Carlin v. Biddison

109 A. 316, 135 Md. 458, 1920 Md. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 109 A. 316 (Carlin v. Biddison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlin v. Biddison, 109 A. 316, 135 Md. 458, 1920 Md. LEXIS 6 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered, the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought in the Baltimore City Court to recover damages for the breach of an alleged contract to deliver to the plaintiff one hundred thousand feet of second-hand lumber.

The declaration as originally filed contained the six common counts in assumpsit for goods bargained and sold; “for work done and materials provided”; for money lent; for money paid; for money received by the defendant, and for money found to be due on accounts stated, and four special *461 counts. On demurrer the eighth, ninth and tenth counts were stricken out. The seventh and tenth counts were amended, and the case was tried on issues joined on general issue pleas to the several counts.

The amended seventh count alleged that on or about the 17th of April, 1917, the defendant sold to the plaintiff' 100,-000 feet of lumber at $16.50 per thousand to be delivered to the plaintiff; that the defendant

“delivered to the plaintiff 28,000 feet thereof on account of said contract, and received on account of the total purchase price $470.52; that thereafter the defendant failed, neglected and refused to deliver * * * the balance of said 100,000 feet of lumber, and as a result thereof the plaintiff was compelled to go into the open market and purchase 55,000 feet in lieu thereof at a cost greatly in excess of $16.50 per thousand, to wit, $41.50 per thousand; and the plaintiff further lost the difference between the value of the lumber sold to him by the defendant and the market value of lumber of a similar character, to wit, $25.00 per thousand for 17,-000 feet.”

The amended tenth count alleged that on or about tbe 17th of April, 1917, tbe defendant sold to the plaintiff

“certain lumber at Baltimore, Maryland, to wit, 100,000 feet at $16.50 per thousand, said lumber to be of an average quality to be delivered to the plaintiff on the ground of the defendant at the Monumental Brewing Company’s plant, Frederick avenue near Smallwood street; that the defendant delivered to the plaintiff on said ground about 28,000 feet of said 100,000 feet, but the said 28,000 feet was of such poor character and quality that it did not average up to the average quality and standard of the whole 100,000 feet, and as a result thereof the plaintiff suffered great loss and damage.”

During the trial, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, the plaintiff reserved eighteen exceptions *462 to rulings on the evidence, and a further exception to' the action of the Court on the prayers.

' The plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that the defendant owned the property in Baltimore City formerly owned of occupied by the Monumental Brewing Company, on Frederick avenue and Smallwood street; that in March 1917, the defendant told the plaintiff he had a large quantity of heavy timbers and asked him if he could make use of them, ánd that the plaintiff told him that he had no use for them at that time; that about the 14th of April, 1917, the plaintiff called the defendant up and asked him if he had sold the timbers, and the defendant told him that he had not sold them but was anxious to do so;.that plaintiff asked him where the timbers were,, and that the defendant said they were, at the Monumental Brewery, and that plaintiff-said he would go down' and “look them over”; that the plaintiff and his architect, Mr. S. Bussell, went down to the brewery property the following Saturday to go. “over the situation” and see the timbers. The plaintiff’s testimony as to what they found, and what subsequently occurred betweeen him and the defendant is as follows: “The site was the location óf a brewery with all the necessary stables and ice houses, buildings that seem to be required for that purpose, and the smaller buildings were wrecked, part of the walls was lying down and some of ends of the timbers was still hanging up in the wall, leaving them on a slant, one end on the ground and the other end in the wall, and the stuff was. scattered all over the ground so that there was not any available space for any more than to pull a wagon in, the whole lot was practically covered with this debris. We looked over the timbers. We saw the condition' of the stuff in these stables and ice houses and one thing and another, and that had the ends rotted and was full of nails and spikes, and very unusual 'sizes., which in itself would have been worth nothing to me, but I went into the two buildings that were standing there, and those buildings had a good many joists, three by twelve and ten by *463 ten posts, and girders going all the way through, one on a floor; the ceilings were very low in those buildings and each floor bad a big girder, I imagine they were 12 by 14 or 14 by 16, all good, clean, Georgia pine, and by taking all the timber on the place in our calculations we decided that we could make plans and build the building really to suit these timbers. So Mr. Bussell sketched tbe layout on Sunday and Monday morning I called up- Mr. Biddison (the defendant) and told him that I thought if we could agree on a price that I could use the lumber that he had down there, and the result of that conversation was that I made an appointment to meet him at Mr. Bussell’s office, 2900 Clifton avenue. * * * He (Mr. Bussell) is the architect and consulting man that I had, and we made an appointment to meet him at eight o’clock Tuesday evening. I took my working foreman, who is another Mr. Russell, with me; and went to- Mr. Bussell’s office. We waited there from eight to something after nine and finally Mr. Biddison came in. We first discussed some general topics. The first question I put to Mr. Biddison was, ‘Mr. Biddison, what are you going to do about the lumber that is in those buildings/ standing there, as that was one of tbe fundamental elements of tbe whole proposition, and be said, Why, I am going to tear them dowln just as soon as I can get the lumber cleaned up- off tbe ground, they have been in the hands-of a real estate man for sale, but he has not sold them, and I am going'to- take them away from him and tear them -down.’ I asked him what he wanted a thousand for the lumber, both in the buildings and that on tbe ground. He said, ‘Twenty dollars a thousand.’ I told him I did not think it was worth twenty dollars a thousand to me, but I would give him fifteen dollars for it. We haggled about the price for a while, and finally Mr. Biddison got up and stood in the doorway and said, Well, he -was going to leave, but he would take sixteen dollars and a. half a thousand for the lumber that was there.’ I asked him how much he thought he had there and he said it was consider *464 ably over one hundred thousand feet. I' studied over the mattér for a little while and very deliberately and carefully said, 'Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A. 316, 135 Md. 458, 1920 Md. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlin-v-biddison-md-1920.