Freiberg Mahogany Co. v. Batesville Lumber & Veneer Co.

285 F. 485, 1 Ohio Law. Abs. 370, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1987
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1922
DocketNo. 3678
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 285 F. 485 (Freiberg Mahogany Co. v. Batesville Lumber & Veneer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freiberg Mahogany Co. v. Batesville Lumber & Veneer Co., 285 F. 485, 1 Ohio Law. Abs. 370, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1987 (6th Cir. 1922).

Opinion

DONAHUE, Circuit Judge.

This proceeding in error is brought to reverse the judgment of the District Court in an action brought by the Batesville Dumber & Veneer Company against the Freiberg Mahogany Company to recover the contract purchase price of mahogany veneers cut by the plaintiff from logs.in its yards, selected by the Freiberg Company. These veneers were rejected by the Freiberg Company before shipment was made. It assigned as its reason for such rejection “bad workmanship either in'cutting or drying.” Dater the Batesville Company made shipment of part or all of these veneers, which shipment was refused, and the veneers were returned to the Batesville Company and held by it for the account of the Freiberg Company. A verdict for the full amount of the purchase price was returned against the defendant, on which verdict judgment was entered for the plaintiff in the District Court.

It appears from the evidence that, shortly prior to the execution of the contract between the parties, Herman S. Dax, an employé of the Freiberg Company, visited the factory of the Batesville Company at Dawrenceburg, Ind., and selected from the stock on hand 11 mahogany logs, 5 in one parcel and 6 in another, and had these logs cut into longitudinal sections, known in the trade as “flitches.” A few days [486]*486later, two of the managing officers of the Freiberg Company with Mr. Tax and John Brockman, another of its employés, went to Tawrenceburg, Ind., and examined these flitches. Upon their return to Cincinnati the Freiberg Company wrote to the Batesville Company on the 16th day of September, 1920, the following letter:

“This is to confirm order placed by our Mr. Lax with you yesterday for all the veneer that you will produce out of the eleven (11) logs originally shown Mr. Lax, and which he has flitched for you, consisting of one parcel of five (5) logs and one parcel of six (6) logs, these flitches lying in four different places in your mill, for which we are to pay you $38 per M ft. cut Vasth, f. o. b. Cincinnati, less 2 per cent, for cash on arrival, but if we are to cut any i/2<tth in the lot, we are to pay you $43 for such flitches as we cut i/zAh.
“Xou are to give us good workmanship in cutting in every particular, and this order is placed with that understanding, and also the veneer is to be measured when dry, before shipment is made, and it is to be manufactured under the supervision of our Mr. Brockman. Our Mr. Lax will be down with Mr. Brockman to show Mm just what we are to receive, so that there will be no misunderstanding.
“Please confirm the above, as we do not want to leave any further contracts subject to any verbal agreements.”

In reply to this letter the Batesville Company, on the 17th day of September, 1920, wrote as follows:

“We have yours of 16th, confirming the purchase by Mr. Lax of the 11 mahogany logs, and the same is in order.”

These two letters constitute the contract in suit. There is also evidence tending to prove that on the following Monday morning (September 20,. 1920) Mr. Brockman went to Tawrenceburg, Ind., to the factory of the- Batesville Company. Before he reached there the flitches had been put in the vat and steamed and made ready for cutting. The work of cutting, drying, and measuring these veneers occupied a little more than a week. From the veneers cut from these flitches Brockman selected three sets of samples, each set composed of three pieces of veneer from each of three separate flitches, and forwarded the same to the Freiberg Company at Cincinnati. On Saturday of that week (September 25, 1920) Brockman returned to Cincinnati and had a consultation with the officers of the Freiberg Company. On the following Monday (September 27, 1920) he went hack to Tawrenceburg, Ind., and informed the Batesville Company that he had told the officers of the Freiberg Company that “the cutting was bad and the drying was rotten.” At that time the veneers were all cut, and the drying process was finished by 2 o’clock on the afternoon-of the next day. Brockman completed the measuring on Tuesday, and the balance of samples were sent on to the Freiberg Company at Cincinnati. On Monday, September 27, 1920, the Freiberg Company wrote the Batesville Company in part as follows:

“Our Mr. Brockman returned home last Saturday and reported to us that the cutting and drying of the 11 logs was not proper, and that the majority of the stock he could not accept as being merchantable stock.
“The samples did not arrive until to-day, but we sent him back this morning to go over the balance of the stocks. •
“We carefully went over the samples which were sent in to ns, and were amazed at the manner in which many of the flitches were ‘butchered’ and the way they were dried.
[487]*487“Under no conditions could we accept the stocks that are manufactured in this manner, as there are very few flitches that are merchantable; the balance being unfit, either on account of poor cutting or poor drying."

It is insisted upon the part of the plaintiff in error that the trial court erred in its instructions tó the jury in reference to the authority of Brockman to supervise the manufacture of these veneers, that the evidence showed that Brockman had repeatedly supervised work done by the plaintiff for the defendant, and that his authority in all such cases of supervision, including the present case, was very limited, and that the court in its construction of this provision of the contract overlooked this evidence, and also overlooked the provisions of section 8451 of the General Code of Ohio, which section is a part of the Uniform Sales Act, and provides that:

“When any rigbt,’ duty, or liability would arise under a contract to sell or a sale by implication of law, it may be negatived or varied by express agreement, or by tbe course 'of dealing between the parties, or by custom, if tbs custom be such as to bind both* parties to the contract or the sale."

The determination of this question involves a consideration of the terms of the contract and the pleadings. The letter of the Freiberg Company dated September 16, 1920, which contains the terms and conditions of this contract, specifically required the Batesville Company to confirm in writing the proposition therein made, “as we do not want to leave any further contracts subject to any verbal agreements.”

There is nothing ambiguous or uncertain in the language ■ of this letter, nor is there.any evidence introduced in this case to show that the word “supervision” had acquired a technical meaning in the "trade generally. What may have been done by Mr. Brockman by way of supervising the manufacture of other veneers under verbal arrangements, more or less uncertain in their character, could hardly be permitted to explain the meaning of the word “supervision” in this contract, especially in view of the express statement that the Freiberg Company did not want to leave any further contracts subject to any verbal agreements. If there were any doubt as to what the Freiberg Company understood by the word “supervision” in this contract, that doubt would he removed by the letter written by the Freiberg Company under date of September 27, 1920, in which this language is used :

“Our Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
285 F. 485, 1 Ohio Law. Abs. 370, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freiberg-mahogany-co-v-batesville-lumber-veneer-co-ca6-1922.