Hjorth v. Albert Lea Machinery Co.

172 N.W. 488, 142 Minn. 387, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 638
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 16, 1919
DocketNo. 21,158
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 172 N.W. 488 (Hjorth v. Albert Lea Machinery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hjorth v. Albert Lea Machinery Co., 172 N.W. 488, 142 Minn. 387, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 638 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

HallaM, J.

Plaintiff sued to recover $966.51, the price of merchandise sold and delivered. Defendant admitted the sale and the price but set up two counterclaims, one for damages for failure to deliver other merchandise which plaintiff contracted to sell, and the other for breach of warranty of quality of some of the merchandise delivered.

As to the first counterclaim: Plaintiff is a manufacturer of tools at JamestowjL, New York, and defendant is a jobber of tools at Albert Lea, Minnesota. From time to time during the year 1916 defendant ordered from plaintiff wrenches and pliers. Plaintiff accepted these orders. The contract relation was therefore complete. A large quantity of the articles so sold, plaintiff failed to deliver. The court found that the failure [389]*389was without excuse. The court limited defendant’s damages to the difference between the contract price and the market price of similar goods at the time delivery was due and found that defendant suffered damage in the sum of $907.48. This rule of damages eliminated all items of special damage and was the most favorable rule possible to plaintiff, if defendant is entitled to damages at all.

1. Plaintiff claims that it committed no breach of contract. It claims that, in order to put plaintiff in default as to deliveries, it was necessary for defendant to make specific demand for delivery at a certain time. We do not agree with this contention. Some of the orders fixed a date for delivery. Some asked shipment “at the earliest possible date,” or “as soon as possible,” or “in shipments a week apart,” commencing “as soon as possible,” or “as soon as possible after you have filled the orders * * * now * * * on file.” Most of them fixed time of delivery in one of the ways above mentioned. No demand is -necessary in any of these cases to put the seller in default. Where the time for delivery is fixed the failure of vendor to deliver within such time is a violation óf the contract. Where no time for delivery is fixed the seller is obliged to make delivery within such time as is reasonable, taking into account the character of the goods, the purpose for which intended, the ability of a man-facturer to produce the goods, and the usual course of business or trade. Palmer v. Breen, 34 Minn. 39, 24 N. W. 322; 35 Cyc. 183.

Canney v. Brown, 40 Minn. 461, 42 N. W. 354, is not in point. The transaction involved in that case was a sale of paving plank to be delivered during the season of 1887. The contract contemplated deliveries at places where paving was to be done and at times and in quantities as the work of construction required. Of necessity some further demand was necessary in such a case in order to render performance by the seller possible.

2. Plaintiff claims that it delivered the articles for which no time was fixed, as fast as it reasonably could, taking into account war conditions; in other words, within a reasonable time. The court found against plaintiff on this point and the evidence is sufficient to sustain this finding. There is evidence that plaintiffs preferred not to pay the prevailing high prices for some of the raw material necessary to manufacture the tools sold to defendant, and preferred also to sell its manufactured products [390]*390to others from whom it could derive larger profits than by filling its contracts with defendant.

3. Plaintiff claims that at numerous times defendant made requests not to ship certain articles until further notice, and that this fact accounted for the failure to ship a large part of the articles, for the nondelivery of which damages are now claimed.

In view of the fact that plaintiff ultimately refused all further deliveries, these “do not ship” orders do not seem of vital importance, but they were much discussed in the argument and we make this reference to them. It is generally true that, where shipments are to be made from time to time, a request on the part of the buyer not to ship certain goods until further notice justifies the seller in suspending delivery of such goods while the request remains in force. Robson v. Bohn, 27 Minn. 333, 7 N. W. 357. Defendant explains these “do not ship” requests in this case as follows: “If they were for a considerable period unable to ship a given item, we would probably have so many cancelations from our customers * * * that we wouldn’t need so many as we would have needed, if we had had them promptly.” “A number of times we had to make similar requests to plaintiff, so that they wouldn’t send us goods of which we were getting too many, in view of the fact that we didn’t have other items of which they were not shipping enough.” “Another reason is that we hoped by stopping the flow of tools of which we were not in immediate need to divert plaintiff’s energies to sending us tools that we did need.” From all the evidence the court could well find that, notwithstanding these “do not ship” requests, defendant held itself in readiness to receive all goods ordered if shipped in accordance with the contracts between the parties. For example, although on June 3 a “do not ship” order had been given as to certain goods, on June 12 defendant wrote plaintiff: “We don’t know any reason now why you should not feel under obligation to supply us, as promptly as possible, with the goods for which you have accepted our orders.”

4. Plaintiff claims that it was relieved of the obligation to make the deliveries which it failed to make because defendant had failed to pay for the merchandise that plaintiff had delivered, in accordance with the contract of sale. The contract provided that defendant should pay for all goods shipped within 30 days from the date of invoice. The orders [391]*391for the goods involved were given and accepted between March 7 and October 13, 1916. During tbe early months payments were made in a manner satisfactory to plaintiffs. On the last day of September, $126.67 fell due, and on October 13, $286.73 more. On this latter date plaintiff commenced making insistent demands for payment. On November 10 it informed defendant it would ship no more, unless payment was made for indebtedness past due. Defendant refused to pay.

The attitude of both parties is expressed in the following correspondence. On November 7 defendant wrote: “We absolutely refuse to make payment on your past due invoices until you have made us shipments that will cut down the goods that we have coming from you.” “In proportion to what your shipment of goods to us from this on cut down the unfilled orders, we would cut down your past due invoices to us by making remittance to you to apply on them.” “We are willing to allow you to ship us goods from now on, draft with bill of lading.” In reply to this plaintiff wrote on November 10: “We are not going to ship you any goods on sight draft and bill of lading attached, or any other way until you have taken care of the accounts that are now past due.”

There is much conflict in authority as to the effect, in case of contracts calling for instalment deliveries and instalment payments, of failure of the vendee to pay an instalment when due. We need discuss the law only as it pertains to the state of facts presented in this ease. This court said in one case that the vendee’s failure “without excuse” to make an instalment payment when due relieves the vendor from mailing further instalment deliveries. Robson v. Bohn, 27 Minn. 333, 346, 7 N. W. 357. See Palmer v. Breen, 34 Minn. 39, 24 N. W. 322. Beatty v. Howe Lumber Co. 77 Minn. 272, 79 N. W. 1013. See also Uniform Sales Act, § 45, Laws 1917, p. 767, c. 465.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 N.W. 488, 142 Minn. 387, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hjorth-v-albert-lea-machinery-co-minn-1919.