Hardwick Bros. v. Kirwan

46 A. 987, 91 Md. 285, 1900 Md. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 14, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 A. 987 (Hardwick Bros. v. Kirwan) 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
Hardwick Bros. v. Kirwan, 46 A. 987, 91 Md. 285, 1900 Md. LEXIS 41 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case was instituted in the Superior Court of Baltimore City by the appellants, who were plaintiffs below, against the appellees, defendants below; the cause of action being the breach of an alleged executory contract. The declaration contained the common counts and in addition a special count which is as follows : “ And for that the defendants sold to the plaintiffs on the tenth day of May, in the year one thousand eight hundred and ninety-eight, 15,000 cases of three-pound fruit cans (cases to contain two dozen each), at $1.47^ per 100 net cash, and 15,000 cases (to contain said cans), at eight cents per case, less three per cent discount for cash. One delivery or all to be made on June 1st. If all are not delivered on June 1st, interest to be charged for delayed delivery at the rate of six per cent per annum. And that the plaintiffs fully complied with every requirement of the said contract to be performed by them, and were ready and willing to receive said cans and cases in accordance with the said contract, but that the defendants wholly failed to comply with the said contract and refused to deliver the said cans and cases to the plaintiffs,, whereby the plaintiffs suffered great damage.” To this, declaration the defendants pleaded, first, that they were never indebted as alleged ; and secondly, that they did not promise as alleged. Under the issues joined upon the pleas the plaintiffs at the trial below offered their proof, at the conclusion of which the defendants, without any offer of proof on their part, asked from the Court the following in *290 struction: That the plaintiff has offered no evidence legally sufficient to charge the defendants upon the cause of action upon which this suit is brought, and the verdict of the jury should be for the defendants.” This instruction was granted and the plaintiffs excepted to the action of the Court below in granting the same. The exception which thus calls upon us, upon the appeal of the plaintiffs, to pass upon the propriety of this action of the trial Court is the single one which the record contains. To determine the correctness, of the ruling which is the subject of this exception renders necessary first an examination of the evidence which the plaintiffs submitted. They first proved by one Charles B. Summers that on the morning of the loth of May, 1898, he was informed by one Sidney Bailey, that Selby B. Hard-wick, one of the plaintiffs, was in Baltimore for the purpose of. purchasing for cash and immediate delivery fifteen thousand cases of tin cans for use in packing tomatoes during the next ensuing season; that he (Summers) posted himself elsewhere as to market quotations, and then called on the defendants, Kirwan & Tyler, who were manufacturers of tin cans, and received from Kirwan ‘authority to sell fifteen thousand cases (two dozen each) of three-pound tin cans at $>1.47^ per one hundred cans, and wooden cases for holding said cans at eight cents each, less three per cent for cash, and that he was told by Kirwan that he could make the cans deliverable up to and including June 1st, 1898. This witness further proved that he was not a licensed broker, but was a general manufacturers’ agent and had previously made a number of small sales for Kirwan & Tyler, “ but as this was a special article Mr. Kirwan wrote the quotations on a slip of paper and gave it to the witness, stipulating to pay the brokerage of one and a half per cent that in the conversation at the time quotations were given it was understood that the purchaser was to provide schooners for the cans at Baltimore; that a schooner-load is about five thousand cases • and cans, and that the purchase price was to be paid in cash on delivery to the schooner. He *291 then further proved that on leaving Kirwan he went to the hotel where Hardwick was stopping and saw Hardwick for the first time; that Bailey was also present; and that he then drew up in duplicate a contract of sale which was signed by Hardwick for the plaintiffs and by him (Summers) for the defendants and produced the contract, which was in the words and figures following :

“ C. B. Summers, No. no W. Fayette street, Baltimore, Maryland, Order No.--, date May ioth, 1898. Messrs. Kirwan & Tyler, ship to Hardwick Bros, at Kinsale, Virginia, via schooner, 15,000 cases, 3ft fruit cans of 2 dozen each at $1.47^ per 100 net cash; 15,000 cases at eight cents, less 3 per cent cash.
“Deliveries: One delivery or all to be made June 1st. If all are not delivered on June 1st interest to be charged for delayed delivery at the rate of six per cent per annum.” The witness further proved that on the next morning, May 1 ith, he handed to Kirwan his copy of the contract, who, after reading it over carefully, said : “I suppose that it is all right, leave it with me; I believe there is one clause there I don’t understand ; that is the interest clause; I will write to Mr. Hardwick to define it.” He left the contract with Kirwan and saw him again on the 16th or 17th ot May, when Kirwan told the witness he had not yet heard from Hardwick, to which witness replied that there had not yet been time. On the same day the witness heard from Hardwick and saw Kirwan and told him that Hardwick expected him to live up to the original contract, and Kirwan said witness did not know the tricks of the trade ; that the prices of cans were rising when the original contract was made on May ioth, and went up the next day and kept rising, and on June 1st, 1898, the price of cans had gone up to $1.75 per one hundred and cases to nine cents. On cross-examination the witness said that “while nothing was said in his conversation with Kirwan on May ioth about interest and his authority was limited to selling for cash, deliveries to be made anytime up to June first, inclu *292 sive, he had, inasmuch as it was, in his opinion, beneficial to both parties, considered that he had authority to incorporate the interest clause in the contract,” and gave his reasons for the opinion that the said clause was beneficial to both parties. The plaintiffs further proved by Vincent Hardwick, one of the plaintiffs, that he came to Baltimore on the 31st day of May, 1898, and called upon Kirwan & Tyler and made a demand for the cans, and that Kirwan told him he had consummated no contract, and refused to deliver; that he (Hardwick) was ready to take all or part of the cans, and had money to pay for them. On cross-examination this witness admitted that the plaintiffs received from the defendants on May I ith, 1898, the following letter :
Baltimore, Md., May nth, 1898.
“ We háve received from C. B. Summers contract for 15,000 cases 3fb cans at $1.47^ net cash, deliveries to be made on or before June 1st. The other condition of the contract that all cans not delivered on June 1st are to bear interest after that date is not satisfactory to us. If you wish to sign and return the enclosed contract it will be satisfactory to us, but we cannot possibly give you any other terms than specified in the contract enclosed. The way the other Potomac River people do is to send their money with the schooner when she goes after the cans, and we suppose will be agreeable to you. Kindly let us hear from you by return boat or send the schooner at once and we will load her up. We will hold the contract signed by you and Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 A. 987, 91 Md. 285, 1900 Md. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardwick-bros-v-kirwan-md-1900.