Daniel Gage, Inc. v. Kimball

193 N.E. 30, 288 Mass. 413, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1295
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 N.E. 30 (Daniel Gage, Inc. v. Kimball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel Gage, Inc. v. Kimball, 193 N.E. 30, 288 Mass. 413, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1295 (Mass. 1934).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is an action of contract in two counts to recover the price of ice, “sold and delivered” to the defendant under a sealed agreement which reads: “Agreement made this twentieth day of March, 1930 between • Daniel Gage, Inc., a Massachusetts corporation having [415]*415a usual place of business in Lowell, Massachusetts, and George Kimball of Malden, Massachusetts. The said corporation agrees to sell and the said Kimball agrees to buy all the ice now in the houses of said corporation at North Littleton, Massachusetts, payments to be made weekly by the buyer at the rate of seventy-five cents (75c) per ton, the weight for the purposes of this contract to be the same as the weight estimated by the railroad company which receives shipments of ice at the ice houses at North Littleton. The buyer agrees to remove all of the ice the subject of this contract at once and in no event to leave any ice on the premises of said corporation after Sept. 1, 1930. It is agreed that the time of each payment for the ice is of the essence of this contract. It is further agreed that the ice which is the subject of this contract shall not be sold by said Kimball for direct or indirect distribution in any part of the territory where the said corporation operates at Lowell, and it is agreed that this last stipulation is also of the essence of the contract. Witness our hands and seals this twentieth day of March, 1930. Daniel Gage, Inc. By F. Arthur Osterman Its Vice-President & General Manager. George P. Kimball.”

The defendant admitted that “the weight estimated by the railroad company which received shipments of ice at the ice houses of the plaintiff in North Littleton in 1930 was the weight shown by the railroad scales at Lowell when the ice from said houses at North Littleton reached Lowell.” He also admitted “that from June 11, 1930 to and including June 14, 1930, he or his employees or agents removed from the ice houses of the plaintiff at North Littleton 403,400 pounds of ice for which ... he owed the plaintiff $151.27.”

The vice-president and- general manager of the plaintiff corporation, whose authority to act for and bind the plaintiff is not questioned, testified as follows: In the spring of 1930 the plaintiff had ice houses and ice in them at North Littleton and other places. The ice in the houses at North Littleton had been cut in the winter of 1928-1929, and consequently had stayed over one summer in the ice houses [416]*416and was called "two-year ice.” Before March, 1930, the manager had a conversation with the defendant relative to the buying of this ice, and, as a result of this conversation, by appointment he met the defendant at said ice houses. There an employee of the plaintiff uncovered a block of ice and took it outside for examination by the defendant. The defendant looked at it and talked about the sale of it. Thereafter, on March 20, 1930, the plaintiff and the defendant executed the paper, above quoted, at the office of the plaintiff in Lowell. The manager further testified, in substance, that he talked with the defendant about the insurance of the ice, told him that the plaintiff had the ice insured, and asked him if he would care to have the policy indorsed to him; that the defendant said “ no,” that he wanted to give it to a friend if there was any profit in it and that he would take care of the insurance. The manager told the defendant "he would cancel the plaintiff’s policy in a matter of a day or two afterwards,” and did so.

Respecting the matter of insurance of the ice the defendant testified that "there was a conversation about insurance on the ice in which Mr. Osterman [the manager] told him he was going to cancel his insurance; that this conversation was very soon after the signing of the contract, whether the next day or two days after . . . [he] could not say; that he told Osterman not to cancel the insurance; that he did not consider the ice to be his ice until it was on the cars, but would take it up with MacDougall, because the ice had been resold to MacDougall and if MacDougall wanted to put insurance on, it was up to him ‘but we would place it through my brother-in-law’; that there was nothing in the agreement with MacDougall that compelled him to place insurance on the ice; that his agreement with MacDougall was just an oral agreement.”

The manager testified, in substance, that he met the defendant by appointment at the ice houses in North Littleton in June, 1930, after the defendant had taken out several cars of ice; that the defendant said he was [417]*417going to close the house and move to South Chelmsford and take the ice in the North Littleton houses out later in the season; and that he (the witness) said that was all right with him. He later testified that there was no mutual understanding arrived at in June that the ice should stay in the North Littleton houses until cold weather; that he understood the defendant’s statement to be that the ice would stay there until later in the season, that is, until the first of September, which was the time for removal provided by the agreement, and that the talk about leaving it until later was “a matter of conversatian.” He further testified that he went to North Little-ton in June to see that the ice was covered properly because if it was not covered properly it would melt faster and the plaintiff had to stand the melting as the ice was to be weighed in Lowell; that the defendant did not ask him to come out there and notice the condition of the ice, and did not tell him that the ice in the houses was not fit to ship; that the defendant did not say to him, “I think the best thing we can do is to let this alone until cold weather, because if we try to ship it to Lowell there won’t be any in Lowell when the cars get there.”

The defendant testified as to this conversation as follows: MacDougall, to whom the ice had been resold by the defendant, in the presence of the defendant told Osterman that the “ice wasn’t fit to ship and couldn’t be handled in the retail business and that he couldn’t take any more ice out of the ice house.” “Osterman had some ice taken up, at least two or three tiers, to see if the thickness had changed in going down.” It had not, so the defendant simply told Osterman that no more ice could be taken out of that ice house through MacDougall. Osterman said “it was all right, to try and take out what they could, the best of it.” MacDougall said “it would be no use, there would be too much of a shrinkage,” and that he would “take it out later in the fall, in cold weather.” Osterman replied that “he had not put the ice in the house; that the old Daniel Gage company had put it in the ice house and that he didn’t know the condition of [418]*418the ice.” When the cakes were exposed to view Osterman said “only to take out the good ice.”

On September 15, 1930, the plaintiff sent a letter to the defendant, the material part of which reads: “We have been expecting to see you, especially since the MacDougall fiasco and have wondered just what was being done about the North Littleton ice. According to our interpretation of the contract, the ice is yours and really should have been removed long ago.” On October 22, 1930, a fire consumed the North Littleton ice houses. On October 24, 1930, the plaintiff sent the defendant the following letter: “This is to notify you that we have suffered a complete loss by fire at our North Littleton plant. Everything has been destroyed and, as far as I can see, you will be unable to salvage any of the ice.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sadler Machinery Co. v. Ohio National, Inc.
102 F. Supp. 652 (N.D. Ohio, 1952)
Manhattan Clothing Co. v. Goldberg
78 N.E.2d 1 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1948)
B. H. Spinney Co. v. Western Massachusetts Finance Co.
4 Mass. App. Div. 376 (Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div., 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 N.E. 30, 288 Mass. 413, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-gage-inc-v-kimball-mass-1934.