Davison Chemical Co. v. Baugh Chemical Co.

106 A. 269, 134 Md. 24, 1919 Md. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 A. 269 (Davison Chemical Co. v. Baugh Chemical 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
Davison Chemical Co. v. Baugh Chemical Co., 106 A. 269, 134 Md. 24, 1919 Md. LEXIS 55 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment obtained by the appellee against the appellant. On the , 28th of April, 1913, a contract was entered into between the parties by which the appellee purchased from the appellant from 30,000 to 50,000 tons of clear sulphuric acid per year, delivered at the appellee’s works at Canton, Md., or to Baugh & Sons Co., Norfolk, Va., from a period beginning January 1, 1913, and ending December 31, 1917. There was to be a minimum of 30,000 tons, or a maximum of 50,000 tons of 2,000 pounds each per annum, on a basis of 50° Beaume, 60° Fahrenheit, and the appellee agreed to declare on January 2nd of each year what proportion of the 20,000 tons option it would take that year. The price was $5.00 per ton of 2,000 pounds, delivered in storage tanks at the buyer’s works at Canton, or storage tanks of Baugh & Sons Company, Norfolk, Va., in quantities not exceeding 700 tons at one delivery. Settlement was to be made in cash on the first day of the month for all deliveries made during .the previous month, and deliveries were to be made as nearly as possible in equal weekly instalments. The contract contained the following clause:

“Fire, accident or strike, in the work of any of the parties herein mentioned, obstmction to navigation, accident to acid barges, war, insurrection or other uncontrollable causes, rendering buyers unable to receive *27 or sellers to deliver, shall he good and sufficient reason to make this contract inoperative during the period of necessary repairs, reconstruction or continuance of difficulties.”

A trial of the case resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $139,433.65. A motion for a new trial was made, and the Court decided that it would grant a new trial unless the plaintiff filed a remittitur of $10,922.77, and the defendant would aceeed to that. The plaintiff agreed to file a remittitur, but the defendant declined to accede to the terms. The Court overruled the motion and a judgment was entered for the amount of the verdict. There are nine bills of exception presenting the rulings of the Court on the admissibility of evidence, and a tenth which embraced the rulings on the prayers.

A case between these parties, involving this contract, was decided by us at the April Term, 1918, and can be found in 104 Atlantic, 404, and in 133 Maryland, page 203. That was a bill for specific performance and an injunction, but the period of time and the questions involved are not the same in the two cases. At the trial of this case the plaintiff offered five prayers, all of which except the third were granted, and the defendant offered three, the first and second of which were granted and the third .rejected. A special exception to the defendant’s third prayer was: also filed and sustained. Wo do not understand the appellant to particularly complain of the rulings, on the plaintiff’s prayers, and we will therefore not discuss them in this opinion, but will only say that we find no reversible error in the granting of them or either of them. The alleged error in the rejection of the defendant’s third prayer is specially relied on, and we will aslc the reporter to copy that in his report of the ease. It is conceded that the authorities- cited by the appellant in support- of the doctrine of pro-rating do not in terms determine the question which the appellant intended to present by that prayer, but it is contended that it contains a propo *28 sit-ion “which logically follows from the general doctrine of pro-rating, as laid down in the authorities which we have cited; and that it is sound law.” The cases cited are Oakman v. Boyce, 100 Mass. 477; Garfield & Proctor Coal Co. v. Penn. Coal co., 199 Mass. 22, 84 N. E. 1020; Met. Coal Co. v. Billings, 202 Mass. 457, 89 N. E. 115; Jessup & Moore Paper Co. v. Piper, 133 Fed. 108; Consol. Coal co. v. Mexico co., 66 Mo. App. 296; Luhrig Coal Co. v. Jones & Adams, 141 Fed. 617; McKeefrey v. Connellsville Co., 56 Fed. 212, and Herman v. Bower Co., 242 Fed. 59. It is also claimed that the former case between these parties in 104 Atl. -, especially in the quotation from Jessup & Moore Paper Co., v. Piper, adopted the doctrine of prorating in such cases. But we have found no authority to sustain the position taken in the third prayer.

The theory of it, as stated in the appellant’s brief, is that “When a manufacturer assumes future commitments for his product to an amount which, when added to existing' future commitments to his customers, exceeds the existing capacity of his plant, but at the same time undertakes additions to his plant which should be sufficient to* provide for the increased burden assumed,”' he is doing what a reasonably prudent man in the same situation would do. Or as stated elsewhere in that brief, “The appellant’s third prayer was submitted on the theory that if a manufacturer, who* has* so made additions, does not deliver upon the new contracts assumed •in reliance upon them more than the actual production due to such additions alone, and which the* plant would not have produced if they had not been made, that then the plaintiff would not be entitled to* more than his pro-rata share of the production due to the original plant alone, if distributed among those customers in like situation with itself.”

We can understand why the doctrine of pro-rating should be adopted where the contracts for future deliveries have such saving clauses as that in this contract, which is quoted above. If the contract so provides, they are permitted to rely *29 oil such tilings, as that clause refers to—provided, of course, they act, in good faith and are proven to be entitled to, its protection, but unless the contract does so provide the parties must generally be bold to, the terms of it. There is danger, however, of giving these saving clauses too much latitude. This prayer must strike anyone as very unusual, and, to say the least, questionable. To permit a manufacturer to escape from bis full liability to bis regular customers, when he exceeded the amount tuhich his plant might he expected to produce, because he planned and undertook the construction of enlargements and additions to his, plant, for the purpose of enabling him to manufacture the increased production or additional articles so contracted for, would be making contracts dependent upon contingencies and uncertainties which the law does not subject them to unless the parties have contracted with reference to them.

We need only recall the former case between these parties to illustrate how dangerous, such a doctrine would he. There the defendant contended that it could not, get sufficient quantities of pyrites in order to furnish its customers with the acid, and that, unless it changed its plant and furnished a much more expensive substitute, it could not supply it.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A. 269, 134 Md. 24, 1919 Md. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davison-chemical-co-v-baugh-chemical-co-md-1919.