M. & E. Solomon Tobacco Co. v. Cohen

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 310

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 311 The question presented for decision is what did the parties mean by their brief memorandum in view of all the circumstances surrounding them when they made it? The question is close, for the courts below divided in judgment upon it and we are compelled to decide by the vote of a majority. The parties might well have been more explicit in their contract and not have left to implication that which could have been expressly stated by the use of one or two additional words. It is not for us, however, to criticise but to decide, and in announcing our decision in favor of the plaintiff we state the following as, in brief, the grounds of our judgment.

It would naturally be expected that the plaintiff, who furnished the money to pay the duty, would be entitled to any overpayment exacted by the agents of the government, rather than the defendants, who, although making the payment, *Page 312 in fact did not use their own money for the purpose. No one was really interested in the amount paid except the plaintiff, upon whom the burden of the duty fell, although the defendants formally handed the money over because the government would accept it only from the importer. While the sale was for the nominal sum of $2.25 per pound, the real purchase price was that sum less the estimated duty of 70 cents to be advanced by the plaintiff in cash for the sole purpose of paying the duty. It was expressly conceded at the trial that the "seventy cents entered into the price of $2.25," and that "$2.25 per pound means the price of the tobacco per pound including the seventy cents duty." The sum of seventy cents, however, having been arbitrarily agreed upon merely for convenience, was by the terms of the contract subject to reduction either exclusively on the basis of the appraisal made by the collector, or by the final and only legal appraisal which was made in effect through an adjudication by the Federal courts. The rights of the parties depend on the meaning of the expression "if appraised at less," which, as we read it, means a lawful appraisal, whether made by the collector or adjudged by the court. It means such an appraisal as the law required and justified, not such as was made by the collector, which was illegal and has been treated by the government as illegal. Since the plaintiff advanced the duty as estimated simply for the protection of the defendants, the word "appraised" should not be limited to the unlawful action of the collector, but should be extended to the method, whatever it was, by which the lawful duty was ascertained. It is obvious that the real price of the tobacco was $1.55 per pound, plus the lawful duty to be ascertained by an appraisal, but the plaintiff was to advance enough to protect the defendants who were liable to the government as they had imported the tobacco. Such advance was made simply to indemnify the defendants against loss and any balance left after payment of the actual duty was to be restored. Thus the sale in effect was subject to the payment of the duty by the plaintiff, but the defendants were to pay it for them out of moneys furnished for the purpose. *Page 313 The appraisal by the collector was at sixty-one cents and the difference between that sum and seventy cents, the amount advanced to pay the duty, has been restored, but the difference between the duty called for by the collector's appraisal and thirty-five cents, the rate fixed by the courts, although paid back by the government to the defendants, has not been paid by them to the plaintiff.

The time fixed for the performance of the contract does not control, as the defendants were not to pay the duty with their own money. There was no postponement of performance of any part of the contract in which the defendants had a pecuniary interest. They were to get their pay within the time fixed for performance in any event; and what interest had they beyond that? The lawful appraisal might have been made within the five months provided for payment of the purchase price to the defendants, and even if it was not made within that period of what concern was it to them, as they had all they were entitled to? The fact that the mistake of the collector was not acknowledged for a long time gave them no title to the money. The delay in the final appraisal caused them neither loss nor inconvenience. The risk was not theirs, but the plaintiff's, who performed within the time allotted and thereupon the real interest of the defendants ended. While it was not their legal duty to take steps for a further and lawful appraisement, it was a matter of fairness to their customers, because they had been paid for what they sold and they might well take such voluntary action as the interests of their customers required. They were not compelled to act, but having acted, the result was not for their own benefit but for the benefit of the one who furnished the money to them to pay the duty. They commenced no action to recover the money back, but entered a protest when it was paid, employed an attorney apparently upon a contingent fee, probably appealed to the secretary of the treasury within the time required by statute, and then let the matter rest until the lawful rate was determined in an action brought by other importers. (In re Blumlein, 49 Fed. *Page 314 Rep. 228; 55 Fed. Rep. 383.) The plaintiff could not protest, as it had no relations with the government, and the defendants by protesting showed that they thought the collector's appraisal was unlawful. After the lawful rate had been fixed by the court, the custom house officers, as one of them testified, "went back over their (our) figures and appraisements made on the former basis and corrected them to conform to the decision. * * * The real adjustment resulted in a refund to the importer and was upon the basis of the examination of the samples of the tobacco originally made." The plaintiff provided the money and ran the only risk and it was within the reasonable contemplation of the parties that it should receive the amount refunded by the government, after payment of expenses. Ex æquo et bono the defendants had no right to it, but simply received it to the use of the plaintiff.

In a "bought" memorandum drawn by a broker the essentials are expressly stated and the rest left to reasonable implication from what is thus stated, when considered in the light of the situation of the parties and the circumstances known to both.

The test is what would a reasonable man infer on reading the contract in the light of that situation and those circumstances if the facts ultimately developed occurred to him as possible or likely to happen.

The defendants are to be commended for their efforts to protect their customers, and they have been paid their expenses in so doing. It was not their money they were looking after but the money of the plaintiff. Unless they contracted with reference to the lawful duty they are in the attitude of speculators at the expense of their patrons. Good faith and fair dealing require a construction that will give effect to the contract as a reasonable man would understand it at the time it was made, and this we have endeavored to do.

We find no error of law committed by the trial judge, and as the judgment rendered by him was not reversed on the facts, but on the law only, we think the order of the Appellate *Page 315 Division should be reversed and the judgment of the trial court affirmed, with costs in Appellate Division and in this court.

CULLEN, Ch. J., EDWARD T. BARTLETT and WILLARD BARTLETT, JJ., concur; GRAY, HAIGHT and CHASE, JJ., dissent on opinion of Appellate Division below.

Ordered accordingly.