Blue Spruce Company v. Parent

365 A.2d 797, 1976 Me. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 4, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 365 A.2d 797 (Blue Spruce Company v. Parent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Spruce Company v. Parent, 365 A.2d 797, 1976 Me. LEXIS 383 (Me. 1976).

Opinion

DUFRESNE, Chief Justice.

Blue Spruce Company, the plaintiff, in a complaint on account annexed, sought to recover the sum of $8,462.73 from the defendant, E. H. Parent, in the District Court, District II, Division of Central Ar-oostook. The plaintiff Company’s claim was for the purchase price of certain chemicals sold and delivered to the defendant. The issue was joined and the case proceeded to trial upon the defendant’s general denial, no affirmative defenses being set forth in any responsive pleading as required by Rule 8, District Court Civil Rules, which provides that Rule 8 of the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure governs procedure in the District Court so far as applicable. 1 Following the receipt of testimonial and documentary evidence, the Dis *800 trict Court Judge awarded judgment to the plaintiff in the full amount prayed for.

Upon the defendant’s request pursuant to Rule 52, D.C.C.R., 2 the District Court Judge adopted practically in toto suggested findings filed by the plaintiff with the Court. These findings supported the plaintiff’s contention that the dealings between the parties resulted in a contract of sale, thus rejecting the defendant’s argument that the agreement entered into was only f>ne of consignment.

Pursuant to Rule 52(b), D.C.C.R., 3 the defendant then filed with the Court a motion to have the previous findings of fact and conclusions of law amended, suggesting for the first time on this record, as an alternative to the finding of no consignment, the following findings of fact and conclusions of law, based on illegality of the transaction:

a) “that Plaintiff sold and delivered to Defendant at New Jersey from 8/1/71 through 11/2/71, 5,530 gallons of a chemical known as sodium arsenate for shipment to the State of Maine.
b) “that the chemical sold and delivered by Plaintiff to Defendant was an unregistered economic poison within the meaning of Title 7, Section 135a of the United States Code which was in effect at the time of the sale.
c) “that Title 7, Section 135a of the United States Code made it unlawful during the period from 8/1/71 through 11/2/71 for any person to ship or deliver for shipment from any State to any other State the chemical known as sodium arsenate.
d)“that any contract entered into by and between Plaintiff and Defendant in the period from 8/1/71 through 11/2/71 for sale and delivery of the chemical sodium arsenate is an illegal contract and not enforceable in a court of law.”

Following the defendant’s motion to the Court for an amendment of the previously made findings, the plaintiff suggested amended findings of facts and conclusions of law, which were adopted by the Court. The material portion of these findings may be quoted as follows:

“However, from the testimony elicited, it would appear that the chemicals were ‘economic poisons’ within the purview of Title 7, Sec. 135(a), U.S.C.A. However, the evidence produced showed that the final destination of the respective shipments was to be a foreign country, to wit, Canada, and said chemicals were to be finally sold and used there, and no evidence was offered by either party to the contrary. See Title 7, Sec. 135a(5)(b), U.S.C.A. Arnold Livingston, general manager of Plaintiff and an expert in the domestic and foreign sale of chemicals of this nature, testified that the chemicals in question were properly *801 labeled, branded and registered for sale in Canada. Since his testimony was not disputed, the Court finds such to have been the fact.”
“The chemicals in question would not be an unregistered economic poison within the meaning of Title 7, Sec. 135(a) of U.S.C.A., as they were properly labeled, branded and registered for sale in Canada which was their intended destination and would therefore not have been in violation of Sec. 135 — 135k of Title 7, of U.S.C.A. See Title 7, Sec. 135a(5)(b) of U.S.C.A.” (Emphasis in original)
“Title 7, Sec. 135(a), U.S.C.A., speaks for itself, but the Court finds that the sale in question was not an unlawful shipment by reason of the fact that its intended final destination was a foreign country, to wit, Canada, and all evidence at the trial showed that that is where final delivery and sale was made. There was no evidence that any of said merchandise was either sold in or used in the State of Maine.”
“The contract in question is not illegal for the reasons above stated and is an enforceable contract.”

The defendant appealed the District Court judgment in favor of the plaintiff to the Superior Court, where he pressed anew the defense of illegality. The Superior Court Justice, in his analysis of the record on appeal, noticed that no mention of the defense of illegality was made in the defendant’s answer and that, since no record of the evidence in the District Court was made available as part of the record on appeal, it could not be implied that the case was tried with the issue of illegality in mind. He concluded that the issue of illegality had not been litigated before the District Court by consent of the parties, either express or implied. Under the circumstances, the presiding Justice ruled that the defense of illegality had been waived and was not properly before him on appeal.

In his appeal to the Law Court, the defendant seeks to test the propriety of the Superior Court’s ruling on the question of the defense of illegality. We deny the appeal.

The defense of illegality under the rules of court regulating the civil procedure in the courts of Maine is an affirmative defense and, if the defendant Parent intended to raise such an issue to block recovery by the plaintiff on the asserted contract, he was required to “set forth affirmatively” in his responsive pleading his claim of illegality of the contract in avoidance of responsibility thereunder.

Since the defendant was required in the instant case to file a responsive pleading and since Rule 12(b), M.R.C.P. (made applicable by Rule 12, D.C.C.R) says that

“[ejvery defense, in law or fact, to a claim for relief in any pleading, whether a claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim, shall be asserted in the responsive pleading thereto,” (Emphasis added)

the defendant’s failure to “set forth affirmatively” the defense of illegality would ordinarily be considered a waiver of the same. Existing issues between the parties should be properly raised by sufficient pleading at the trial level. Frost v. Lucey, 1967, Me., 231 A.2d 441, 445.

The affirmative disclosure of the specific issues in controversy required by the rules compelling the express assertion of affirmative defenses in pleadings is essential, if the trial court is to have the opportunity to make underlying findings of fact on critical aspects of any issue, which findings are necessary for appellate review. See Graffam v. Geronda,

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365 A.2d 797, 1976 Me. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-spruce-company-v-parent-me-1976.