A. F. Pylant, Inc. v. Escambia Treating Company

276 F.2d 919
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 13, 1960
Docket18101
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 276 F.2d 919 (A. F. Pylant, Inc. v. Escambia Treating Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. F. Pylant, Inc. v. Escambia Treating Company, 276 F.2d 919 (5th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

This case turns on the construction of a contract. The point at issue is whether the parties agreed to a second inspection of seasoned cross-ties, subject to certain “rigid” specifications, the ties having already passed an earlier inspection in the green or unseasoned state. We agree with the trial judge’s construction of "the contract, and affirm the judgment below.

Appellant, A. F. Pylant, Inc., a Mississippi corporation, cuts and sells crude cross-tie timbers. Appellee, Escambia Treating Company, a Florida corporation, creosotes and sells treated railroad cross-ties. Escambia agreed to supply a large number of treated ties of unusual size and quality to the Mozambique Na *921 tional Railroad of Mozambique, Portugese East Africa. To fill this order Escambia contracted with Pylant for 269,000 cross-ties at $1.71 a tie.

The original agreement, dated December 29, 1953, provided for inspection of the ties by an independent inspection •company designated by Mozambique. The parties agreed, in the following language, that the inspectors’ decisions would be binding:

“Both parties hereto agree that all decisions made by such inspectors as to the quality of ties and the compliance thereof with specifications, shall be final and binding on both parties and all certificates issued by such inspectors relating to inspections shall be conclusive and shall bind both parties.”

Mozambique, the ultimate user, designated A. W. Williams Inspection Company, a recognized independent inspection company, as the agency to make inspection of the ties.

The contract required Pylant to stack at least 150,000 ties in the field for air-drying and seasoning. These ties were to be given a first inspection by the inspection agency at the time they were stacked. The remaining 119,000 ties, at the option of Pylant, were to be delivered to Escambia either as dry or green ties. Pylant agreed to replace rejected ties without cost to Escambia.

The day after the contract was executed, Escambia wrote Pylant “confirming [their] verbal discussion and agreement of yesterday” modifying the original agreement in three respects. (1) Escambia authorized Pylant to use Escambia’s yard for storage of ties, free of charge, during the air seasoning period. (2) At the option of Pylant, Escambia agreed to stack the ties for two and one half cents a tie. (3) The parties agreed that the ties would “remain the property of [Pylant] during the drying period, the same as if they were stacked in other yards”, Escambia to lend Pylant $1.71 for each tie delivered to the yard. The letter concluded: “It is understood and agreed that nothing in this letter constitutes a waiver or change of the contract between the two parties. It is also understood and agreed that these ties remain your property, and that in the event any of these ties are rejected because of splits or stack rot, you will replace such ties without cost to us or repay the loan on such ties.”

Pylant delivered the ties in the green state to Escambia’s yard. Escambia stacked the ties. An inspector for A. W. Williams Company inspected the ties and stamped “AWW” on them. This signified that the ties met American Railway Engineering Association (AREA) specifications for green ties and passed the initial inspection. When Williams Company rejected ties, Pylant made replacements without objections.

By a supplemental agreement dated May 31, 1954, set forth in the footnotes to this opinion, 1 the parties amended the *922 original agreement. The original contract clearly provided for two inspections, a first or field inspection of green ties and a final inspection for seasoned ties. The pertinent language of the original contract reads:

“All air-seasoned ties delivered hereunder in addition to the field inspection above described, upon delivery to Escambia at its plant at Goulding, Florida, shall be given a final inspection for moisture content rot developing from stack bum and splits. All green ties, except in those instances where final inspection in the field prior to shipment is requested by Pylant in writing, shall be given final untreated inspection at Escambia’s plant at Goulding, Florida.”

The controversial language of the supplemental contract reads:

“* * * and Pylant warrants that all of said green cross-ties shall conform to specifications of the American Railway Engineering As sociation, and shall be acceptable to designated inspection agency under these specifications upon completion of the air-seasoning period, and that in event any of said cross-ties shall not be acceptable to the inspection agency under these specifications at any time before or at the end of the period of air-seasoning, upon being notified by Escambia of such rejects, then Pylant shall replace such cross-ties with another green or dry cross-tie conforming to specifications and acceptable to the inspection agency, without cost to Escambia.”

Some time after May 31, 1954, a dispute arose over the correctness of the rejection of certain ties. Pylant, however, continued to replace rejected ties until 20,989 ties were replaced. Pylant then sued Escambia for $35,891.19, the value of 20,989 ties at $1.71 a tie, and for $3,717.19, an undisputed amount owed Pylant by Escambia. Pylant makes two-contentions: (1) That ties which passed the first inspection and were stacked in Escambia’s yard were not subject, after seasoning, to a second inspection; (2) That the inspection agency on the second inspection improperly rejected seasoned cross-ties, particularly in applying to the seasoned ties AREA specifications for green ties.

The case was tried without a jury. The distinct judge found that the agreement provided for two inspections and that there was no evidence that Escambia had wrongfully relied on the advice of A. W. Williams Company in rejecting the ties. Pylant’s claim of $35,891.19 for the value of the replaced ties was denied. A judgment of $3,717.19, the undisputed sum for ties not involved in this controversy, was entered in favor of Pylant. Pylant’s motion for a new trial was denied.

On appeal, Pylant makes three main points: (1) the district court erroneously construed the existing contract; (2) the district court erred in ruling out customs and usages showing the proper application of AREA specifications; (3) Escambia and Pylant were-joint adventurers.

As shown in the quoted language, the original contract explicitly calls for a first inspection and a final in- *923 spection. It seemed clear to the district judge, and it is clear to us, that nothing in the supplemental contract altered the requirement of two inspections. On the contrary, the language from the supplement quoted above recognizes that the ties must not only meet the AREA specifications for green ties but must also be “acceptable to the inspection agency * * * upon completion of the air-seasoning period”.

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Bluebook (online)
276 F.2d 919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-f-pylant-inc-v-escambia-treating-company-ca5-1960.