Millar v. Fitzgibbons

Van Brunt, J.

[After stating the facts as above.]—Upon the face of the order in question it- would appear to be a contract of sale, and, as a consequence, within the statute of frauds. The plaintiffs, in order to avoid this conclusion, have endeavored to show that it was in the contemplation of the parties that the goods should be manufactured in order to fill the order, and that thus it was a contract for work, labor and services within the decisions upon the statute of frauds, and not a contract of sale of goods, wares and merchandise. It is admitted upon the part of the appellants that if any order of this kind is given to a manufacturer to manufacture the articles mentioned in an order, that it is not within the statute of frauds; but it is claimed by them that where a vendor is not a manufacturer then such a contract is within the statute of frauds.

I have been unable to find in the decisions of this state any case bearing directly upon this point, but an examination of the authorities leads me to the conclusion that the distinction is undoubtedly well taken. All the cases which had appeared in this state, and in England, Connecticut and Massachusetts at the time of the decision of the case of The Passaic Manufacturing Company v. Hoffman (3 Daly, 495), were collected and reviewed by the learned chief justice of this court, who wrote the opinion in that case, and an examination of those cases shows that the distinction is recognized, in the principle upon which it is held that contracts to manufacture are not within the statute of frauds, because it is, as those cases say, a contract for the labor, skill, care or knowledge of the manufacturer who contracts to manufacture the article: in other words, the contract is for work, labor and services as well as for materials furnished, and as a consequence is not a contract for the sale of goods, wares and merchandise. And if no price were fixed for the articles when delivered, an action for work, labor and services and materials furnished would undoubtedly lie.

In view of the exhaustive review contained in that case of the authorities upon this subject, it is not necessary that I should restate them here. It follows, therefore, that unless the defendants in this case were to manufacture the goods in ques*507tion, the contract under consideration was within the statute of frauds.

The plaintiffs in this case claim that they did riot know but that the defendants were to manufacture the goods. If the contract is affirmatively within the statute of frauds, as it clearly is upon its face, then it was the duty of the plaintiffs to show those facts by which they desired to take it out of that statute, or in other words they were bound to show that the defendants were to manufacture these goods.

There being no proof of that, description in the case the statute must necessarily be applied to the contract.

The judgment must be reversed.

Charles P. Daly, Ch. J., and Beach, J., concurred.

Judgment reversed, with costs.