Fisher v. Andrews

50 A. 407, 94 Md. 46, 1901 Md. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 21, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 A. 407 (Fisher v. Andrews) 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
Fisher v. Andrews, 50 A. 407, 94 Md. 46, 1901 Md. LEXIS 79 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants sued Joseph B. Andrews, trading as J. B. Andrews & Co., for damages alleged to have been sustained by the former by the failure of the latter to deliver six hundred cases of peas sold by him to the plaintiffs. ' The first question presented by the record is the ruling of the Court below in sustaining a demurrer to the first count in the declaration, but, as the second count is based on the contract relied on' by the appellants, that ruling is not material, although we are satisfied it was correct.

The first exception was taken to the action of the Court in permitting the defendant to introduce the evidence of a witness, Andrew Reiter, tending to prove that'four hundred and thirty cases of peas purchased by him of the defendant “ did not-fully measure up, as to quality and condition,' to the sample exhibited to him in Court.” The defendant had shipped those cases to Baltimore for the appellants and had drawn on them for the contract price. They refused to accept the draft, which was attached to a bill of lading and presented through one of the banks—one member of the firm giving as his reason for not paying it that they wanted the remainder of the six hundred cases shipped before they paid any draft, and the other member stating that it was not customary to pay drafts until the goods were delivered and could be examined. On the same day they wrote assigning those reasons, they were notified by the steamboat company of the arrival of the four hundred and thirty cases, and, after consulting their attorney as to their right to accept them without releasing the appellee from delivering the rest, they inspected them and finding them satisfactory tried to locate the draft and bill of lading. They failed to do so, as they had not made a memorandum of the bank which held them, and then sent their check to the defendant for the amount of the bill rendered. The defendant returned the check and stated that acting on the letters of the plaintiffs. *49 they had notified their broker to sell the peas, but if the plaintiffs could find the draft they could pay it and get possession of them. They were unable to find it and mailed a certified check for the amount, which was also returned by the appellee. The peas remained on the wharf of the steamboat company from June 23rd to the 1st of July, 1899, when they were delivered to Mr. Reiter whose firm purchased them. One of the plaintiffs had testified that after he had made the purchase for his firm he was shown a pile of cans containing peas which the defendant had told him were of the description of those he had purchased, and that, with the consent of the defendant, he took two cans from the pile as samples of those he had purchased. After he had heard of the sale of the peas to Andrew Reiter & Company he gave one of the sample cans to a broker to ascertain what peas of a like kind, condition and quality, could then be purchased for. The plaintiffs called that broker and others as witnesses to prove the value of peas like that sample and also produced the other can taken by him to the witnesses in Court and offered evidence tending to prove the market value of such peas. The object of the testimony was to show what damages the plaintiffs had sustained by the alleged breach of contract on the part of the defendant.

Under those circumstances the defendant called Mr. Reiter, who had purchased the four hundred and thirty cases of peas, to show that they “ did not fully measure up in quality and condition to the sample exhibited in Court.” It must be remembered that the plaintiffs had inspected the four hundred and thirty cases at the wharf in Baltimore, and were satisfied with them, but they had undertaken to prove the amount of damages sustained by them by proving the market value of such peas as were in the two cans he had gotten from the defendant. The offer of the defendant was therefore evidently-intended to meet that evidence, by showing that the peas purchased by the plaintiffs were not of the quality of the two cans on which the plaintiffs based their evidence, but were inferior to them and hence the loss to the plaintiffs was not as great as they attempted to show. For that purpose we think the tes *50 timony of Mr. Reiter was admissible. Mr. W. H. Fisher, the member of the firm who made the purchase, testified that it was after the purchase had been made ” he was shown the pile of cans from which he obtained the two, and as he had inspected those in Baltimore and pronounced them satisfactory, the evidence offered by the defendant was relevant, as the plaintiffs claimed to have purchased “ second June peas,

‘ Andrew’s Brand,’ at 62 cents per dozen cans, to be delivered in Baltimore, packing of 1899,” and if the four hundred and thirty cases answered that description, which they apparently did, as the plaintiffs were satisfied with them, it was proper to show that they were not of the same quality and condition as those on which the testimony of the plaintiffs as to their market value was based. The theory of the plaintiffs seemed to be that the peas were not sold by sample and one of the special objections to the defendant’s second prayer was that there was no legally sufficient evidence to show such a8 sale. If that view had been adopted by the Court or the jury had so found this evidence was manifestly relevant.

It is contended on the part of the appellee that the second •bill of exceptions, which embraces the rulings of the Court on the prayers, cannot be considered by us, because it does not affirmatively appear that the exceptions were “ seasonably taken. ” But we cannot agree with that contention. The first bill of exceptions commences with the statement “ At the trial of this cause ” and then, after stating the testimony and the action of the Court referred to in the first bill of exceptions, the second is connected with it in the usual form, and after stating other evidence it proceeds “ At the conclusion of the testimony the plaintiff, by his counsel, offered the following three prayers,” which are set out in the record, as are the two of the defendant, together with the action of the Court thereon. It shows that the plaintiffs excepted specially to the first and second prayers of the defendant for reasons that are stated, and that they also “ excepted generally to the granting of both of defendant’s said prayers.” While the language used in stating the exception to the ruling on the plaintiffs’ prayers is *51 somewhat unusual, it sufficiently shows that the exceptions were intended to be to the modification of those prayers by the Court and to the granting of those offered by the defendant. There is nothing to suggest that the exceptions were not taken during the trial, as the rulings were made, but on the contrary the record when taken as a whole shows they were. We must therefore consider the rulings embraced in that (the second) bill of exceptions.

The first and second prayers as offered by the plaintiffs were modified and those offered by the defendant were granted. The narr. alleged that there was a written contract. W. H. Fisher, one of the plaintiffs, testified that on the ioth of June, 1899, the contract of purchase was made by him and as soon as made a contract or memorandum of sale was prepared and signed by J. B. Andrews & Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A. 407, 94 Md. 46, 1901 Md. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-andrews-md-1901.