D'Orsay Equipment Co. v. United States Rubber Co.

199 F. Supp. 427, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2971
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 22, 1961
DocketCiv. A. No. 58-772-C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 F. Supp. 427 (D'Orsay Equipment Co. v. United States Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Orsay Equipment Co. v. United States Rubber Co., 199 F. Supp. 427, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2971 (D. Mass. 1961).

Opinion

CAFFREY, District Judge.

This is an action of contract in which the plaintiff, D’Orsay Equipment Co., Inc., a Massachusetts corporation with its principal place of business in Malden, Massachusetts, seeks to recover $11,248.-88 from the defendant, United States Rubber Company, a New Jersey corporation. Jurisdiction,of this Court is invoked on the basis of diversity of citizenship of the parties.

On December 8, 1955, the defendant sent a written quotation to plaintiff, by the terms of which defendant offered to sell to plaintiff a lot of 100,000 rubber milk-dispenser tubes at a price of $81.50 per thousand. The quotation provided that the tubes would be 21%" long, possess an inside diameter of %a of an inch, an outside diameter of W32 of an inch, and have rubber-plugged ends. It stated that the quoted price included individual packing of each tube in a separate polyethylene bag and the packing of cartons containing 250 tubes per carton. It likewise contained the provision: “We are quoting White Compound C4 125.” In the “Terms” portion the document provided for a two per cent discount if payment was made within ten days; that shipments were F.O.B. Passaic, New Jersey; and that freight would be allowed on shipments of 200 pounds and over. Immediately below the above-summarized provisions of the quotation, all of which appeared in typewriting, the [429]*429following language appeared in printing as part of the prepared quotation form:

“Except to the extent specified above, all quotations, orders, sales and deliveries, as to this or any other merchandise, are subject to the conditions of sale printed on the reverse side hereof. United States Rubber Company.”

The reverse side of the quotation contained a full printed page of conditions, said conditions being eight in number.

After receipt of this quotation, plaintiff placed an order with defendant for 100,000 tubes, which order was filled, the tubes were received and paid for by plaintiff, and subsequently were resold without incident by plaintiff to its customers. Plaintiff is a distributor of supplies and equipment to dairies and affiliated businesses and it ordered the rubber tubes for resale by it to its wholesale customers, most of whom were either dairies or large distributors of milk and associated products, including H. P. Hood, United Farmers, and Whiting.

The procedure followed was for defendant to ship tubes from its factory in New Jersey to Bay State Packaging Co. in Boston. This firm in turn individually wrapped the tubes in polyethylene wrappers and placed them, 250 to a box, in boxes which at the request of plaintiff were labeled with the name D’Orsay Equipment Co., Inc. As plaintiff needed tubes for its customers it withdrew them from the stock on hand at Bay State.

On May 11, 1956, plaintiff placed another order with defendant. This order was for 250,000 tubes, and was evidenced by Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3, a printed form of the D’Orsay Equipment Co., Inc. which provided in material portion as follows:

“Please enter our order for the following, subject to the terms and conditions hereon. Quantity, 250M. Description, Dispenser-Tubes to be released as ordered in lots of 25M. Price, $81.50/M.”

On the bottom of this form appears the legend:

“Please acknowledge receipt of this order immediately giving a definite shipping date. If prices are higher than shown hereon or last quoted, notify us at once before filling this order.”

In response to this order, plaintiff received from defendant a letter dated May 15, 1956 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4), which stated:

“We wish to acknowledge and thank you for your order No. 03227 for 250,000 dispenser-tubes. We wish to advise that this material will be made up and held at our warehouse for your releases in lots of 25,000 pieces.”

Thereafter, as the defendant shipped lots of tubes to Bay State, defendant sent and plaintiff received invoices for and paid to defendant the sum of $11,-248.88, which constitutes the contract price for 139,250 of these rubber tubes.

The controversy between the parties arises as a result of plaintiff’s contention that a substantial number of the tubes delivered pursuant to the May 11, 1956 order were not of a merchantable quality, either by reason of (1) being too rigid, with the result that the clamping device in the Norris Dispenser (a piece of equipment in which these tubes were intended to be inserted by the ultimate users thereof) would not close the tubes so as to dam the flow of milk or cream from the 5-gallon cans which were connected to these tubes in Norris Dispensers used by plaintiff’s customers, or (2) being “tacky,” with the result that when the clamp of the Norris Dispenser was applied to them the insides of the tubes would remain stuck together so that no flow of milk or cream would result upon releasing the clamp of the Norris Dispenser.

Plaintiff’s position is that these tubes, as a result of these defects, were not of a merchantable quality, and that as a result plaintiff may rescind the contract and reclaim the purchase price of the material by reason of the statutory warranties contained in the Uniform Sales [430]*430Act which was in effect in both Massachusetts and New Jersey at all times material to this controversy.

Defendant denies that anything more than a negligible number of tubes were not of merchantable quality and further contends that even assuming that the quality of the tubes amounted to a material breach of the Uniform Sales Act warranty of merchantable condition and/or fitness for the particular purposes, these warranties of the statute are not available to plaintiff in this litigation by reason of the fact (1) that the conditions of sale referred to above specifically eliminate any statutory warranties or other undertaking by the seller, whose obligations for breach of warranty are described in paragraph 4, and (2) that plaintiff had failed to give seasonable notice of his dissatisfaction as required by both the conditions of sale and the Sales Act. Paragraph 4 of the Conditions of Sale provides:

“The Seller’s products are not guaranteed for any specific length of time or measure of service but are wari*anted only to be free from defects in workmanship and material, and all goods shall be subject to Seller’s normal manufacturing tolerances. Only those warranties herein set forth shall be deemed to have been made by the Seller, or relied upon by the Buyer. All previous communications, whether in the form of engineering recommendations or otherwise, are effective only to the extent therein contained.
“The Seller’s liability for breach of the above warranty is limited to refunding the purchase price of the merchandise, or at the Seller’s option, to replacement upon its return. Under no circumstances shall the Seller be responsible for consequential damages.
“No claim for any breach of warranty herein will be considered unless delivered in writing to the Seller within thirty (30) days after date of delivery of the first shipment with respect to which claim is made.”
To dispose of this argument based on the disclaimer of warranty, plaintiff contends that the quotation is not part of the contract under which the tubes involved herein were sold and that the contract of the parties is composed merely of Plaintiff’s Exhibits 3 and 4, i. e., Purchase Order No.

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Bluebook (online)
199 F. Supp. 427, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorsay-equipment-co-v-united-states-rubber-co-mad-1961.