Bisordi v. A. Barbaresi & Son, Inc.

44 A.2d 381, 132 Conn. 356, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 10, 1945
StatusPublished

This text of 44 A.2d 381 (Bisordi v. A. Barbaresi & Son, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bisordi v. A. Barbaresi & Son, Inc., 44 A.2d 381, 132 Conn. 356, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 207 (Colo. 1945).

Opinion

Ells, J.

The plaintiff brought this action in five counts to recover balances alleged to be due for mill-work materials furnished to the defendant, a general contractor engaged in building houses for the Federal Housing Authority. The appeal concerns only the judgment on the fifth count, in which it is alleged that the parties entered into a contract whereby the plain *357 tiff was to furnish all the millwork required for housing projects at Southington and Stratford, that the plaintiff performed all the conditions of the contract, and that a balance of $21,734.06 is due and unpaid. The trial court entered judgment for approximately this amount, with interest, and the defendant has appealed.

The defendant in its answer admitted that the parties entered into the contract. The principal issue is whether it was based upon price lists submitted by the plaintiff sometime prior to the execution of the written agreement. If the lists are not a part of the contract, the court’s conclusion to the effect that there was no agreement establishing fixed prices for the materials furnished is correct.

The material facts found by the trial court, with the corrections to which the defendant is entitled, may be thus summarized:

The plaintiff was furnishing, under lump sum contracts with the defendant, all the millwork material required for houses being built by the latter for New Britain and Plainville projects. In March, 1943, the defendant began negotiations with the federal authorities relative to proposed housing projects at Southington and Stratford. Wholesalers and manufacturers would not sell the necessary materials to the defendant in carload lots to be shipped to the nearest railroad station. Late in March, the defendant discussed with the plaintiff the prospect of buying through him as much millwork material as possible, in carload lots to be shipped direct to the job site, thus making the plaintiff a purchasing agent so that the defendant could secure the benefit of wholesale prices. The discussions at that time contemplated that none of the materials would be handled, processed or delivered by the plaintiff and that, if the defendant should agree to buy through the plaintiff all the necessary materials, the *358 plaintiff would receive 10 per cent of the cost for acting as the purchasing medium.

In the latter part of April the defendant asked the plaintiff to make up lists of the millwork requirements for the two projects, with available current quotations for carload lots to be shipped to the job sites. The lists were made up and the parties discussed them and made notations in pencil of the page totals. The aggregate amount was $67,621.01.

On or about May 11, the defendant informed the plaintiff that it had become too late to purchase carload quantities to be shipped to the job sites because of the uncertainty of the time of arrival. The proposal to purchase all the material in carload lots was abandoned, and on May 11 an oral agreement was made which was confirmed on May 22 by a letter, admitted by both parties to be the existing contract. It was prepared by the defendant, and reads as follows :

“This will confirm our verbal order to purchase all the Exterior and Interior Millwork required for both the Southington Job Conn. 6161 and 6163 and for the job at Stratford, Conn. 6062 and 6063.

“This material is to be purchased by you at the lowest possible wholesale price after quotations from several sources are received. We are to receive written quotations as soon as possible after you have placed the order. All materials that you pay for on a C.O.D. basis, 'we will reimburse you'immediately upon pre'sentation of proper receipts or cancelled checks.

“All material which is shipped on carload quotations, can be billed direct to us or to you as the mill desires. Careful records are to be kept of purchases. For any material that you purchase, you are to be paid monthly, the actual cost plus 5%. When the total order is purchased, you are to receive an additional *359 5%, making a total commission of 10% on the cost of all material purchased for the above jobs. Any trucking by you is to be charged to us at the rate of $25.00 per day.

“We anticipate that the total amount of material required for these projects is $65,000.00.

“Please see that this material is ordered and delivered as soon as possible, so that there will be no delay in the progress of these two jobs.”

The defendant’s main claim is that the price lists previously prepared constituted a part of this contract and set a limit on the costs to be charged, but that the agreement obligated the plaintiff to procure the designated articles at the lowest possible wholesale prices. If that was the intention, the president of the defendant corporation, who drew the contract, could easily have stated that for all materials purchased the defendant would pay the prices stated in the lists or the actual cost, whichever was lower. But the agreement actually said: “This material is to be purchased by you at the lowest possible wholesale price after quotations from several sources are received. We are to receive written quotations as soon as possible after you have placed the order.” This is strange language indeed if it was intended to cover prices agreed upon at some previous time.

Furthermore, the lists upon which the defendant relies were based on carload quantities shipped directly to the job sites. They did not contemplate that much necessary material must be processed, machined and delivered by the plaintiff. That the defendant did not understand or believe that these lists constituted the price basis of the contract it drew is also indicated by the further words: “All material which is shipped on carload quotations, can be billed direct to us or to you as the mill desires.... Any trucking by *360 you is to be charged to us at the rate of $25.00 per day.” The court further found, upon sufficient evidence, that only a relatively small portion of the materials were purchased in carload lots, and that, with these exceptions, the materials furnished consisted of articles purchased by the plaintiff and processed by him for the defendant’s specific purposes, articles which the plaintiff had on hand which he processed for the defendant’s specific purposes, and articles purchased and delivered to the plaintiff’s yard which he reloaded on his own truck and delivered to the job sites. This finding was not attacked. It is also found on sufficient evidence that pursuant to the contract the plaintiff rendered detailed and itemized bills and requisitions each month, that during the progress of the work the defendant made no complaint regarding the prices charged in these bills, and that no complaint was then made that the charges were not the plaintiff’s actual costs.

The defendant claims that the statement made in the contract, “We anticipate that the total amount of material required for these projects is $65,000.00,” is of great significance, and ties the agreement to the lists. The court concluded that this language was not intended to, and did not, constitute any limitation or fixation of the approximate cost of materials for these two jobs.

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24 A.2d 487 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 381, 132 Conn. 356, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bisordi-v-a-barbaresi-son-inc-conn-1945.