Champlin v. United States

297 F. 503, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1731
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 22, 1924
DocketNo. 1541
StatusPublished

This text of 297 F. 503 (Champlin v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champlin v. United States, 297 F. 503, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1731 (D.R.I. 1924).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

This is a petition under the “Tuclcer Act.” See Act March 3, 1911, 36 Stat. 1093 (Comp. St. § 991, par. 20): Act March 3, 1887 §.5, 24 Stajt. 506 (Comp. St. § 1575).

The plaintiff claims damages for breach of warranty of quality of 10,874'pounds of No. 80, single comb, Sea Island, slashed yarn, bought and paid for by him at $1.35 per pound. The first question in dispute is as to the character of the warranty. •

The plaintiff requests the following finding of fact:

“(3) That prior to selling said yarn to the plaintiff, the defendant, by its duly authorized agent, warranted said yarn to be a commercial article and reasonably fit for the purpose for, which it was made.”

The -defendant’s request on this point is:

“(5) That the defendant warranted that the yarn could be used commercially if rehandled and the sley reduced.”

The finding requested by the plaintiff is suppoited by the testimony of Frank W. Weeks, the authorized selling agent. The defendant’s request for finding seems to be based merely upon testimony of Joseph F. Kivlin, who was an assistant of Mr. Weeks, the selling agent.

Mr. Kivlin testified that the yarn had been listed by the government as scrap; that he went to New Bedford to inspect the yarn and found it all on hand in apparently good condition; that he interviewed several yarn men in New Bedford and, after talks with them and with men at the mill, reported that the yarn was in excellent condition and could be utilized if rehandled and the sley reduced. He testified that he told the plaintiff, in effect, that it was the opinion of everybody that the yarn could be used if rehandled and the sley (i. e. the number of ends in the warp) reduced.

Some confusion is introduced in the case by failing to distinguish between the questions of marketability and of quality. Mr. Stanton, treasurer of the Acushnet Mill, where the yarn was made, testified, when asked if he would have attempted to weave the yarn without reducing the sley:

"Xo; I should not have attempted it. At that time the market was flooded with balloon cloth, and I should not have made any more.”

It is evident that Mr. Kivlin, in seeking for customers, was interested in finding other uses for the yarn than the manufacture of balloon cloth. A statement made by him that the yarn could be utilized, if rehandled and the sley reduced, might Le interpreted as having reference to the market demand rather than tc the quality of the yarn. We would hardly be justified in inferring that a statement that the yarn could be used if rehandled was intended as any disparagement of the quality of the yarn or of its suitability for weaving into balloon cloth.

The plaintiff testified that he had dealt largely in balloon cloth and knew of a great number of purposes for which a high-count balloon cloth could be used1. It seems unlikely that -the plaintiff, who is an [505]*505experienced dealer in cotton yarns, should have relied upon Mr, Kivlin for information as to the uses for the yarn, or as to the commercial demand for any particular product of such yam, though it is probable that he did rely upon information that it was in excellent condition,

Mr. Kivlin reported to his superior that the yarn was in excellent condition, and, according to the testimony of Mr. Weeks, negotiations were carried on with a number of customers on the basis that the yarn was a commercial article. He testified that there were at least five bidders, one of whom, a very experienced manufacturer, bid within 5 cents of the plaintiff’s bid.

In making the contract, the United States was represented by Mr. Weeks, and the nature of the warranty must be determined from his testimony and that of Mr. Champlin, who are in practical agreement. Mr. Kivlin’s testimony did not limit the warranty nor justify a granting of the defendant’s request for a finding on this point.

The plaintiff’s request for a finding on this point as above set forth is granted.

The next question is as to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s evidence to show that th^ yarn did not in fact correspond with the warranty. Evidence of the failure of the plaintiff to find a customer for the yarn is of slight weight. It shows that it was not wanted, but does not show that this was because of any defect in quality.

There is evidence that the market was flooded with balloon cloth, that there was no demand for the yarn for this purpose, and that customers were not disposed to purchase it for other purposes. There is no substantial evidence that they declined to buy it because it was in quality unsuitable for the manufacture of balloon cloth or any other cloth. The only evidence of consequence that is offered by the plaintiff as_ to the quality of the yarn and its suitability for manufacture is evidence as to his unsuccessful attempts to have the yarn manufactured into cloth. The first attempt was by sending a beam of yarn to the Nield Mill in New Bedford on Octobef 18, 1920; a second attempt was made by sending nine beams to the Taber Mill at New Bedford on March 25, 1921. with instructions to manufacture it into cloth. The testimony of the superintendent of that mill is quite detailed. The manufacture was under his direct observation, and his testimony is the principal support, of the plaintiff’s case.

Mr. James A. Sullivan, superintendent ;of the Taber Mill, stated that the yarn was'poor yarn and “very poor .preparation,” that the yarn was weak, and in the dressing of the yarn there were places with no sizing on them. He testified that the cloth produced was very poor quality of cloth and caused much trouble among the weavers; that with proper yarn and proper sizing a weaver kan run three iooms in a six-loom set without any trouble; that with' this yam one weaver had all he could do to take care of one 1oom; that the weaving cost of the yarn would be more than the price of the cloth. He testified that in his opinion the yarn for any kind of weaving is impractical and is worth only 15 or 20 cents per pound for waste. ■

There was corroborating testimony from plaintiff’s witness, Frederick B. Macy. There was also corroboration in the testimony of'defend[506]*506ant’s witness, Charles H. Huggins, a textile engineer, who had practical experience with this yarn at the Nashawena Mills, New Bedford. He testifies as to trouble in weaving the yarn, .and that they got about 60 per cent, out of the theoretic production of 100 per cent., which made the weaving cost pretty high.

There is also testimony as to the character of the yarn from Mr. John A. Swanson, the agent of the Crompton Mills, Crompton, R. I., that he wove 6 or 7 yards of cloth from the yarn, which took one weaver IS hours; that with perfect yarn the product should have been 20 or 21 yards; that the troubles were breakage of the yarn in the loom. He testified that the price of the cloth made of such yam should be 30 cents, whereas the weaving of the cloth would cost about $1 per yard for direct labor only. He testified that the yarn was waste. The value of his testimony is seriously affected by the fact that the experiment was made shortly before the trial and more than three years after the delivery of the yam. The question of deterioration was raised, but the preponderance of evidence on that point seems to be that the yam had been properly kept and had not deteriorated from its original condition. -

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Bluebook (online)
297 F. 503, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champlin-v-united-states-rid-1924.