Boston Iron & Metal Co. v. Rosenthal

156 P.2d 963, 68 Cal. App. 2d 564, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 798
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 1945
DocketCiv. 12681
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 156 P.2d 963 (Boston Iron & Metal Co. v. Rosenthal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Iron & Metal Co. v. Rosenthal, 156 P.2d 963, 68 Cal. App. 2d 564, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 798 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

On April 20, 1937, a contract was entered into between William Rosenthal as seller and Boston Iron & Metal Co. as buyer for the sale of 4,000 to 4,500 gross tons of scrap steel at $30 per gross ton, delivered Japan, for shipment *566 during May, June, July and August, 1937. Three cargoes were shipped, the first from Honolulu and the other two from Oakland, weighing in all, according to weights at points of shipment, 1,457.09 gross tons. On July 12, 1937, the Boston Company by telegram and letter notified Rosenthal that no further shipments should be made.

Boston Company’s evidence showed that the weight .of the first two cargoes at destination was 38.32 gross tons less than at points of shipment. It also disclosed that 536.68 pounds of material in' the first cargo exceeded in size the limits set by the contract. Invoices with shipping documents had been sent to Boston Company when the shipments were made, and immediately paid. The plaintiff brought this action for $1,306.51, of which $1,150.87 was claimed as an overpayment because of the shortage in weight, and $155.64 as a penalty for the oversized material. When the defendant answered he filed a cross-complaint for -breach of contract arising out of the repudiation as to the 2,542.91 tons remaining unshipped at the time of cancellation. Judgment went for the cross-complainant. The court found Rosenthal’s damages to be $7,598.64, but deducted the $155.64 (which was conceded) for the oversizes, and entered judgment for $7,443 against the plaintiff.

Plaintiff appeals, contending that it is entitled to judgment for the short weights because, it claims, the seller was obligated to deliver in Japan and therefore landed weights should control. Its other contention is that the measure of damages should have been based on values at Kobe and that no such values were proved; also that Rosenthal acquiesced in the cancellation and was guilty of laches and that this is a case of commercial frustration.

Defendant appeals on the ground that the award of $7,443 is insufficient.

The Boston Company’s Appeal

The questions (1) whether shipping weights or landed weights should control, and (2) whether values here or in Japan should form the basis of the measure of damages, invite the inquiry as to' where the contract was to be performed; where title was to pass.

The writing sued on is dated Baltimore, April 20, 1937. It describes the material, shows.the tonnage, and then *567 provides as follows: “Price: Thirty Dollars ($30.00) per gross ton, delivered Japan. Shipment: During month of May, June, July, August, 1937. Terms: All payment to be cash against the following documents: Certificate of weight, Mate’s receipt that he has received the weight on the ship, prepaid freight bills, and invoices in duplicate. Remarks: Material to be loaded in vessel, insurable, under the nominal rates of insurance. Proper destination as to port delivery will be furnished upon advice as to the amount of tonnage you are ready to ship.” Under Boston Company’s signature appears: “Accepted: C. & F. Japan Accepted Ports. Wm. Rosenthal.”

The cross-complaint, in addition to stating a cause of action for damages, pleaded that at and prior to the making of the written contract the parties agreed that the defendant would ship all material in the name of the plaintiff, procure at his own cost marine insurance in the name of the plaintiff and for its benefit, and deliver the marine insurance policies to plaintiff; and that these matters had been omitted from the written contract by mutual mistake. The prayer asked for reformation. It was stipulated and the court found that the parties had signed the writing in the belief that it embodied these omitted matters.

The first cargo was shipped on the S. S. “Ethan Allen” from Honolulu. An affidavit was furnished showing the weight to be 1,018,450 pounds, or 454.665 gross tons. The court found that material of that weight was loaded aboard ship, but also found that the weight of the cargo on arrival at Kobe was only 437.55 gross tons. The second shipment was on the S. S. “Golden Tide” from Oakland. Weight certificates were furnished showing the weight to be 1,161,920 pounds, or 518.7142 gross tons. The court found that material of that weight was loaded, but that the cargo at Kobe weighed only 497.51 gross tons. When each shipment was made the defendant delivered to the plaintiff an invoice, a bill of lading, prepaid freight bills, certificates of railroad or truck weights and an insurance policy. The contract called for payment against such documents. The contract also called for a mate’s receipt showing the weight on the ship, but the court found that compliance with that provision had been waived.

The parties by stipulation defined the issues to be tried. *568 The first question was whether plaintiff was “obligated to pay for merchandise ‘delivered Japan’ only?” and the second: “When defendant delivered to plaintiff bill of lading, certificates of railroad or truck weights, insurance policies and invoice did defendant fulfill his contract obligations ? ’ ’

Boston relies upon the words “delivered Japan” as creating a condition that Rosenthal had to actually land the material there. There is nothing in the contract touching the place of delivery other than may be suggested by the words “delivered Japan,” and it is settled law that “if, in a contract for purchase and sale of goods to be shipped to a given point, nothing is stated as to the place of delivery, the delivery to the buyer is complete when it is made to the common carrier at the place where the seller produces them or has them for sale.” (1 Williston on Sales (2d ed.), § 280h, p. 623; Pond Creek etc. Co. v. Clark, 270 F. 482, 486.) Counsel for Boston have submitted no authority holding that the words “delivered Japan” mean what they claim. On the other hand, in Meyer v. Sullivan, 40 Cal.App. 723 [181 P. 847], this court held, where the words “f. o. b. Kosmos steamer at Seattle” gave rise to a controversy as to precisely where delivery was intended, that the trial court properly admitted parol evidence of custom and usage to aid in determining that question. In the instant case the words “delivered Japan” are part of the sentence “Price: Thirty Dollars ($30.00) per gross ton, delivered Japan.” The trial court was undoubtedly satisfied, as we are, that the words in that collocation were used to refer to and qualify price, and not to indicate the point of delivery or where title was to pass. The other provisions of the contract, which were performed to the letter, are consistent with this view, for marine insurance and ocean freight were paid by the seller, which rendered the price of $30 per ton inclusive of all charges up to the actual landing of the cargo in Japan. In short, it was a “delivered Japan” price. In Meyer .v. Sullivan, supra, the court points out that the trial court had determined that the phrase “f. o. b. Kosmos steamer at Seattle” had been “used therein in connection with the price of the grain only, and not as fixing the exact place at which it should be delivered.

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Bluebook (online)
156 P.2d 963, 68 Cal. App. 2d 564, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-iron-metal-co-v-rosenthal-calctapp-1945.