Berman v. Littauer

119 A. 565, 141 Md. 649, 1922 Md. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 17, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 A. 565 (Berman v. Littauer) 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
Berman v. Littauer, 119 A. 565, 141 Md. 649, 1922 Md. LEXIS 154 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

*651 Ojkb’ütt, J.,

delirerecl the opinion of the Court.

The appellees, who are glove manufacturers of New York City, in November, 1919, orally contracted to sell to Louis Berman and Jacob B. Kadis, trading as the Federal Bargain House of Baltimore, a. lot of gloves to correspond with certain samples shown the purchasers at the time the contract was made. The gloves were shipped in the following July to the “Federal Bargain House” at 37 Hopkins Place, Baltimore, Maryland, where the buyers appear to have been engaged in the jobbing business at the time they ordered the gloves. When the gloves arrived in Baltimore the appellants were no longer at 37 Hopkins Place, which had become unlouantable as a result of a fire, but were located at- 713 Light Btreet. The gloves were sent to the Hopkins Place address for delivery, and finding neither the consignees nor any one representing them at that address, the gloves were placed by tlio carrier in its warehouse, and notice of their arrival, addressed to the consignees at Hopkins Place, sent, and inquiries made to ascertain their new location. In the latter part of August, 1920, the appellants having learned of their presence there, removed the gloves from the warehouse to their place of business and inspected them, and, as a result of their inspection, they on August 31, 1920, wrote the appellees this letter:

“Your shipment of July 8th reached us a few days ago, same having been placed in storage by the Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Oo., without our knowledge. We did not receive notice of arrival.
“The cases were opened by us today, and we find that we will not he able to use the gloves at any price. Yon have cut your sizes so small that we could only sell the gloves as boys’ sizes. We ordered the goods at your regular prices and are entitled to first quality goods and full men’s sizes. We do not intend to ruin our trade with merchandise that is not worth handling.
We enclose herewith bill of lading to cover the shipment of three cases.
*652 “This is the first season that we have dealt with you, and we are sorely disappointed. If we had bought a job lot from you we would know what to expect, but we ordered your regular goods, and do not intend to accept anything but merchandise that we can handle at a profit and hold our trade.”

To that letter the appellees replied that the goods corre-. spondéd with the samples and returned the hill of lading. The appellants again wrote the appellees a letter in which among other things they said:

“We again enclose herewith B. & O. R. R. bill of lading dated August 31st, covering the three cases of gloves. Please do not be under the impression that we are going to be intimidated because you refuse to accept the shipment. You did not ship us the gloves which we ordered. The samples are full size and the make is uniform, but you shipped us three cases of the worst and the commonest gloves we have ever seen.”

This letter, as it appears in the record, bears the date October 2, but that is apparently an error, for the record speaks also of a letter written by the appellees dated September 13th, 1920, as a “response” to the letter dated “October 2d.” In this last letter the appellants were notified that the carrier ha'd placed the gloves in storage in New York. On October 25th, 1920, the appellees sued the appellants in an action of assumpsit in the Superior Court of Baltimore City for the purchase price of the gloves. The case was in due course tried before a jury, and a verdict returned and judgment thereon entered for the plaintiffs for $1,293.15, and from that judgment this appeal was taken.

The record contains two exceptions, one of which relates to the court’s action in overruling a motion to “non suit” the plaintiff, and the other of which relates tO' the court’s rulings upon the prayers.

The point involved in the first exception is that, because the business of the plaintiffs was, before this suit, taken over *653 by a corporation, that they could not sue upon a partnership claim existing at the time the corporation succeeded to their business..

Assuming, without deciding, that the question is before us for review, we find no error in the ruling involved in the first exception. The record does not show that the partnership of Littauer Brothers was ever dissolved, or (2) that the' claim sued oil here was ever assigned by the partners to any other person. But even if the partnership had been actually dissolved, it, nevertheless, would not have terminated until the winding up of the partnership affairs had been completed, (article 73 A, Code Pfib. Gen. Laws of Maryland, section 39), and the partners were as mucli entitled to sue on the claim in this ease after the incorporation of the new company as before, even if that could be regarded as a dissolution of the partnership'. 2 Rowley on Partnership, sec. 834.

The plaintiffs offered one prayer which the court granted, and the defendants six prayers, of which the court granted the second, fifth and sixth and refused the others. The defendants’ first prayer raised the same question which we have disposed of under the first exception and was properly refused. The defendants’ third prayer was bad because it entirely ignored the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, tending to show that the defendants' received and accepted the goods, and having accepted them, failed within a reasonable time to return them or notify the seller of any breach of warranty, and it wa.s properly refused. The defendants’' fourth prayer is a demurrer to the evidence, and in connection with it some reference was made to the Statute of Frauds, as affecting the plaintiffs’ right to recover, but that contention is. without substantial merit, because there is in the case evidence that the goods were received and accepted by the defendants, and if they were received and accepted, such receipt and acceptance took them out of the statute. Castle v. Swift & Co., 132 Md. 634.

By granting the plaintiffs’ first prayer the court instructed the jury “that it was the duty of the defendants to accept *654

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Bluebook (online)
119 A. 565, 141 Md. 649, 1922 Md. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berman-v-littauer-md-1922.