Clinton Oil & Mfg. Co. v. Carpenter

101 S.E. 47, 113 S.C. 10, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 14, 1919
Docket10281
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 101 S.E. 47 (Clinton Oil & Mfg. Co. v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clinton Oil & Mfg. Co. v. Carpenter, 101 S.E. 47, 113 S.C. 10, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 183 (S.C. 1919).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

Action for damages for breach of a contract; verdict for the plaintiff; appeal by the defendant.

The appellant has argued five questions; let the statement of them be reported as set down on the fourth and fifth pages of the brief.

*13 There is no question about the existence of the contract. Omitting the irrelevant parts of it, the contract is in these words:

“J. H. Carpenter agrees that he will sell to the other parties to this contract * * * acid phosphate during the two seasons, May 1st, 1916, to May 1st, 1917, and May 1st, 1917, to May 1st,' 1918, at the price of $8.50 cents per ton f. o. b. cars at the plant of Carolina Phos. Co. near Greenville, the fertilizer to be paid for on May 1st, 1917, and May 1st, 1818, respectively.”

The italics are supplied.

The persons to the whole transaction are the Tennessee Fertilizer Company at Nashville, Tenn., represented by Carpenter, its president, resident then in New York; Sparrow, its secretary, resident at Nashville; Todd, the local agent and manager of the Carolina Phosphate Company, a domestic corporation at Greenville and an agency of the Tennessee corporation; Bryson, the head of two domestic corporations, the Woodruff Oil & Fertilizer Company at Woodruff, in Spartanburg, and the Clinton Oil & Manufacturing Company, at Clinton, in Laurens.

The instant transaction is for the fiscal year first named, May 1, 1916, to May 1, 1917; and the amount of acid phosphate thereby agreed to be sold to the plaintiff was 1,000 tons.

There is likewise no question but that only 160 tons of acid phosphate was delivered under the contract, and that I he defendant refused to deliver the balance of 840 'tons.

The alleged wrong of such refusal is the plaintiff’s cause of action.

We now come to the appellant’s first question. The contention of it is that there was no testimony that the plaintiff vendee notified the defendant vendor, and gave to the vendor shipping instructions for the shipment of all the 1,000 tons *14 of acid phosphate within the period contemplated by the con tract and by the custom of trade, before the expiration of the time for shipment.

This exception requires some particular examination of the testimony.

Reverting to the contract, it may be fairly inferred from the words of it that the acid phosphate was to be delivered to the plaintiff before the 1st day of May, for that was the end of the fiscal year, and payment of the price was then due.

If, therefore, the plaintiff did not call for an execution of the contract by asking for a delivery to it before 1st May of the 1,000 tons, manifestly the defendant has done the plaintiff no wrong.

The contract does not prescribe by what formality, in time or in agency, the vendee should call for delivery of the acid; it does not prescribe that the call for delivery shall be intermittent, or that it shall be in writing; indeed, the appellant does not contend for so much.

A witness for the vendor described this as the method of calling for a delivery:

“I am familiar with the customs of the trade as to quantities of this product usually ordered out at one time to be shipped during the season. It is the custom of the trade in carrying out a contract of this kind to ship from time to time during the season, and not all in bulk at one time. The custom is to give orders from time to time during the season and directions for shipment and to whom it is to go. Sellers cannot make shipments without shipping instructions. We must wait until such instructions are received before shipping; it would be impossible to ship without these instructions.”

It is conceded that the vendee made six calls, and the vendor made six deliveries for the vendee, starting 18th January and ending 2d February, aggregating 160 tons, and all shipped to Woodruff.

*15 The present 'contention of the vendor is that the vendee on 1st February wrote the vendor not to make any further shipments until “we write you againand that the vendee did not after that date make any further call for shipment until 30th April, on which day the vendee directed the vendor by telegraph “if compelled io have shipping instructions ship balance Woodruff Clinton acid to Spartanburg.” The italics are supplied.

And the vendor’s consequent contention is that this instruction, though within' the letter of the contract, came too late for him to comply with the contract, and it was, therefore, inoperative.

Assuming that circumstance to be a valid exuse, yet the testimony tends to prove that on the 19th March the Tennessee Fertilizer Company wrote to the plaintiff and acquired specifically of it to ascertain “the total amount of acid phosphate which you will take during the current season ending May 1, 1917.”

Thereto the plaintiff answered on 21st March that il “expected to take the amount the contract calls for.”

It is true Todd testified that he could not say that he was advised of that correspondence.

There was, nevertheless, no warrant for the defendant with the plaintiff’s letter of 21st March before him to have been misled by the plaintiff’s aforementioned letter of 1st February.

The testimony also tends to show that the plaintiff, independently of the telegram of 30th April and before that date, frequently requested the defendant, in person and by the agency of a phone message, to ship out the balance of the contract. Mr. Bryson so directly testified more than once. It is true that Mr. Todd testified that he never recognized verbal orders coming to him over the phone; but he admitted that he suspended shipments upon request by phone to do so, and he also admitted that he had first received by phone *16 the substance of the telegram of 30th April which explains the italicized words of that telegram.

1 This testimony made for the jury a pointed issue, whether or not the plaintiff eight or ten days before the 1st May (admitted by Todd to be sufficient period in which to execute an order) ordered to be shipped the balance of the contract.

This conclusion makes irrelevant the inquiry whether the defendant chose not to stand on his right to have in hand before 1st May orders to ship out.

But the second and third grounds of the appellant make that issue, and we shall decide it also.

Of course, the vendor may have waived his right to stand on the letter of the contract; no practice is more common amongst men.

There is abundant testimony tending to prove that the defendant was not minded to exact that all the orders for shipment should be in before 1st May, and that shipments out should inevitably take place before that day.

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Related

McCall Co. v. Hobbs-Henderson Co.
136 S.E. 762 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)
Kirkpatrick v. Hardeman
110 S.E. 119 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1921)
Tennessee Fertilizer Co. v. International Agr. Corp.
243 S.W. 81 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.E. 47, 113 S.C. 10, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-oil-mfg-co-v-carpenter-sc-1919.