C. Noel Legh & Co. v. Stetzinger

274 F. 715
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 1921
DocketNo. 8046
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 274 F. 715 (C. Noel Legh & Co. v. Stetzinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. Noel Legh & Co. v. Stetzinger, 274 F. 715 (E.D. Pa. 1921).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

The plaintiff declares upon an oral contract entered into with the defendants the early part of April, 1919, and confirmation thereof in writing on April 21, 1919, for the sale and delivery to the plaintiff at Liverpool, England, of 26 carloads of lumber of various sizes, grades, and kinds, and at various prices. The terms of the contract as set out in the defendants’ confirmatory letter are as follows: '

“The sale which was made to you at Philadelphia, Pa., is as follows:
5 cars 4/4 No. 2 com. white oak.at, $ 83.00
1 car 4/4 wormy white oak.at 92.00
10 cars 4/4 No. 1 com. white oak.at 100.00
6 ears 4/4 l’s and 2’s white oak.at 126.00
5 cars 4/4 l’s and 2’s chestnut.at 93.00
[716]*716“All delivered to Liverpool, England, less 2% per cent, on nét f. o. b. mill price and 4 per cent, commission on tbe gross amount of invoice terms, sight draft attached to B/L for full net amount of invoice. You to pay the insurance on the lumber, shipment to be made within 60¡ days from May 1st, providing we could secure ocean rate not to exceed $1.00 per 100 lbs. Shipments may be made at a higher rate, with your consent only, and you to absorb the rate in excess of $1.00 per 100 lbs.
“It must be understood, however, that unless there is a likelihood of being able to secure the rate specified above, that we shall not be expected to hold the stock for you, and in that event the order is to be considered canceled.”
On May 21, 1919, the defendants wrote to the plaintiff’s managing director at New York as follows:
“New Castle, Pa., May 21, 1919.
“Mr. E. Hooton, Pennsylvania Hotel, New York, N. Y — Dear Sir: We received your night letter reading as follows: ‘Letter received. Yes other shippers have just booked at dollar fifty five through Baltimore. Telegraph what quantity first and seconds and number one oak you have ready for immediate shipment against our order and will write you instructions. Pennsylvania Hotel, New York.’
“We are not wiring you for the reason that we want to go into detail more fully than we can by wire. '
“We have made a great many inquiries for space and rates. The B. & O. have not been able to encourage us any for shipment from Baltimore. The latest quotation, we have was from Furness-Withy & Co., who quote us a rate of $1.90 per 100 lbs., freight to be prepaid. Their letter dated the 19th we are inclosing herein.
“Now, with reference to the stock, desire to say that we sold this for shipment in May and June and delivered prices were based on ocean rate of $1.00 per 100 lbs. To get space and a rate that we thought would be satisfactory to you seemed practically out of the question, consequently we were under the impression that you would not be able to take the stock and we were probably a trifle hasty in disposing of a few cars of the material which we had intended to apply on your order.
“About the only stock we have now which is dry enough to ship is one car 4/4 No. 1 common white oak, and five cars No. 2 common white oak. If we could secure space and you are willing to( absorb the difference in ocean rate, of course we will be pleased to ship this.
“Your commission, however, will apply to the gross amount of invoice, computed on an ocean rate of $1.90 per 100 lbs.
“On account of extremely wet weather, we have not been manufacturing the amount of stock anticipated, neither has the stock that is in pile been drying very rapidly, both of which had a tendency to shorten our supply.
“If it will suit you as well, we would prefer to hold the order up for the time being, but will be guided by your wishes in the matter.
“Yours truly [Signed] G. G. Stitzinger & Go., G. G. S.”

Replying to the above letter, Hie plaintiff, by its managing director, wrote the defendants as follows:

“May 23, 1919.
“Messrs. G. G. Stitzinger & Co., New Castle, Pa. — Dear Sir: I was pleased to receive your letter of the 21st. inst. and note carefully all you state, and are rather sorry that you have disposed of some of the stock purchased by us. I note that it would suit you better to hold the stock up for the time being, and would certainly like to meet your wishes all we can. We will therefore leave matters as they are say for another month, when we shall be pleased if you will advise us what stock you have on hand against our order, and we will let you know exactly what to do.
“Regarding shipment we would just like to point out that our friends the C. S. Powell Lumber Co., 1270 Broadway, New York, inform us that it is possible they will obtain space for a good bunch out of Norfolk in the near future, [717]*717in which they have promised to give us some of this space, and we would like you to take this letter as ail authority to ship any of your goods to them at Norfolk for our account, and satisfactory arrangements will be made regarding payment. Probably Messrs. Powell would cable us at Liverpool and ask us to put up a bank credit, so that they could pay you the amount necessary, equivalent to what the stock would cost on a cif basis as per contracts between us.
“Meanwhile, I remain
“Yours sincerely, [Signed] It Hooton.”

It is averred in the statement of claim that in the above letter of May 23, 1919, the plaintiff agreed to extend the time for shipment one month, or until August 1, 1919, and that it thereupon became the duty of the defendants to ship the lumber not later than August 1, 1919. That the plaintiff, desiring to remove any cause for delay by relievingthe defendants of all responsibility in procuring a freight rate, made an agreement with the C. S. Powell Lumber Company to allot to the plaintiff space reserved for its lumber on a steamship or steamships to sail for England, and that the plaintiff on July 1, 1919, sent the defendants a cablegram in code, and confirmed it in a letter of the same date to the defendants, reading as follows:

“Liverpool, July 1, 1919.
“Gentlemen: We received a cable from our friends Messrs. G. S. Powell Lumber Company, New York, indicating that they had an opportunity of chartering a United States Shipping Board vessel at a low rate of freight out of Norfolk, Va., and knowing that the writer when in thej States had purchased large blocks of lumber from different friends, Messrs. Powell cabled to us, asking if we would like to get in touch with our friends and authorize them to ship out our lumber on this space and take advantage of the low freight offering, and we lost no time in cabling you as follows: ‘Will you communicate with Powell Lumber Oo. New York reference lumber on order they will arrange freight we give you authority to deliver to their instructions.’
“Of course, as soon as ever you have delivered the goods to Messrs.

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Related

C. Noel Legh Co. v. Stitzinger & Co.
281 F. 1015 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
274 F. 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-noel-legh-co-v-stetzinger-paed-1921.