Consolidated Beef & Provision Co. v. Witt & Co.

40 A.2d 295, 184 Md. 105, 1944 Md. LEXIS 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 20, 1944
Docket[No. 45, October Term, 1944.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 A.2d 295 (Consolidated Beef & Provision Co. v. Witt & Co.) 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
Consolidated Beef & Provision Co. v. Witt & Co., 40 A.2d 295, 184 Md. 105, 1944 Md. LEXIS 219 (Md. 1944).

Opinion

Collins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Witt & Company, Inc., plaintiff, appellee, entered suit in the Superior Court of Baltimore City against The Consolidated Beef & Provision Company, a body corporate, defendant, appellant, for payment for 1762 pounds of beef tongues at twenty-four cents per pound, the amount alleged to be due being $422.88. After general issue plea was filed by the defendant, the case was heard by the trial Judge and a judgment rendered for Witt & Company, Inc., for the amount claimed, $422.88.

From that judgment the Consolidated Beef & Provision Company appeals to this Court.

The appeal is taken from the judgment on exceptions to proffered evidence which the trial Judge refused to admit, and by virtue of General Rules of Practice and Procedure, III, Trials, Rule 9 (c), effective September 1, 1941, allowing this Court to review the case on the evidence. As the weight of the evidence is before this Court, it is necessary to recite it in some detail.

Barry T. Wright, manager of plaintiff corporation at the time of the transaction on September 15, 1943, called as a witness for plaintiff, testified to the facts contained in this paragraph. Mr. Maurice Salganik, agent of defendant corporation, came on Wednesday, September 15, 1943, to plaintiff’s place of business to buy anything they had to offer. He told Mr. Salganik that they had four or five barrels and boxes of fresh beef tongues of *107 which one box and one barrel were a little off condition, not as fresh as they could have been. The prevailing price was twenty-seven cents a pound, but on account of the off condition of the barrel and box of tongues, he offered the whole lot to him for twenty-four cents a pound. He was not sure whether the box and barrel were marked “beef tongues” or “ox lips.” In the presence of Mr. Samuel Kolker, the president of plaintiff corporation, who was there during the whole transaction, all of the barrels and boxes were opened and examined by Salganik. He pointed out to him the box and barrel which were in off condition. Some of the tongues were chilled, not frozen, and their condition did not prevent a proper examination by Salganik and the ascertainment in his presence and in the presence of Mr. Kolker as to whether or not they were acceptable. After examining them, Salganik signed the ticket and had plaintiff’s men load the barrels and boxes on his truck and he hauled them away himself. Witness testified that the off condition tongues were fit for human consumption. The witness then produced the invoice and ticket signed by Mr. Salganik showing a sale of 1,762 pounds at twenty-four cents, a total of 8422.88. On the following Thursday or Friday he had a telephone call from Mr. Salganik who said he would pay ten cents a pound for the lot of tongues because the barrel and box were in “off condtion” and all he could get was ten cents, and the tongues were worse than he thought they were. Witness told Vim that this was ridiculous, that he must be crazy or something like that. He next heard from Salganik on the following Saturday when he came to plaintiff’s place of business and asked if witness would allow him a credit of fourteen cents a pound for the tongues. Witness refused to do this as did also Mr. Kolker. On the following Monday, September 20, Salganik returned the tongues which the plaintiff would not accept. He further testified that he left the employ of the plaintiff on the 25th of September, 1943, and went into business for himself on December 1st. He said he was certain that after that *108 time he did not sell anything to the Consolidated Beef Company. His business is a partnership known as the Wright Beef Company. He does not make all the sales. His partner, Mr. Segal, might have sold something to the Consolidated Beef Company and he would not know it. The witness then identified an invoice dated January 8, 1944, showing a sale made by Mr. Segal of the Wright Beef Company to the Consolidated Beef Company for §850.61, and the defendant offered this invoice in evidence. The Court refused to admit this invoice, and to this refusal the defendant noted an exception.

Samuel Kolker, the president of plaintiff corporation, testified that on September 15th, the morning of the transaction, Mr. Salganik stopped at a place of business across the street from that of the plaintiff corporation where he was at the time. He knew that he was buying tongues, so he told him that he had a few barrels across the street and would like him to look at them. They walked across the street to plaintiff’s place of business where, in the presence of Mr. Wright, they discussed the price of the tongues. There were six barrels and a box of which one barrel and a box were a little off condition, and Wright had' a conversation with Mr. Salganik regarding that. On that day the price for first-class tongues of that quality was twenty-seven cents. As a result of their conversation, Salganik finally bought the whole lot of tongues for twenty-four cents a pound. Witnesses saw him make an examination of the tongues. One of the employees opened up the tops and Mr. Salganik looked at and examined every barrel, and he opened up a box and looked at that and agreed to take them. There was nothing about their condition which prevented him from making a thorough examination or from seeing or ascertaining the condition of the tongues. After the examination and after they were weighed, they started making out the invoice. The witness said, in other word$, that the barrels were rolled out on the pavement, opened up for Salganik to look at them thoroughly, more in the light. Each and every barrel was rolled on the pave *109 ment and they were opened outside so Mr. Salganik could examine them thoroughly. One of plaintiff’s men and defendant’s driver loaded the goods on a truck of the Consolidated Beef Company and Salganik signed the invoice in evidence. On the following Saturday he came to plaintiff’s place of business, complained about the tongues, that they were not good enough. He said he told him: “You saw them, you bought them, you examined them. As far as I am concerned, it was a perfect sale. I am not responsible for what you have done with them after you took them from my place.” Salganik offered ten cents a pound which witness refused, stating that he would not make any reduction in price.

Maurice Salganik, purchasing agent for the defendant, testified for the defendant that since September 15, 1943, he had seen Mr. Wright once every day or every other day. In January, 1944, he was at the Wright Beef Company. To the question as to whether Mr. Salganik did or did not on January 8, 1944, purchase from Mr. Segal in the presence of Mr. Wright a lot of merchandise, the plaintiff objected. The Court sustained the objection, and the defendant noted an exception. The defendant again attempted to offer in evidence the invoice in the amount of 8350.61 formerly rejected. The plaintiff objected. The Court sustained the objection and allowed defendant an exception.

Mr. Salganik further testified that Mr. Kolker was not present when the purchase of the tongues was made by him or at any time during the transaction. He said Kolker was across the street and he was told by Kolker there that they had some tongues across the street. He said that Mr. Wright had the tongues in a big cooler. He had a few barrels of tongues, he did not see exactly how many, and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 295, 184 Md. 105, 1944 Md. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-beef-provision-co-v-witt-co-md-1944.