verdict in favor of plaintiffs, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial, made on the minutes, defendant appeals.
    Affirmed.
    On September 20, 1892, the parties entered into a contract whereby the defendant, an Illinois corporation, during the period ending September 1, 1893, agreed to receive from the plaintiffs (who were engaged in the manufacture and sale of linseed oil at Buffalo, N. Y.) all the linseed oil manufactured by them, which should not within that time be sold by them to others, and pay for it within 10 days the then Chicago market price, in car-load lots, less 2 per cent., and less 2% cents per gallon commission, provided (1) that the defendant should not be required to receive in any one month more than 60,000 gallons, to be delivered in lots of 20,000 gallons or less; (2) that the oil tendered to the defendant should be pure raw linseed oil, well settled, and in good cooperage, f. o. b. cars at Buffalo; (3) that the sale by the plaintiffs to other parties should not be made at better terms, or at less than the then established market price of like quality and quantity in the district where sold; (4) that upon all oil sold by the plaintiffs to others they should allow to the defendants one-fourth of 1 cent per gallon. The plaintiffs delivered and the defendant received 60,000 gallons monthly up to and including June, 1803, and thereafter received none from the plaintiffs, who, in July and August, tendered, in lots of 20,000 gallons each, 100,000 gallons to the defendant, which it refused to receive. In this action, founded upon an alleged breach of contract, the plaintiffs recovered $8,837.20 damages.
    Argued before DWIGHT, P. J., and LEWIS, BRADLEY, and WARD, J J.
    A. Rebadow, for appellant.
    Franklin D. Locke, for respondents.
   BRADLEY, J.

The obligation assumed by defendant to receive linseed oil from the plaintiffs was dependent upon a tender of it by them. It was by the contract provided that the oil tendered should be in good cooperage, f. o. b. cars at Buffalo. Did this necessarily imply intent that to render a tender effectual the oil should be in wooden barrels at the time the defendant was notified that the plaintiff was ready and offered to make the delivery? The oil was by the plaintiffs kept in iron tanks, from which it was taken and put into barrels or other vessels required for use in its transportation. It appears that wooden barrels are not suitable to contain linseed oil in storage, as it will more or less escape by leakage from them. The parties, however, recognized and adopted such a construction of the contract as did not require the plaintiffs at the time of the tender, nor until instruction for shipment was given them, to put the oil so tendered into barrels. This was the method adopted by the plaintiffs at the outset, and understood by the defendant. By its letter to plaintiffs of date June 15, 1893, the defendant says: “Under the contract you have the right to deliver when we send you instructions, but we are not bound to receive on your tender.” By its letter of a later date it adds: “Under our construction of the contract, we are at liberty at any time during the month to give you shipping instructions according to our convenience. Therefore .all that is necessary for you is to give us notice of the quantity that you intend to tender; then, in due time, and at our convenience, we will tell you what to do with it.” Soon after the contract was made, the defendant expressed a desire to have oil shipped in oil-tank cars, which the plaintiffs consented and paade preparations to do, and considerable quantity of oil in that manner was delivered to the defendant, and shipped to such places as the defendant directed. The tank cars were furnished by it or under its direction. By its letter to the plaintiffs of date June 23, 1893, the defendant, after referring to the fact that a tender of 20,000 gallons had been made, says, “Please have the amount above named 20,000 gallons put in first-class cooperage.” Then follow some further instructions. It thus appears that it was contemplated by the parties, and such was the practical construction of the contract, that it was only requisite that the plaintiffs have the oil in their tanks ready to be put into vessels for transportation at the time of the tender or offer to deliver. And, inasmuch as the plaintiffs had on hand, ready for delivery, the several quantities of 20,000 gallons each, which they tendered in July and August, 1893, and constituting the 100,000 gallons, which they also had on hand for delivery, the tender to the defendant was effectual. Not only the reasonable construction of the contract, but that practically given to it by the parties in the progress of its performance, was such as not to require that the oil be in cooperage at the time of the tender. The readiness at that time to put it in barrels when notified of the defendant’s acceptance was all that was essential to give effect to the offer to deliver. Hayden v. Demets, 53 N. Y. 426. The defendant, by its refusal to receive the oil, was put in default, and became liable, at the election of the plaintiffs, to pay for it, or to pay such damages as they sustained by the breach of the contract on the part of the defendant. In due time after the default of the defendant, the plaintiffs proceeded to sell and sold that oil on the account of the defendant, and, assuming, as the evidence permits, that they sold it fairly, and for the best price they could get for it, the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the deficiency; that is to say, the amount less, derived from sale, than that to which they were entitled by the contract. Dustan v. McAndrew, 44 N. Y. 72; Mason v. Decker, 72 N. Y. 595. Nor was it necessary that the sale be at auction, or upon notice to the defendant, although, as bearing upon the question of fairness of a sale in such case, it is usually prudent to give such notice. Pollen v. Le Roy, 30 N. Y. 549; Van Brocklen v. Smeallie, 140 N. Y. 70, 35 N. E. 415. The contract provided that the defendant should receive all the linseed oil manufactured by the plaintiff's “which shall not be sold by them to other parties.” It is now urged on the part of the defendant that the plaintiffs did not show upon the trial that they had made any effort to sell the oil tendered before it was offered to the defendant. No such question was specifically raised upon the trial. If it had been, and such fact had been deemed essential, it may be that it would have been supplied by proof. It may be observed that by the contract the sales other than to the defendant were so restricted as not to permit the plaintiffs to sell to others “on better terms or at less than the established market price,” which, it seems, was practically regulated by the defendant’s circulars. While it was contemplated by the contract that the plaintiffs would, under such restrictions, make sales to others, it did not, in terms, impose upon them an effort to do so. The apparent purpose of the contract was to give to the defendant the control of the market for the oil manufactured by the plaintiffs, and with a view on the part of the defendant to realize a profit from its performance. The contention that the want of evidence of an effort to sell the oil in question to others before the tender to the defendant is in the way of the plaintiffs’ recovery is not supported by the record on this review. The contract provides for the sale of raw linseed oil only. After the default of the defendant, a portion—less than one-third—of the oil, was, for the purposes of the sale, boiled. It is insisted on the part of the defendant that the part of it subjected to that process was thereby taken from the operation of the contract, and therefore the defendant is not chargeable with the deficiency arising from the sale of that portion of the oil. It is true that the defendant cannot be charged to its prejudice by the conversion from raw into boiled oil. It appears to have been no detriment to the defendant. The evidence tends to prove that there was a demand for raw oil after it was boiled, and that this was boiled to facilitate the sale. The price for which it sold was three cents per gallon more than that for raw, unboiled oil, and such increased price was just the expense of boiling the oil. The result, in which the defendant is concerned, was the same as if a market could have and had been found for it unboiled. The objection relating to the sale of the oil which was subjected to that process for market, and founded upon that fact, is not, as matter of law, tenable. This was deemed by the plaintiffs necessary to render it readily marketable, and to enable them to consummate the sale which they, by reason of the defendant’s default, were permitted to make on its account.

The further question has relation to sales of oil made by the plaintiffs to the New York, Lake Erie & Western Bailroad Company in the period covered by the contract. It is insisted that such sales were made for less than the established prices, and in violation of the contract. It seems that the prices were deemed fixed by the schedules or circulars issued from time to time by the defendant, and that those were the prices of the oil delivered at the places where the buyers accepted it, and, when transported to them they took it at those prices, less the freight charges upon it; in other words, the .freight was deducted from such prices. The sales made to the railroad company were made for delivery at certain points on its line, and, although it was taken by that company upon its cars at Buffalo, the oil was transported upon its road to the several points designated, and to treat the oil as delivered at those points at the established price the freight was deducted from it. This practically placed the railroad company, as a purchaser, on the same footing as that of other purchasers. The oil sold to the company amounted to only about $3,000, and if it had been treated as delivered at Buffalo at the established price only a small sum more than was would have been realized from those sales. There seems to be no substantial reason for the charge that the plaintiffs in the sales to the railroad company failed in the observance or performance of the contract on their part. The motions in behalf of the parties at the close of the evidence for the direction of nonsuit and verdict raised questions of law only, and, as no request was made to submit anything to the jury, the entire case was left to the consideration of the court, and in the direction of the verdict for the plaintiffs the court is deemed to have determined adversely to the defendant whatever questions of fact there were for consideration. Ormes v. Dauchy, 82 N. Y. 443; Dillon v. Cockroft, 90 N. Y. 649. No other question requires consideration.

The judgment and order should be affirmed. All concur. .  