Foster v. Hudson Valley Lumber Co.

37 F. Supp. 381, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3710
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMarch 3, 1941
DocketCivil No. 830
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 F. Supp. 381 (Foster v. Hudson Valley Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Hudson Valley Lumber Co., 37 F. Supp. 381, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3710 (D. Md. 1941).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

' This is a suit on a written contract. It was originally instituted in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, Maryland, but removed to this court pursuant to provisions of Section 28 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 71.

The. terms of the contract, and what took place under it leading up to the present controversy, may be summarized as follows. The contract was entered into on January 15, 1938, in Maryland — and therefore is governed by Maryland law— by Mrs. Foster, plaintiff, and the defendant corporation, for the purchase by the latter from the plaintiff of the “merchantable pine timber” of a specified size located on plaintiff’s land in Worcester County, Maryland, at a specified price “scaled and measured in accordance with either the Standard Scribner or Doyle Rule using middle measure of the tree, to obtain the fair lumber content of said tree.” The buyer agreed to cut and remove all the timber from the land, without expense to the seller, within twenty-four months from the date of the contract. The contract further provided that the timber should be scaled or measured by a scaler or scalers agreed upon by the parties, the wages or salary of such person or persons to be divided equally between the buyer and the seller.

The stipulated terms of payment were cash in full for all timber when loaded for shipment, but it was further provided that upon the execution of the contract the purchaser should deposit $5,000 in a specified bank, to the credit of the seller, on which the seller might draw from time to time in payment of timber taken, unless the buyer paid direct by cash or check. It was further agreed “that as and if and as often as said deposit is diminished by withdrawals as above provided that it [the buyer] will replenish the same by making additional deposits to the credit of the Vendor in said account, so that the net balance in said account shall at all times be Twenty-five Hundred Dollars in excess of timber cut and removed from said lot of ground. At the expiration of this agreement and its fulfillment by the Buyer including the payment in full for all timber cut, whether removed or not by the Buyer, the Vendor [383]*383covenants and agrees to withdraw and pay-over to the Buyer the balance to the Vendor’s credit in said account.”

Then came the following provision for liquidated damages.: “In the event, however, that the Buyer abandons said timber or fails or defaults in carrying out all of the covenants, promises and obligations assumed by it under his contract, said balance will in that event be treated as the sole property of the Vendor, and may lawfully be applied by her to her own exclusive use as liquidated damages and not as a penalty.” Plaintiff has invoked this provision in the present suit, electing to limit proof of damages to same, and has been permitted so to do by a preliminary order entered in this proceeding, on the authority of Baltimore Bridge Co. v. United Railways & Electric Co., 125 Md. 208, 93 A. 420; Cowan, Inc., v. Meyer, 125 Md. 450, 94 A. 18. The jurisdictional requirements being satisfied by the original suit, jurisdiction is not lost by the fact that the amount now sued for under the liquidated damage clause of the contract is less than the jurisdictional requirement. St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab Co., 303 U.S. 283, 58 S.Ct. 586, 82 L.Ed. 845.

Shortly after the execution of the contract, the defendant corporation assigned all its rights thereunder to the United Piling Corporation, a Maryland company, which promptly entered upon the logging operations necessary to remove the timber. Cutting was started on or about January 23, 1938. It is not contended, however, that by such assignment the defendant has been relieved of any of its obligations to the plaintiff under the contract, the plaintiff never having accepted or recognized the assignee.

One Ernest Shockley was agreed upon by the parties as the scaler called for by the contract, he being also separately employed by the defendant in connection with the contract and, in fact, had complete charge of defendant’s operations thereunder whenever another representative of the defendant, Mr. Apgar, was absent. One Samuel E. Shockley was agent for the plaintiff in connection with the contract. Ernest Shockley measured the timber before being loaded, made a record of his measurements either in duplicate'or triplicate, and gave one copy of same to Samuel Shockley and the other copy either to defendant’s other representative, Mr. Apgar, or made it available to him.

For a while the so-called Doyle Rule of measurement was employed, but on or about February 27, 1938, Mr. Arthur Foster, representing his mother, the plaintiff in the present suit, requested Mr. Pearce, president of the defendant corporation, to substitute therefor the so-called Scribner Decimal C Rule, a permissible substitution under the express provisions of the contract, Mr. Foster having found that the Doyle Rule was producing results that were unfair to him. Both Mr. Pearce and his representative, Mr. Apgar, were furnished copies of this Scribner Rule by Mr. Foster. The cutting of timber was stopped for a short while pending agreement on this question, and finally, on April 20, 1938, Mr. Pearce wrote Mr. Foster agreeing to the substituted Scribner Decimal C Rule as the standard of measurement for all of the timber under the contract. Thereupon the cutting of timber continued during April, May, June and for part of July, 1938; at that time the defendant’s net balance deposited under the contract had fallen slightly below the $2,500 minimum. Mr. Pearce admitted this fact to Mr. Foster and stated that the deposit would be brought up to the required amount, but also, and for the first time, stated that he thought the seller should bear one-third of the entire amount of wages which the defendant, the buyer, was paying to Ernest Shockley, that is to say, one-third of what the latter was earning from the defendant in addition to what he earned as the joint representative of both of the parties in the perfoi-mance of his duties as scaler.

A prolonged discussion ensued over this point, and the parties never reached an agreement. The defendant sent $300 additional, but this was not sufficient to settle its account for all timber that had been cut and to keep the net balance on deposit from being less than the contract requirement. Following further demands for payment, Mr. Foster notified defendant’s representative, Mr. Apgar, not to cut any more timber until the deposit requirement was fulfilled. The latter was never done. Mr. Foster suggested that the matter of the Shockley wage dispute be submitted to arbitration. This was not agreed to, but nevertheless Mr. Foster, rather than allow this dispute to stand in the way of the fulfillment of the contract, stated that he would pay one-third of the entire wages of Shockley, as defendant had proposed, provided the defendant would meet the deposit requirement of the contract, and [384]*384would proceed with the cutting of the timber. It is significant that at about the same time, according to a statement sent by defendant’s counsel to plaintiff’s counsel, a deficiency of over $600 in defendant’s required deposit account is indicated, after giving credit for the entire amount claimed as plaintiff’s share of the Shockley wages. On February 8, 1939, the present suit was filed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 F. Supp. 381, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-hudson-valley-lumber-co-mdd-1941.