Granite City Cooperative Creamery Ass'n v. B & K Cheese Co.

63 A.2d 193, 115 Vt. 408, 1949 Vt. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 5, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 63 A.2d 193 (Granite City Cooperative Creamery Ass'n v. B & K Cheese Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Granite City Cooperative Creamery Ass'n v. B & K Cheese Co., 63 A.2d 193, 115 Vt. 408, 1949 Vt. LEXIS 73 (Vt. 1949).

Opinion

Moulton, C. J.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover a balance claimed to be due for skim milk and cream sold and delivered to the defendant during the period between April 4, 1945, and August 8, 1945, in the amount of $2249.99. The writ was dated April 3, 1946, and served on April 9, 1946. The trial was by the court and the judgment was for the plaintiff to recover the sum of $529.67, with interest of $47.67, in all $577.34. The cause is here upon the plaintiff’s exceptions.

The plaintiff’s specifications contain items showing sales of skim *409 milk to the defendant to the amount of 3,100,355 pounds, at the following prices per hundred weight: April 1945, .6566; May, .6575 ; June, .6699; July, .6699; August, .6599, the entire sum being $20,-540.95. There is another item for hauling the milk at 5 cents per hundred weight, amounting to $1550.18. The third item is for two jugs of cream, charged at $43.86. The total is $22,134.99, against which there are credits consisting of payments on account, including a payment of $500 made after the action had been brought, in the sum of $19,885.00, leaving the balance claimed of $2249.99.

The material findings of fact are these: On April 11,1946, after a conversation by telephone regarding a settlement of the controversy, the attorneys for the respective parties reduced their offers to ■writing. (These writings, which consist of letters are quoted elsewhere in this opinion, and the findings as to their contents need not be recited here.) The defendant conceded'that the amount of milk-charged to it, as shown by the semi-monthly statements sent to it by the plaintiff was correct, and that it received the milk in question, but claimed a misunderstanding as to the price, which it contended should be .5910 per hundred weight for April milk, .5918 per hundred weight for May milk, .5993 per hundred weight for June and July milk, and .5933 per hundred weight for August milk. The plaintiff asserted that these figures were based upon 90 pounds of skim milk, and that in order to ascertain the price for 100 pounds, they should be divided by 9 and multiplied by 10. The defendant conceded that it received two jugs of cream, for which it should be charged $43.86. The court found that the total charges made by the plaintiff to the defendant amounted to $24,277.75; that a certain credit item of $3,863.08, appearing on the last statement sent to the defendant, should be allowed and that, after adding this to the conceded payments on account, the total credit was $23,748.08, leaving a balance due of $529.67, upon which the plaintiff was entitled to interest. The findings also state that the negotiations between the attorneys as shown by their letters of April 11, 1946, should not.be binding upon the parties, and that a concession made by the defendant’s attorney in open court concerning the item in the plaintiff’s specification of $1550.18 for hauling should not be taken against the defendant because he was expecting to be charged for skim milk only at prices ranging from .5910 to .5993.

There were many exceptions taken by the plaintiff to rulings made during trial and to the findings, to the refusal to comply with *410 requests for findings and to the judgment. We shall not consider them one by one for in one way or another they raise only a few material issues.

The first in order is the construction placed by the Court upon the letters that passed between the attorneys, written after the action had been brought, which the plaintiff insists constitute a binding stipulation as to the basis upon which the judgment should have been rendered. Both letters having been introduced in evidence, we quote from each, as material.

The letter on behalf of the plaintiff contains the following: “Confirming the agreement made over the telephone today, it is agreed that the plaintiff shall be entitled to judgment for the amount of skimmed milk delivered to the defendant at the price fixed by the Milk Market Administrator in the Boston area, during the period that the milk was delivered, plus five cents per hundred weight for each hundred weight of skimmed milk delivered. In consideration hereof, it is agreed that the credit of August 31, 1945, of $3,863.08 is not to be given to your client as the foregoing is to fix the entire price to be paid by your client for the skimmed milk delivered to it. Your client, of course, is to pay in addition for the items that do not constitute skimmed milk, as I understand some items cover cream and possibly other matters. These are to be paid for as charged. Against the aforesaid sums, your client is to be credited for all payments actually made. If these figures show that the plaintiff is entitled to any balance due it, it is to have judgment unless the defendant pays the amount determined to be due, plus costs. . . . This agreement is to settle and compromise the matters involved in this suit and this letter is to have the effect of a stipulation in the case.”

The letter of the defendant’s attorney is couched in this language: “Confirming our conversation had today with respect to settlement of the case of Granite City Cooperative Creamery, Inc. vs. B & K Cheese Co. Inc., we have computed the amounts to be charged on the basis of our talk, namely: at the rate of the Administrator’s price per hundred, as in effect for the months involved, plus 5$ per cwt. for hauling, and the following is an itemization of the results of our computation:

*411 Pounds Admr. Price Hauling Total

6985.75 .5910 .05 $4477.87 April

10826.10 .5918 .05 6948.03 May

9782.10 .5993 .05 6351.52 June

3292.46 .5993 .05 2137.76 July

11720. .5933 .05 75.39 Aug.

19990.57

Total charges $19,990.57

Total credits 19,385.00

605.57

According to our computation it would appear that Mr. Kurz owes you $605.57 . . . P. S. It is understood that Mr. Kurz will pay the taxable costs. This letter was dictated before your letter of the same date was received. The terms of settlement therein outlined are agreed upon.”

Certain evidence was introduced by the plaintiff tending to show the circumstances attending the exchange of the letters between the attorneys for the respective parties, which was not contradicted, but which the defendant argues need not have been accepted as conclusive by the trial court. We spend no time in the consideration of this contention, because, aside from all extrinsic evidence, the letters taken by themselves are sufficient to establish an agreement between the parties. The postscript to the letter of the defendant’s attorney by its own language makes it entirely clear that it was written and signed after receipt of the letter on behalf of the plaintiff, with full knowledge and understanding of the contents of that document. It contains ah express and unequivocal acceptance of the terms therein proposed as a basis of settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A.2d 193, 115 Vt. 408, 1949 Vt. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granite-city-cooperative-creamery-assn-v-b-k-cheese-co-vt-1949.