Eastern Rolling Mill Co. v. Michlovitz

145 A. 378, 157 Md. 51, 1929 Md. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 20, 1929
Docket[No. 22, January Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 145 A. 378 (Eastern Rolling Mill Co. v. Michlovitz) 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
Eastern Rolling Mill Co. v. Michlovitz, 145 A. 378, 157 Md. 51, 1929 Md. LEXIS 64 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiffs,' Simon Miehlovitz, Abram Miehlovitz, and David Furman, aré copartners trading as Miehlovitz & Co., and carry on an extensive wholesale business in buying and selling iron, steel, and other scrap at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where their office and two of their yards are located. They have two other yards at Lebanon, which is in the same state and twenty-five miles from Harrisburg. The defendant, the Eastern Rolling Mill Company, an incorporation of the State of Maryland, with its principal office in Baltimore and its plant either in that city or in its environs, is a manufacturer of sheet steel, and its processes leave for disposal a large quantity of what is known to the trade as “crop end *53 scrap” and “bundled steel scrap.” Tbe first is tbe ends of steel bars, which are the raw material of the industry; and the second is the ends of steel sheets, which the defendant hydraulically compresses into bundles for sale as scrap. The steel sheets constitute ninety-eight per centum of the gross money value of the corporate business, and the other two per centum is, practically, the two kinds of scrap mentioned.

Since the defendant began operation in 1920, the defendant had exclusively disposed of this scrap to the plaintiffs. The yearly output of scrap was large, the transactions between the parties satisfactory, but periodic contracts for more than three months for the entire accumulation of both kinds of scrap began, apparently, on December 1st, 1922, when the parties agreed to a sale and purchase of an entire thirteen months’ production at a flat rate per ton for each kind as delivered by the defendant on gondola railway cars at its plant, when it was to be removed without delay by the plaintiffs. However, the prices agreed did not remain in force throughout the period, as they were voluntarily increased by the plaintiffs, after a conference, for the deliveries during the second and third quarters of that year. On November 30th,, 1923, the parties again agreed in writing. The contracts were similar to those for 1923,' except that the term was for five years, beginning on January 1st, 1924, and ending on December 31st, 1928; and that the prices were not specified but were to be agreed upon by the parties at the beginning of every period of three months during the life of the contract. Before the expiration of these contracts, the parties cancelled them on September 15th, 1927; and superseded them by two new written contracts, each for the period of five years from the 1st day of October, 1927, to the 30th day of September, 1932, inclusive. The only practical difference between the two contracts is that the subject matter of one is crop end scrap and of the other is bundle steel scrap, so only the terms of one need be stated.

By these contracts, the defendant agreed to sell its entire accumulation of the two kinds of scrap during the period of five years at prices to be fixed at the beginning of every *54 •quarter for the next succeeding three months in the following manner: The plaintiffs were to accept delivery .of the scrap as it accumulated, and its price, when loaded by defendant •on gondola cars at its plant, was, (a) with respect to the pressed bundled sheet steel scrap, three dollars a ton less than what was quoted in the “Iron Age,” a trade publication, at the beginning of every quarter, as the Philadelphia market for bundled steel sheets; and, (b) with respect to the crop •end scrap, three dollars a ton less than what was quoted in said journal, at the beginning of every quarter, as the Philadelphia market for No. 1 heavy melting steel. The contracts required the plaintiffs to pay $5,000 on account of both contracts at the time of their formation; and the defendant agreed to give credit to this amount on the scrap to be delivered, the plaintiffs promising to pay whatever was in •excess of this sum in accordance with the terms then in force between the parties.

These contracts went into effect according to their stipulations; the plaintiffs paid to the defendant the required •$5,000; the prices for bundled sheet steel scrap and for crop end scrap were fixed on September 29th, 1927, in accordnace with the provisions of the contracts, for the ensuing-last quarter, October, November and December, 1927; and. the scrap for this quarter was regularly delivered by the defendant and paid for by the plaintiffs. No controversy of any kind arose until the death of John M. Jones, who had been the president and general manager of the defendant from its inception, and who-, in these capacities, had made with the plaintiffs all the contracts for the sale of scrap to the plaintiffs. Jones died about November 1st, 1927, and in the following month, under the direction of A. J. Hazlett, the new president, an effort was made to induce the plaintiffs to agree to a rescission of the contracts. The defendant’s objection to the contracts was their duration and the prices, but it was willing- to enter into new contracts for not •over a year, upon the other terms, including the prices, of the original contracts. The defendant charges, but the plaintiffs deny, that the plaintiffs assured the defendant of *55 their willingness to1 rescind the subsisting contracts and to enter into similar ones for a short period. The defendant’s, contention is not supported by the weight of the evidence; and there can be no doubt that there never was any agreement between the parties for any modification of the contracts in controversy. In performance of these contracts,, the defendant and plaintiffs agreed in December, 1927, upon the prices for scrap for the- ensuing first quarter of the year, and, similarly, agreed in March, 1928, upon the price basis; for the second quarter, and, accordingly, the defendant delivered, and the plaintiffs received and paid for, all the scrap which accumulated during the first six months of 1928.

Since the June, 1928, deliveries, the defendant has refused to comply with its contracts, although the plaintiffs have demanded their performance, and the defendant does, not question plaintiffs’ willingness and ability to complete and discharge fully their obligations. Under these circumstances, and because of the alleged irreparable loss and injury to the plaintiffs resulting from the defendant’s refusal to fulfill its continuing contracts, the plaintiffs brought a bill to enforce specifically the contracts. After answer, and the taking of proof by the parties in open court, the chancellor decreed the relief prayed for, and this appeal raises the question of the right of the plaintiffs to relief.

When the defendant determined, in November or December, 1927, to obtain a termination of the contracts by cancellation or by the reduction of their term, it was aware of all the grounds, upon which it now relies to avoid the contracts, so all the successive acts of performance on the part of the plaintiffs and of the defendant, respectively, were alike referable to the subsisting contracts; and, even if it be conceded that these acts were done- pending an abortive effort to- cancel the contracts or to

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Bluebook (online)
145 A. 378, 157 Md. 51, 1929 Md. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastern-rolling-mill-co-v-michlovitz-md-1929.