California Pine Box & Lumber Co. v. Wasatch Orchard Co.

117 P. 35, 39 Utah 325, 1911 Utah LEXIS 49
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1911
DocketNo. 2215
StatusPublished

This text of 117 P. 35 (California Pine Box & Lumber Co. v. Wasatch Orchard Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Pine Box & Lumber Co. v. Wasatch Orchard Co., 117 P. 35, 39 Utah 325, 1911 Utah LEXIS 49 (Utah 1911).

Opinion

FRICK, C. J.

Appellant brought this action to recover an alleged balance due on an account for merchandise sold and delivered by it to respondent. Appellant, as a corporation of California, during the times mentioned herein, was engaged in.the manufacture and sale of box shooks, or material used by growers, shippers, and dealers in fruit, in which latter business, as a ■Utah corporation, respondent was engaged at Evona, Utah. Respondent, in its answer, admitted the purchase of the merchandise as alleged in the complaint, and that the amount claimed by appellant, to wit, the sum of $2,143.05, would be due on said account were it not for certain facts which respondent set forth as a counterclaim against the appellant.

The material facts, we think, are fairly reflected in the court’s findings, which, in substance, are: That on March 7 1906, the parties to this action entered into a contract in writing whereby appellant sold to respondent and agreed to deliver to it from time to time as the same should be ordered or required by respondent all of the “box shooks” required by respondent in its factory near Ogden, Utah, for the period of one year ending March 6, 1907, such shooks to be delivered f. o. b. at respondent’s factory aforesaid. The style, quality and sizes of said box shooks, and the prices to be paid therefor, fully set forth. The workmanship was to be first-class and shipments were to be made by appellant in car load lots as ordered or directed by respondent, each shipment to be made within ten days after the receipt of the order from respondent to appellant. It is also found that appellant should [328]*328not be liable for nondelivery if delivery should be rendered impossible by reason of tbe destruction of appellant’s plant, “by fire, strikes, or other good cause over which it might have no legal control;” that after the contract was entered into, respondent, pursuant thereto, and in accordance with its terms, from time to time ordered large quantities of box shooks in carload lots from appellant, which orders were all received by appellant before March Y, 190Y; that pursuant to the orders aforesaid appellant shipped large quantities of box shooks to respondent for all of which it paid appellant the contract price except for the last three carload lots amounting to $2,143.05; that no part of said box shooks were shipped within the time specified in the contract after an order therefor was received by appellant, and the shipments were delayed by appellant without “sufficient or reasonable excuse for such delay, and in many instances shipments were delayed for several months after the plaintiff received the orders thereforthat by reason of appellant’s failure to ship the box shooks as ordered respondent was compelled to purchase from other dealers large quantities of box shooks of an inferior quality, by reason of which it was damaged in the sum of $596.20; that in addition to the foregoing the appellant, without cause, also failed to ship to the respondent three carloads of box shooks ordered by it pursuant to> the contract, by reason of which respondent was compelled to purchase shooks from other dealers of an inferior quality at a price greater than that stipulated for in the contract, which, for three carloads, amounted to the sum of $1194. It is further found that respondent in its factory and business required all of the box shooks it had' ordered from appellant including all that it was compelled to purchase from other parties as aforesaid, and that the failure to ship said box shooks by appellant was without excuse and wrongful and willful on its part. The respondent had also set upi some other items of damage in its counterclaim, but the court found that the respondent’s claims in that regard were not sustained by the evidence. The court, therefore, allowed appellant its claim of $2,143.05 in full and [329]*329allowed respondent on its counterclaim as damages tlie total stun of $1,790.20. The lesser sum when deducted from the greater left a balance due to appellant on its claim amounting to $352.85, which, with legal interest thereon from the time it should have been paid to the time of the judgment, aggregated the sum of $431.60, for which amount the court entered judgment in favor of appellant. The appeal is from such judgment.

The appellant has assigned a large number of errors, but counsel have argued only a few of the assignments in their brief, which we will now consider in their order. Counsel’s first contention that the court erred in finding that there was no legal cause or excuse for appellant’s failure to ship the material as the same was ordered by respondent and in accordance with the terms of the contract is clearly untenable. The court’s findings in that regard are in accordance with the weight of the evidence. The contention that the court erred in allowing the sum of $596.20 as damages for delayed ship>-ments is, in our judgment, not well founded. The evidence was sufficient to authorize the court to find that the appellant, without cause, failed to ship and deliver to respondent the box shooks at the times specified in the contract, and that the kind and quality of box shooks bought by respondent from appellant increased in price or market value after the contract was entered into so that at the time when the box shooks should have been delivered as contemplated by the contract such shooks were considerably higher in price, or more valuable, than the price they were sold at. Further, that by reason of appellant’s delays respondent was compelled to en- • ter the general market for box shooks, and that in doing so it was compelled to purchase shooks of an inferior quality, which, when made up into boxes, were undesirable in which to ship respondent’s fruit to its customers. The evidence also justified the finding that respondent needed and actually used all the box shooks it purchased from other dealers as well as the delayed shipments it received from appellant as aforesaid. In other words, if appellant had complied with the terms of its contract, respondent would have received from appellant [330]*330all the box shooks it needed of the quality contracted for and that respondent bought no more box shooks from other dealers than it was compelled to in order to supply its needs, and all of which were of an inferior quality as compared with the shooks purchased from appellant.

It is substantially upon the foregoing facts that the court applied the general rule of damages, namely, that re- • spondent as the purchaser was entitled to recover as 1 damages the'difference between the contract price of the box shooks and the market value thereof at the time and place fixed for delivery. That such is the measure of damages when goods are sold and not delivered is elementary. (3 Suth. on Damages [3d Ed.], section 651, and cases there cited.)

Counsel for appellant do not dispute the foregoing rule, but, as we understand them, they insist that the rule has no application to the facts and circumstances of this case. They contend that respondent received and used the 2 box shooks ordered from and shipped by appellant, notwithstanding that the shipment may have been greatly delayed. They further urge that although the respondent was required' to purchase inferior shooks to supply its needs, it nevertheless used the shooks so purchased for the purpose it would have used those it purchased from, but did not obtain from, appellant, and hence it is contended respondent was not damaged.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 P. 35, 39 Utah 325, 1911 Utah LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-pine-box-lumber-co-v-wasatch-orchard-co-utah-1911.