Hanna v. Crozier

31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 16 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 49
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133 (Hanna v. Crozier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanna v. Crozier, 31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 16 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 49 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

The parties here stand in the reverse order in which they stood in the action in the court of common pleas. The terms [134]*134“Plaintiff” and “defendants” as used in. this opinion, will refer to the parties as they stood in the original action.

■The plaintiff avers in his second amended petition that on November 18, 1901, he and the defendants entered into an agreement by which the defendants were to furnish to the plaintiff five hundred tons of a certain grade of iron-; that the same was to be shipped at the rate of twenty tons per week, between January 1, 1902, and August 1, 1902, and the plaintiff agreed to pay therefore at the rate of $17 per ton, to be paid at the town of Kennet Square, Pennsylvania, in installments; when the iron aforesaid was delivered at the furnace of the defendants at (Buffalo, New York, in cars for shipment to the plaintiff upon presentation to plaintiff of bill of lading for same with sight draft attached for the amount due therefor, at the rate aforesaid.

The plaintiff further says that the defendants failed to deliver any part of the iron so contracted for, and that prior 1o the time when.delivery, was to begin under the contract, to wit, on the 28th day of December, 1901, the defendants notified the plaintiff, in writing, that they would not carry out the contract but repudiated the same.

The defendants answer, admitting that they entered into the contract as claimed by the plaintiff, and that on December 28, 1901, they notified the plaintiff that they would not carry out the contract. They say, however, that the contract was a continuation of a former contract, under which the defendants were furnishing iron to the plaintiff and that subsequent to the making of the contract sued upon, the plaintiff defaulted in the earlier contract, in that he failed promptly to pay for the iron shipped under such former contract as he was required by said former contract to do. And though the answer does not set up the fact that the plaintiff was unable to carry out his part of the contract of November 18, 1901, yet upon the trial the claim was made, and to a certain extent at least a trial was had upon the theory that the plaintiff was unable to carry out the contract of November IS, 1901; that his financial condition was such that he could not have carried it out.

The answer further avers that the plaintiff acquiesced in and agreed to the cancellation of the contract, for the breach of [135]*135which this suit was brought. The result of the trial was a verdict for the plaintiff.

A motion for a new trial, made by the defendants, was overruled, and exception to such overruling of- the motion was made by the defendants.

Exceptions also were taken to a ruling upon the introduction of evidence which is complained of in the proceedings here, and exception is taken to the charge of the court; and it is urged here that the court erred in these particulars, and that therefore the judgment should be reversed.

The ruling upon the evidence complained of is found by an examination of pages 66 and 67 of the bill of exceptions. One Beuben E. McNahon, an agent of the defendants, who had charge of the shipping of the iron, was being examined, and was asked this question by counsel for the defendant:

“I will ask you, Mr. McNahon, if under the terms of the contract which is in dispute here, you did make any shipments to Kennet Square Foundry Company of this iron?”
To this he answered: “We did not.”
He was then asked: “You may state why you did not.”

This question was objected to by the plaintiff and the objection. sustained. To this ruling the defendants excepted, and then stated that they offered to show that “if the witness were allowed to answer, that the defendants had obtained knowledge, through the conduct of the plaintiff, subsequent to the execution of the contract, that he did not intend to carry out the term of the contract, and that he was insolvent and unable to do so. ’ ’

The question asked by counsel for the defendants of their own witness, “You may state why you did not,” is clearly improper. One can conceive of any number of answers which-might have been given to this question, which would have been incompetent. The witness might have answered, because we heard from John Doe that the plaintiff was insolvent; or he might have answered, because we had made up our minds that we didn’t care to do business any longer with the plaintiff. Indeed, he might have answered in such wise that his answer would necessarily be incompetent. It is not competent ordi[136]*136narily, for one to ask of his own witness why he did or did not do certain things. However, we are not left here to conjecture as to whether the answer obtained was incompetent. It was not proposed to have the witness say what facts he relied on as a justification, but only state certain conclusions at which he had arrived.

There was no error in the ruling of the court on this question.

The language complained of in the charge is that the court said, in reference to the claim of the defendants, there the plaintiff acquiesced in and agreed to the rescission of the contract; "There is no evidence that the par ties, here at. any time abandoned or rescinded this contract, so that part of the issue you will have no reason to consider.”

We think the court was entirely justified in using - this language.

The only evidence the defendants could claim tended in any way to support their contention in this issue ivas their letter of December 28, 1901, which reads:

1 ‘ Cleveland,. 0., Dec. 28, 1901.
"Kennet Foundry Company,
Kennet Square, Pa.
"Gentlemen: We are advised today by the agent of the Pennsylvania By. that you have not paid for the car of Buffalo pig iron which was shipped you last Nov. We think you will readily understand that we can not do business in this way, and that when we entered your order of Nov. 16th for 500 tons of Buffalo charcoal iron the understanding was that oúr drafts would be paid immediately upon presentation. The experience we have had with this car is such that we can not do business in this way, and have therefore, canceled your order of Nov. 16th and will not ship any more pig iron to you accepting on receipt of your New York draft, or postal order, before the iron is shipped and we will then ship you iron if you desire at the market price, but under no other conditions.
"Yours very truly,
"M. A. Hanna & Co.”

The plaintiff did nothing until the 20th of March next following, when he wrote the following letter:

[137]*137“Kennet Square, Pa., Mar. 20; 1902.
“M. A. Hanna & Co.,
Cleveland, Ohio.
“Gents: The writer has been absent from the office for some time on account of sickness; or would have taken up your letter of December 28th, before this. Now you say that the understanding was that we were to pay your drafts immediately upon presentation.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 16 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanna-v-crozier-ohcirctcuyahoga-1908.