Buckwalter Stove Co. v. Central Trust & Savings Co.

53 Pa. Super. 558, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 219
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 75
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 53 Pa. Super. 558 (Buckwalter Stove Co. v. Central Trust & Savings Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckwalter Stove Co. v. Central Trust & Savings Co., 53 Pa. Super. 558, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 219 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

This action was brought to recover a balance claimed for heaters and ranges furnished, for a building enterprise undertaken by James Conner. The plaintiff’s evidence exhibits the following state of facts: There were 156 dwelling houses included in the plan; mortgages were placed on the property and the money arising therefrom amounting to about $282,000 was deposited with the [561]*561defendant to be applied by the latter on the bills of subcontractors for materials, etc.; title to the property was placed in David Carson, who was paying teller of the defendant, by whom the property was to be held until the houses were completed, for the protection of the mortgagees or the Central Trust Company; the defendant insured the mortgagees against loss by reason of the failure of Conner to complete the buildings and received the usual compensation for holding and disbursing the funds deposited; it provided an inspector of the work and the funds were controlled and disbursed by John It. Deacon, trust and title officer of the defendant; the McKee Roofing Company was a subcontractor having a contract for the roofing, cornices, spouts, heater and range work for all the houses at the aggregate price of $21,000, $14,700 of which was to be paid as the work progressed and the remainder, $6,300, at the completion of the buildings; of the fund on deposit, $14,700 was set aside to apply on the McKee contract. The specifications of that contract called for furnaces and ranges to be manufactured by the plaintiff. An agent of the latter took an order from the McKee Co. on June 3,1906, for ninety-six furnaces and ninety-six ranges. After one-half of the order had been filled the plaintiff became dissatisfied and at a meeting of McKee, P. D. Buckwalter, treasurer of plaintiff, and Deacon at the place where the houses were in course of construction Mr. Deacon expressed himself as not being satisfied with the progress that McKee was making on the operation; that it was not going along fast enough; and that he would have to have more goods and have them shipped faster; in reply to which Mr. Buckwalter said that no more goods would be shipped to that operation until he (Deacon) had acknowledged to the Buckwalter Stove Company that he had set apart $6,000-in payment of the goods that were shipped and were to be shipped to the Conner operation, to which Mr. Deacon replied: “Let the goods come in. We will be responsible for them and pay for them, — The Central Trust Co.” A short time thereafter Buckwalter [562]*562obtained an order from the McKee Company on the defendant for $6,000 out of the amount appropriated to the McKee contract which amount' he requested be set aside for the use of the plaintiff. On the same day Buckwalter and McKee of the McKee Company had an interview with Deacon at which time the order for the $6,000 was handed to Deacon who received it and said that the amount named would be appropriated as requested by the order. At that time, according to the plaintiff’s evidence, Deacon also promised to pay for the merchandise that the plaintiff had delivered for the houses and for that to be thereafter delivered. The treasurer of the plaintiff then said to him that if he would confirm that promise 'in a letter the plaintiff would ship the furnaces and ranges not then delivered. A week later the defendant paid $600 to the plaintiff to apply on the furnaces and ranges theretofore delivered and on July 6, a letter was written to the plaintiff company as follows:

“Central Trust & Savings Company.
. “ Philadelphia, July 6, 1907.
“ Buckwalter Stove Company,
“ Royersford, Pa.
“ Gentlemen:
“ The heaters and ranges for the forty-eight houses on Lindenwood Street in the James H. Conner operation, 52nd and Woodland Ave., ought to be shipped at once.
The McKee Roofing Company have the contract with Mr. Conner for this work. If these heaters and ranges have not already been ordered by Mr. McKee, we would ask that you have them shipped irrespective of Mr. McKee’s order.
“ I might mention that the money for this material has been set aside to you from Mr. McKee’s contract.
“ Your early attention to this matter will oblige
“ Very truly yours,
“John R. Deacon,
“ Trust Officer,”

[563]*563Thereupon, the remaining 48 furnaces and ranges were shipped to the Conner buildings. The total amount of the plaintiff’s bill was $4,268.88. The payments made by the defendant amounted to $3,415.10, leaving a balance of $853.78 for which the suit was brought. Liability for this amount is denied by the defendant on the grounds: (1) that the amount deposited with it by Conner was only 80% of the total cost of the buildings and that it was only liable to McKee for that proportion of his bill; that the Buckwalter Company was in the attitude of an assignee of the McKee contract with respect to the furnaces and heaters and that the latter company was not entitled, therefore, to a greater sum than McKee could have recovered; (2) that the assignment of the fund of $6,000 for the benefit of the plaintiff was not accepted in writing and was therefore void; (3) that the defendant’s trust officer was without authority to enter into the contract for the payment of the plaintiff’s bill as set forth in the declaration and that the contract, if made, was not binding on the defendant.

The defendant denied that an agreement was made between its trust officer and the plaintiff for the payment of the whole bill and on this point an issue of fact was clearly and directly raised and that issue was for the jury unless the court was required as a matter of law to declare that Mr. Deacon had no authority in his capacity as trust officer to enter into such an arrangement. It was not attempted to be shown that the plaintiff had any knowledge that the fund in the hands of the defendant was only eighty per cent of the total cost of the building operation or that McKee was without authority to transfer more than eighty per cent of the amount of the plaintiff’s contract to it from his fund in the defendant’s hands. Indeed, Mr. Deacon testified that he told Mr. Buckwalter at the time when the order for the $6,000 was deposited with the company that it would be set aside for the balance of the heaters and ranges of that operation and that he presumed at that time that it was to be payment [564]*564in full. If the defendant through its trust officer who was admittedly in charge of its business in connection with this building proposition promised the plaintiff to pay that part of its bill already filled and the price of the remaining half of the order to be filled on condition that the plaintiff would proceed to deliver the remaining forty-eight furnaces and ranges and the latter relying on this promise and the representation of the defendant that it held $6,000 to be.applied in payment of the plaintiff’s bill completed the order by the delivery of the forty-eight furnaces and ranges the defendant became liable to the plaintiff as for a contract of its own. The last lot of merchandise was delivered on the agreement that the whole would be paid for, and this created an original undertaking: Greenough v. Eichholtz, 1 Monaghan, 433; Corcoran v. Huey, 231 Pa. 441.

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Related

Bayne v. Proctor & Gamble Distributing Co.
87 Pa. Super. 195 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Koons v. Franklin Trust Co.
120 A. 387 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1923)
Fruit Dispatch Co. v. Magee
60 Pa. Super. 259 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Pa. Super. 558, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckwalter-stove-co-v-central-trust-savings-co-pasuperct-1913.