Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. v. Wisconsin Mat Co.

24 F.2d 78, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 1962
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1928
DocketNo. 3865
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F.2d 78 (Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. v. Wisconsin Mat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. v. Wisconsin Mat Co., 24 F.2d 78, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 1962 (7th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

PAGE, Circuit Judge.

Defendant in error, called plaintiff, recovered á judgment against plaintiff in error, called defendant, for damages for breach of a written contract, by which defendant was, within a period of two years, to purchase not less than 15,000 nor more than 30,000 “reversible pit mats of the kind, quality, and approximate size as sample submitted, being made of India fiber rope.” Delivery of more than 500 mats was not to be required the first month, nor more than 1,000 during the second month. For deliveries for any subsequent month “vendee shall serve written notice on said vendor of no less than three months in advance of said delivery, stating the quantity of mats to be delivered in any particular month.” Delivery of more than 3,000 mats could not be required in any month. The contract period was from January 4,1923, to the same date in 1925.

Prior to the expiration of the contract, defendant ordered, received and paid for 10,325 mats. After the expiration of the contract, defendant, on January 15 and March 7,1925, ordered and received sufficient mats to make the total 11,030. On May 28, 1925, after it had been, by the terms of the contract, in default nearly five months, defendant notified plaintiff it would neither specify nor receive any more mats.

Plaintiff was the patentee and manufacturer of the mats, and defendant a very large dealer in mats. The only defense pleaded is that:

“Plaintiff from time to time shipped pit mats * * * which, because of latent defects therein not apparent to this defendant on reasonable examination of said mats, were unmerchantable, in that said mats, after they had been from time to time sold by said defendant to its customers and trade, proved defective and worthless.” (Italics ours.)

It was further averred that plaintiff from [79]*79time to time, when notified, promised to supply mats of better-quality but did not do so; that, because of such breach, defendant refused to order further shipments. A counterclaim, based on the same allegations, was filed. There is no complaint as to the manner in which the mats were made. That the mats were of. the kind and size sold is not questioned. The quality only is questioned. It is not denied that the mats were made of “India fiber,” which meant, in the trade, yam made from the husk of the cocoanut plant.

Outside of the fact that two of defendant's officers testified that one of the officers of plaintiff admitted that the mats were not up to sample, the probative force of which was very slight (see 3 Jones, Commentaries on Evidence, § 1070), there was no evidence tending to support the defense pleaded. There was no attempt to show that there were any latent defects in the mats, more than 10,000 of which -had been received and paid for by defendant. All that the evidence tended to show was: (a) That some of the mats did not wear as long as it was thought they ought to wear; and (b) that some of them did not wear as long as mats purchased from plaintiff at some previous time.

What was said to be the identical sample, upon which the sale was made, was brought into court by defendant, together with a mat delivered in March, 1925. The witness said he was not capable of pointing out the difference between the various kinds of mats, but that, looking at those two side by side, there was nothing in the outward appearance to show any difference between them.

At the close of the case, and after the court had indicated a conclusion contrary to defendant’s contention, defendant counsel said that they had an expert witness coming from Chicago, “who will prove that the sample delivered to us, from which the mats were to be made, was entirely different and entirely superior to the mats delivered to us.”What sort of an expert he was, and in what way the sample was to be shown to be superior, was not disclosed. Under the circumstances, the action of the court in denying defendant’s request to continue the case until the following day, to enable it to produce the expert witness, was, we think, well within his discretionary right.

The two-year term of the contract expired January 4, 1925. The time for specifying monthly deliveries desired under the contract expired three months before that date. The fact that plaintiff did not complain of that failure, but continued, on request, in the months of January and March, 1925, to deliver mats under the contract, did not change the force of the fact that it was nearly eight months after the specifications should have been given that defendant gave notice that it would not carry out its contract. '

While it appears that, from time to time, there were numerous complaints, yet, compared with the number of mats delivered, the number of complaints was small,•••and it also appears that plaintiff was quite ready to meet any complaint; but, so far as the record shows what the complaints were, none disclose defects which the plaintiff, under its contract, was obliged' to make good. This was an installment contract. No examination of any kind was made of the 1,500 mats tendered at the time of their rejection and the repudiation of the contract. The evidence for plaintiff is that they were equal to or better than the sample.

It is urged that the court applied, the wrong measure of damages, and that it should have submitted the question, as to whether there was or was not a market for the goods to the jury. The court held that no market value for the mats appeared, and for that and other reasons the correct measure of damages was the difference between the contract price and the cost of manufacture.

The question as to what the measure of damages is in any given ease is one for the court to determine from all the facts and circumstances in the case. There was no attempt to have submitted to the jury, even if there was a right to have that done, the question as to whether there was or was not a market. As to whether there was, the direct evidence shows that there was a sale, after the repudiation of the contract, of between 50 and 60 of the more than 3,000 mats. One day in September 27 were sold, in October two, and later in October 23.

Under the contract, plaintiff. agreed not to make any sale of the mats to a dealer after May 1, 1923, and agreed it would not accept any more retail orders and that all such received during the life of the contract should be turned over to the vendee. That was done, and for 2% years thereafter, until the repudiation of the contract, no market was open to plaintiff. The action of some of defendant’s customers tended to give the mats a bad reputation, and, on May 25, 1925, without inquiring into the kind or quality of the mats tendered, defendant, who was then plaintiff's only market for the mats, refused to take them “except at a price,” which, of' course, did not mean that there was an established market.

Much has' been made in argument of a statement by the senior Kottler, an officer of plaintiff. He had been testifying about the quality of mats, and that he had found [80]*80no difficulty in finding a market for them, referring to a time prior to the contract. Then he was asked, “As far as you could see, if the 1,500 mats which the Wisconsin Mat Company had were offered for sale, they ought to he salable on the market, had they not? and he answered, “Absolutely.” His testimony showed that he had not been in business for more than two years prior to the time he testified and that he knew nothing about the market.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F.2d 78, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 1962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunswick-balke-collender-co-v-wisconsin-mat-co-ca7-1928.