Heat & Power Corp. v. Foust Distilling Co.

106 A.2d 225, 378 Pa. 133
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 1954
DocketAppeal, No. 15
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 106 A.2d 225 (Heat & Power Corp. v. Foust Distilling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heat & Power Corp. v. Foust Distilling Co., 106 A.2d 225, 378 Pa. 133 (Pa. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

The Heat and Power Corporation, plaintiff in this case, entered into a contract with the Foust Distilling Company, the defendant, for a “New Boiler Installation” at the Glen Rock Distillery of the defendant company. In a letter from the plaintiff to the defendant dated December 21, 1945, the plaintiff outlined what it would supply and install. In a letter from the defendant to the plaintiff dated August 27, 1946, the defendant stated what it would accept. The plaintiff company began its installation work on January 15, 1947 but on April 30, 1947, it was ordered by the defendant to desist, the defendant complaining that defective equipment was being installed.

The plaintiff thereupon sued the defendant for breach of contract and the defendant counterclaimed against the plaintiff for breach of warranty. The plaintiff recovered a verdict of $39,471.08. The defendant failed in its counterclaim and moved for judgment n.o.v. and a new trial on the plaintiff’s claim, and for a new trial on its counterclaim. The lower court affirmed the verdicts and entered judgments thereon. The defendant appealed.

Although many matters were involved in the lawsuit, only one is the subject of contention in this appeal, namely, item No. 6 of the offer and acceptance. [135]*135In the letter of December 21, 1945, the plaintiff offered :

“6. For the installation of 2 Westinghouse Single Retort Stokers with necessary equipment and damper control, we ask the sum of Eight Thousand, Five Hundred Dollars— $8,500.00
The Foust Distilling Company — No. 3
December 21, 1945
ALTERNATE: For the Flynn & Emrich Stokers on the B. & W. Boilers, we ask the sum of Nine Thousand, Five Hundred Dollars— 9,500.00
For the Detroit Double Retort Stokers, we ask the sum of Ten Thousand, Eight Hundred Dollars—
10,800.00
It will be noted that Flynn & Emrich do not meet the guarantee requirements, and the Detroit Stoker is not adaptable to boilers of the required type and size.”
In its acceptance of August 27, 1946, the defendant referred sketchily to item 6: “Stoker Installation — With Escalator Clause 8,500.00”

Whatever grief the defendant company has come to on account of this business transaction can be traced to this scantily-described item — “stoker installation.” No language dressed its purpose, no words gave the clothing of its identity, no phrase established its intention. What stoker installation did the defendant accept? The plaintiff had offered three distinctly different types of stoker, and the defendant laconically replied: “We will take a stoker installation.” It was inevitable then, when difficulties arose between the contracting parties, that some evidence was needed to show what it was that the defendant had accepted. When this followed, the defendant complained that such evidence offended against the rule that in the absence of fraud, accident or mistake, no [136]*136parol evidence is 'admissible to alter the terms of a written contract. But the law does not simply stand by helplessly when the parties fail to express their full intentions in written contracts. Two substantial business organizations, do. not enter into an agreement involving thousands of dollars without a meeting , of the minds. If the terms .of that , meeting are not clearly expressed in the' formal contract, then the ambiguity must be resolved by introduction of other evidence.

On April 8, 1946, the. president of the plaintiff company, John H. Zink, wrote to the president of the defendant company, Louis Mann, saying: “We are placing the order for the stokers with Flynn & Em-rich, Baltimore, Md., because after talking with Westinghouse on the phone this morning, I do not think it is possible for them to make delivery in time.”

On the. same .day Zink ..again wrote Mann: “We have this day placed our order with the Flynn and Emrich . Company for.vone. ■ (1) of their Stokers at Westminster..and two. (2) at Glenn Rock, in accordance with their original proposal. dated November 26, .1945 and covered by. our 'orders H-5572 and H.-5573...

.. “We agree-with you.:that.beeause. of, strike and other conditions:'at thé.Westinghouse Plant, that they .can not possibly make delivery of the stokers, and the Flynn and Emrich Stokers are ordered on your instructions because of . the .advantages of- their being a local concern,, .and", that. the- average' 150 % - rating will meét yoúr requirements.'. ........... •

; When, the stokers, arrived the defendant complained -that the/plaintiff/had" failed to.-.'live/up to "its" express and.- implied’, .".warranty.:that “.steam-.".pr.essúre;,:ef- - one hundred.-fifty- (15.0) qjoundsv would - be: delivered by the equipment:; furnished”- so' * that • the ."'.'Foust ’Distilling ■Company : “co.uld.".:operate;.fits.':,.'distilling- •• equipment, cookers;; mash tubs; . yeast .tubs -.and" all;other' compon[137]*137ents of physical equipment requiring the use of steam.” Further, that the equipment supplied by the plaintiff “did not and could not maintain a uniform and constant pressure of one hundred fifty (150) pounds.” Also that the stoker operation was supposed to be automatic, but, on the contrary, five men were required to fire the stoker and make it work.

The plaintiff’ denied these assertions and stated that the Heat and Power Corporation had agreed to install equipment that would supply “The steam necessary for a mash-drying installation engineered by H. K. Ferguson Company which would require merely 8,600 pounds of steam per hour.” Further, that “the equipment being installed would have fully met all requirements,” if the defendant company had not ordered a cessation of all operations.

In this duel of charges and counter-charges, it was imperative that parol evidence be introduced to establish just what the plaintiff and defendant did agree to. Without the parol evidence which the lower court properly permitted the trial would have been a battle fought in a fog of doubt and mists of uncertainty.

The defendant company maintained that the “stoker installations” mentioned in its acceptance of August 27, 1946, meant Westinghouse stokers. The plaintiff company insisted that because of what had transpired between December 21, 1945 (the date of the original offer) and August 27, 1946, “stoker installations” meant Flynn & Emrich stokers. Only parol evidence could clear away the clouds 'of doubt so that the jury could intelligently meet the issue they were to decide.

The situation presented by this, litigation is not novel in the law. In the case of Fischer v. Anderson, 173 Pa. Superior Ct. 175, decided only last year', the defendant agreed' by. written contract to provide “Fin [138]*138Floor” and “Sub Fir” in the house he was building for the plaintiff. The contract did not specify what type of flooring. At the trial the plaintiff introduced a letter written by the clerk of a bank involved in the transaction. The letter said that Mr. Anderson, the defendant, “has agreed to sign a contract which is to include the pine floor. .” The defendant objected that this letter would be evidence to vary the terms of a written contract.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A.2d 225, 378 Pa. 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heat-power-corp-v-foust-distilling-co-pa-1954.