American Paper & Pulp Co., Inc. v. Maurice Denenberg, Individually and Trading as Denny Paper & Board Co., (Lansdowne Paper Mill, Inc.)

233 F.2d 610, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3186
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 1956
Docket11792_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 233 F.2d 610 (American Paper & Pulp Co., Inc. v. Maurice Denenberg, Individually and Trading as Denny Paper & Board Co., (Lansdowne Paper Mill, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Paper & Pulp Co., Inc. v. Maurice Denenberg, Individually and Trading as Denny Paper & Board Co., (Lansdowne Paper Mill, Inc.), 233 F.2d 610, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3186 (3d Cir. 1956).

Opinion

HASTIE, Circuit Judge.

In this diversity case a buyer has obtained redress against a seller for an alleged breach of warranty of the quality of goods sold and delivered. The trial judge, sitting without a jury, found for plaintiff, American Paper & Pulp Co., against defendant, Denenberg, in the amount of $6,023.26, and made a like award to defendant against a third-party defendant who had manufactured and supplied the goods. However, the third-party defendant did not defend the action because prior to trial it had gone out of business and, apparently, was judgment-proof.

The goods were sold and delivered in Pennsylvania in 1951 and all controverted legal issues are controlled by the law of Pennsylvania. The date is relevant because the Sales Act, 69 Purdon’s Stat., c. 1, rather than the Article of the Uniform Commercial Code on Sales, effective July 1, 1954, 12A Purdon’s Stat., art. 2, was then the controlling statute.

Although the seller does not admit any breach of contract, the evidence so clearly supports the district court’s conclusion that the seller both gave and breached a warranty of quality that no discussion of this issue of basic liability is necessary. The real difficulties of the case concern the buyer’s election of remedy and the proper measure of damages.

*612 These are the essential facts. The seller, Denenberg, contracted to sell to the buyer, American, 55 tons of pure MF Kraft paper in two lots, one of 33 tons and the other of 22 tons as per sample. Both parties were middlemen, Denenberg being a broker and American, an exporter of paper. The contract required the seller to deliver the paper alongside a vessel at the port of Philadelphia in cases marked to show consignment to Topic and Nell, a South African customer to whom American contracted to resell this merchandise.

- Denenberg purchased the paper to fill the American order from the third-party defendant, Lansdowne Paper Mill, Inc. Thereafter, in accordance with shipping instructions the seller had the 33 ton lot of paper delivered to an ocean carrier at the port of Philadelphia. Also, out-turn samples, said to have been taken at random from the rolls during the manufacturing of the paper, were mailed directly to American, but were not received until the goods had left Philadelphia en-route to South Africa. Finding the out-turn samples clearly inferior to the quality of the original samples upon which the contract to sell had been based, American advised Denenberg of this fact by letter and cancelled the order for the undelivered 22 tons. At the same time, in payment for the 33 tons already enroute to South Africa, American remitted $7,-746.13, which was 80% of the agreed purchase price of $9,682.66. The balance was withheld with a view to making some mutually satisfactory adjustment with the South African purchaser on the inferior quality of the paper. However, inspection on arrival in South Africa proved the paper even worse than anticipated and Topic and Nell notified American that it was rejecting the entire shipment. Because of the expense of returning the 33 tons of paper from South Africa, and with the concurrence of the parties, the paper was eventually sold in South Africa for $4,568.00 and this sum was remitted by Topic and Nell to American.

In the meantime, upon shipment of the paper from the United States, Topic and Nell had already paid American the sum of $11,856.88, the full agreed resale price of the paper. But, when the shipment was rejected, American did not refund this money to Topic and Nell. Instead, the parties agreed that American would replace the defective paper, entirely at its own expense, with paper of proper quality. This was done, utilizing paper which American subsequently obtained from a manufacturer at a time when the market had dropped considerably. The cost of such replacement was $5,232.09, as contrasted with the earlier contract, now in suit, to buy similar paper from Denenberg for $9,682.66. This arrangement enables American to retain the full amount paid by Topic and Nell for the Denenberg paper, and in the process to realize not only the middleman’s profit originally inherent in the transaction, but also an additional profit representing the difference between the price it had agreed to pay Denenberg and the smaller price it actually paid for replacement merchandise, provided that American can get back from Denenberg the $7,-746.13 already paid to him.

This brings us to an examination of the conduct of American, as it bears upon the choice of an appropriate remedy against Denenberg. It has already been stated that American notified Denenberg that the out-turn samples were unsatisfactory as soon as they were received. At the same time it announced its election to “cancel” the contract of sale as to the lot of paper yet to be delivered. This was its privilege upon discovery that the first shipment was of poor quality and below the agreed standard. Indeed, Denenberg seems not to have objected to this cancellation. But whether by mutual assent or through unilateral action justified by a breach, it is clear that the contract to sell the second or 22 ton lot of paper was rescinded.

As to the 33 tons, which were on the high seas when samples were received, American told Denenberg it would mini *613 xnize loss as best it could by trying to get Topic and Nell to accept the goods at a reduced price. In optimistic anticipation that this could be accomplished, American then transmitted 80% of the contract price to Denenberg. There followed the inspection of the paper on arrival in South Africa, the discovery that it was even worse than the samples indicated, and the total rejection of the shipment by Topic and Nell. In these circumstances, as the district court explicitly found, all parties concerned agreed that the paper be sold for whatever it would bring in South Africa, since its value did not warrant the expense of shipment back to the United States. This was done.

In the meantime American repeatedly asked Denenberg to state what he would do to discharge his obligation in the premises. Denenberg’s answers were to the effect that he first wanted to know what salvage value could be realized by resale of the paper in South Africa. Dissatisfied with the seller’s refusal to make any commitment, American then made its first specific demand, namely, that Denenberg return the $7,746.13 already, received in payment for the paper and also reimburse American for the costs of shipment to South Africa which it had defrayed.

Denenberg did not comply with that demand and the present suit followed. The complaint itemized American’s claim. It asked for the return of the purchase price and reimbursement for shipping expenses, as theretofore demanded. It also added to the claim a new item, $1,329.79, identified as the profit American would have made on resale of both the 33 ton lot and the 22 ton lot had Denenberg performed as promised. Finally, the complaint recognized the right of Denenberg to the salvage value of the defective paper as sold on the South African market.

In these circumstances we are satisfied that the conduct of American amounted to an election to rescind the entire sale, including the 33 ton lot actually delivered.

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233 F.2d 610, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-paper-pulp-co-inc-v-maurice-denenberg-individually-and-ca3-1956.