Balto. Quarries Co. v. Gwyer, Etc.

112 A. 590, 137 Md. 379, 1921 Md. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 A. 590 (Balto. Quarries Co. v. Gwyer, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balto. Quarries Co. v. Gwyer, Etc., 112 A. 590, 137 Md. 379, 1921 Md. LEXIS 8 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

This is an appeal from a, judgment recovered by John A. Gwyer and Peter Adams, partners, trading as Adams & Company, and Tbe Continental Contracting Company, a body corporate, against tbe Baltimore Q|uaa*ries Company. The declaration filed in this case, in addition to the common counts, contains a special count in wbicb it is stated,

“tbe plaintiffs and defendant entered into a contract whereby defendant was to furnish tbe plaintiffs witb all of tbe crushed Trap Bock needed for a certain contract known as and designated as City Contract No. 11, at and for tbe price of one dollar and sixty-five cents per ton, to be delivered as ordered by plaintiffs, on certain streets and alleys in Baltimore City as specified in certain plans and specifications, submitted to tbe defendant; and tbat plaintiffs purchased and used said crushed rock on said contract as agreed until they were further prevented from using it by tbe act of defendant in refusing to furnish same. Tbat tbe plaintiffs have always been ready and willing to carry out and *381 perform their part of the said contract, but, notwithstanding, the said defendant refused and has ever refused, to furnish said crushed rock as agreed, thereby causing the plaintiffs great loss and damage.”

The defendant pleaded never indebted and never promised as alleged. In the trial of the case, three exceptions, were taken to the rulings of the court, two upon the evidence., and one upon the prayers.

We discover no error in the court’s ruling upon the evidence. In the first of these, after John A. Gwyer, one of the firm of Adams & Company, had testified that the terms of the contract under which the stone was bought by the plaintiffs from the defendant were embraced in a letter received by the plaintiffs that had been lost, his attention, upon cross-examination, was called to a letter dated April 13, 1917, reeeived by the counsel for the defendant from J. Albert Baker, plaintiffs’ counsel, in which the latter had said, “my clients inform me that there was a valid oral contract existing between them” and the Baltimore Quarries Company. The witness in response to a number of questions propounded to lum in relation to what was regarded by defendant’s counsel as a discrepancy between the evidence of the witness and the statement in the letter of his counsel, stated that he, so early as March, 1917, informed Mr. Baker of the letter mentioned by him and talked to him abont its contents, and why he, Mr. Baker, in his letter spoke of the contract as an oral one lie did not know, and said that he was not responsible for the statements so made by Mr. Baker; and when again asked why his counsel should have made the statement, he suggested to defendant’s counsel to ask Mr. Baker why he made the statement. It was then that the witness was asked “if you told your counsel that in March, 1917, * * * how you reconciled that with the letter of your counsel * * * on April 13, 1917, in which he says there was a valid oral contract existing between them.”

*382 The question was objected to, the objection was sustained and an exception noted to the ruling of the court thereon.

The witness having said that he told Mr. Balcer of the letter and its contents before the letter from the latter to the defendant’s counsel was written, and that he did not know why the statement had been made by Mr. Baker, any attempt on bis part to reconcile the alleged discrepancy would have been mere conjecture on his part, and was, we think, properly excluded.

The second exception is to the court’s refusal to permit the defendant to ask his witness, Welsh, assistant manager .of the defendant company, “did you, or Mr. Alexander (the general manager), ever make a contract with another contractor for a large quantity of stone necessary for any particular contract; did you ever make a contract in that way

Both Welsh and Alexander testified that no contract was made by either of them, with the plaintiffs^, for the sale of all the stone required in said contract with the city for paving said streets and alleys. And further stated that they were not authorized to make any contract such as that said to have been made with the plaintiffs. With this testimony before the jury, it cannot, we think, be properly said that the defendant was injured by the court’s refusal to allow this question to be answered, even should it be regarded a.s admissible.

This brings us to the rulings upon the prayers. The plaintiffs offered two. and the defendant four prayers. Both of the plaintiffs’ and all of the defendant’s, except its first prayer, were granted. The rejected prayer of the defendant asked the court to direct a verdict for the defendant because of a want of legally sufficient evidence entitling the plaintiffs to recover under the pleadings in the case.

Peter Adams, or in Italian, Pietro D’Adamo, and John A. Gwyer, compose the plaintiff firm of Adams & Company, and they, with the wife of Gwyer, own the stock of the Continental Contracting Company, the plaintiff corporation, Adams being its president, and Gwyer its secretary and treasurer.

*383 It seems that in 1916 some of the contract work was done by them as a firm, and some by them in their corporate capacity. In that year the firm contracted with the city to pave certain streets and alleys under a contract known and designated as Contract No. 9. Thereafter, as stated by Grwyer, tbe city asked for bids upon what was designated as Contract No. 11. Before submitting a bid thereon he, in September, 1916, called upon the Baltimore Quarries- Company, carrying with him the plan and specifications of the work under said contract, and asked them, the Baltimore Quarries Company, to submit a price for the stone to be delivered on tbe contract at tbe different locations, and that be, with certain of the officials and employees of that company, including Mr. Alexander and Mr. Welsh, went over the blueprint and specifications and “tbe price of $1.65 per ton for tbe stone delivered on the whole contract” was. arrived at by them. Thereafter they wrote him a letter stating that they would furnish all the stone on said Contract No. 11 for $1.65 per ton. This letter, however, was lost and although be has made diligent search, it cannot be found. He testified, however, that- he had a similar letter written him August- 1st, 1916, by the defendant company, in connection with Contract No. 9, and that letter was like the one received in this case, with the exception that it (the one received in this case) was addressed to Adams & Company, and The Continental Contracting Company; and the price was $1.65 instead of $1.10.

The letter of August 1, 1916, written in connection with Contract No-. 9, is as follows:

“Baltimore, August 1, 1916.
“Mr. John A. Gfwyer,
“934 Franklin Road,
“Baltimore, Md.
“Dear Sir:
“Replying to your inquiry of recent date, we beg to quote you as follows on stone for City Contract No. 9, Concrete Alleys:

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 590, 137 Md. 379, 1921 Md. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balto-quarries-co-v-gwyer-etc-md-1921.