Brown Bag Filling MacHine Co. v. United Smelting & Aluminum Co.

107 A. 619, 93 Conn. 670, 1919 Conn. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 31, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 A. 619 (Brown Bag Filling MacHine Co. v. United Smelting & Aluminum Co.) 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
Brown Bag Filling MacHine Co. v. United Smelting & Aluminum Co., 107 A. 619, 93 Conn. 670, 1919 Conn. LEXIS 66 (Colo. 1919).

Opinion

Gager, J.

Between February 18th and February 22d, 1916, the plaintiff and the defendant, after negotia *677 tions in writing, entered into a written contract of sale under which the plaintiff sold to the defendant about 34,000 pounds of aluminum rod. The plaintiff was not a dealer in aluminum, but a manufacturer of machinery, and was left with the material on hand as a result of failure to place an anticipated munitions contract. The defendant was a regular dealer in altnninum. The order of the defendant, prepared by it, described the material as “rod aluminum,” “to be drawn to our specifications.” By direction of the defendant the plaintiff sent the rod to the mill to be redrawn according to specifications to be furnished by the defendant. The defendant then requested that two sample coils of 5/32nds inch wire be drawn and sent to it for examination. The plaintiff advised the defendant that the manufacturer was of opinion that the rods were too hard to furnish a satisfactory 5/32nds inch wire. Under the request, two coils of wire were drawn and sent to the defendant. The defendant refused to give further specifications or to accept the wire at the mill, on the ground that the rod aluminum offered by the plaintiff was not of the character purchased by the defendant. The action is brought under the first count to recover damages for the refusal of the defendant to take the wire. The defendant claims that it bought pure aluminum and counterclaims for damages because of plaintiff’s failure to furnish such aluminum as defendant claims it bought. There is a second count to recover for the two coils of 5/32nds inch wire never returned or paid for, and for 1,490 pounds shipped, out of the lot described in the order, to the defendant and never returned or paid for.

The case primarily turns upon the meaning of the terms of the written contract which the parties confessedly made. It appears that the trade designation of the rods the plaintiff had was 15 S. or 15 S. H. 15 S. *678 is a grade of alloyed aluminum containing about 861^ per cent pure aluminum. H is the symbol for annealed hard. 0 is a symbol for annealed soft. 2 S. is the symbol for commercially pure aluminum, that is, 98 to 99 per cent aluminum. Narrowly, the question was whether rod of the particular alloy, 15 S. in the trade, answered to the description and filled the order for “rod aluminum.” The jury found in the affirmative, or, for reasons stated later, found an acceptance, and rendered a verdict for the plaintiff on both counts. A motion to set aside the verdict, or reduce it by deducting the damages assessed under the first count, was denied. The defendant appeals from the denial of this motion, also for claimed errors in the charge and in rulings on evidence.

Upon the charge as given the jury were fully warranted in rendering a verdict for the plaintiff. It appears from the pleadings that the negotiations were entirely in writing. The series of exhibits, concluding with the direction by the defendant of February 22d to ship the rod to the mill for redrawing, referred without exception to the material as “rod aluminum.” It was also part of the order that the aluminum should be drawn to specifications. The pleadings and the finding show beyond question that the contract was for the purchase of specific property then in the hands, or subject to the order, of the plaintiff, uniformly described as rod aluminum. If, in accordance with the meaning of the term in trade, the aluminum in question was rod aluminum, the contract was met by the plaintiff. Much testimony by witnesses skilled in the business was heard by the juiy as to whether “rod aluminum,” either standing alone in the order, or with the additional words “to be drawn to our specifications,” without further description, had a definite, established meaning in the trade; and if so, whether the meaning was pure *679 aluminum or a standard alloy; or, to put it more definitely, whether the alloy 15 S., containing 86^2 per cent of aluminum, furnished or offered by the plaintiff, filled in the trade the requirements of a contract for rod aluminum.

It further appears that out of the entire amount covered by the defendant’s order, 1,490 pounds of one-half inch rod, needing no redrawing, was shipped to the defendant upon its order and by it sold in the original package. The defendant claimed that this was sold under the belief that it was pure aluminum, and that two months later its purchaser made a claim based upon the fact that these rods were not pure but were only 93 per cent aluminum. There was evidence from which the jury might have found that no complaint was ever made about this rod and that it was accepted by the defendant as part of the entire purchase.

The jury were further entitled to consider from the negotiations, whether the order was not for the specific rods that the plaintiff had, and that if the rods delivered or offered were those and only those the plaintiff had on hand when the defendant made its first inquiry, and were in fact rod aluminum as understood in the trade, then the plaintiff filled its contract whatever the specific alloy might be. There was no error in denying the motion to set aside the verdict or reduce the amount.

The record shows about thirty exceptions to the charge, in quantity about half of rather a long charge. A number of these exceptions were, however, either withdrawn or not pursued upon the argument.

. The ninth and tenth reasons of appeal relate to the preliminary part of the charge, in which the court states the making of a contract with reference to aluminum rods. There was no error here. The court is simply stating the agreed substance of the pleadings and the substance of the defendant’s order as written *680 and accepted, and as to which there was really no controversy. The question that developed did not arise from the form of the contract or its language, as to which there neither was nor could be any dispute, and as to which there was no claim of mistake or fraud. The real question on this part of the case was what, in the trade, under the circumstances, the descriptive language “rod aluminum” and “to be drawn to our specifications,” meant. The defendant contended that rod aluminum, the term uniformly used until long after the contract was closed, meant pure aluminum rod. This whole question was left wide open to the jury by the charge, and indeed was the fundamental question, and there was no error as to this part of the charge.

The eleventh, twelfth, thirty-seventh and thirty-eighth reasons of appeal relate to those portions of the charge which refer to the Philadelphia order, so-called. Thé court said: “Let me remind you . . . that the so-called order number 1414, commonly spoken of as the Philadelphia order, has nothing to do with the case you are to decide, and all this evidence regarding it has been offered because so much of the correspondence refers to both these orders and it has not been possible to keep them entirely distinct and therefore to keep the completed order out of the case.” It appears from the finding that part of the plaintiff’s aluminum consisted of 4,400 pounds of aluminum to be specified, in the original boxes as received at the mill and not described as rod.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Chatham v. All American Sales, Inc.
56 So. 2d 42 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1952)
Miles v. Sherman
166 A. 250 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1933)
Williamsburgh Stopper Co. v. Bickart
134 A. 233 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1926)
Detroit Vapor Stove Co. v. Farmers' Cash Union
216 P. 1075 (Utah Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 A. 619, 93 Conn. 670, 1919 Conn. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-bag-filling-machine-co-v-united-smelting-aluminum-co-conn-1919.