Hughes v. E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co.

37 F.2d 725, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1814
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 7, 1930
DocketNo. 12102
StatusPublished

This text of 37 F.2d 725 (Hughes v. E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., 37 F.2d 725, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1814 (E.D. Pa. 1930).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This is the ease of a directed verdict. The facts are not in dispute. The analogue is in consequence that of a special verdict of the jury finding the facts and asking the trial court to mold the verdict for the plaintiff or for the defendant as the law arising out of the facts as found dictates. The court accordingly directed a verdict for the plaintiff. The question thus becomes one of law as if upon a ease stated.

An outline fact statement may be made within small compass. The plaintiff is a coal miner. His mine supplies a coal of such fuel qualities as to be characterized as smithing coal. This name we assume was given it because-it answered to the requirements of the forge of the Village Blacksmith. The name is sufficiently expressive. Such coal could, of course, be used as a fuel for any steam producing purpose, but was of a higher grade [726]*726and quality than required for such purposes and such, as fitted it for the requirements of blacksmithing use. Because of this capability of a more exacting use, it commercially commanded a higher priee, which any purchaser who needed it for the higher use would willingly pay. The buyer who wanted coal for ordinary steam making purposes would, of course, content himself with the lower priced coal and would not buy smithing coal if he could get the other at a lower priee, notwithstanding the truth that the smithing coal would more than meet all his requirements. Smithing coal is bituminous, and by a wartime executive order under date of August 21,1917, the prices “of bituminous coal at the mine” were fixed, and on October 9,1917, an order issued that “smithing coal when used for smithing purposes only” might be sold at the market price. We have italicized the words pertinent to the instant case. There were modifications of the orders, but none which we can see touch the merits of the present controversy beyond a perhaps overlapping of three days in the date of a later order and the time covered by the shipments in question. This overlapping we have ignored and treat the questions raised as those to be answered in the light of the order quoted. The defendant company had imperative use for' fuel coal, but no need for smithing coal as such. The order went out that the plaintiff ship the entire output .of its mine to the defendant, and this order was obeyed. The coal shipped was in fact “smithing coal” when viewed from the standpoint of its quality as it came from the mine, but in the trade sense of that term only 63.6 per cent, was smithing coal, because in preparing smithing coal for the market for smithing purposes, and the limited market demand for the latter resulted in 36.4 per cent, of the mine output being rejected as smithing coal and reduced to the standard of ordinary fuel coal. Generically all the coal shipped to the defendant was bituminous coal, as smithing coal itself is. The defendant company having, as already stated, need only for fuel coal, used the coal shipped to them for fuel purposes and did not use any of it, in the language, of the regulations, “for smithing purposes only” or for smithing purposes at all. The plaintiff invoiced the coal 63.6 per cent, of it at the smithing coal priee and 36.4 per cent, of it at the bituminous coal price. The defendant insisted upon its right to take the whole shipment at the latter priee. The dispute was for the time being adjusted by the defendant paying the bituminous coal price, without prejudice to the right of the plaintiff in accepting the less priee to recover for the greater, and this action was brought1to have the question raised between them ruled. The parties presented their respective contentions in points of requested charge, each asking for binding instructions. The-trial judge affirmed plaintiff’s point and negatived that of the defendant.

[ 2] We begin the discussion with the proposition that the coal price-fixing regulations, are the equivalent of statutory enactments.McFadden v. Lineweaver, 297 Pa. 278, 146 A. 901.

The administrative order of October 6th. superseded all previous orders. We mention, this because there is a difference between the-order of October 6th and previous orders, at-least in phraseology. The previous order-limited the market value priee to “coal specially prepared for use in smithing and sold, for that purpose and for no other”; the last, order allows the market value priee for“smithing coal when used for smithing purposes only.” This difference may be more-than verbal, because this coal was “smithingcoal,” but had not been “specially prepared for use in smithing,” nor had it “been sold for that purpose.”

The question thus turns, as we view it, upon the meaning of the phrase “smithing coal when used for smithing purposes only.” It-•may be remarked that the phrase is not employed with verbal accuracy because it refers-to coal at the place and time of shipment when and where it has not been “used” at all either “for smithing purposes only” or for any purpose. The defendant interprets the-use as the use to which devoted by the buyer; the plaintiff interprets the phrase as merely descriptive of the coal; its qualities, and consequent commercial value. The product of some mines is a coal which, while it does not reach the dignity of smithing coal, is none-the less coal of such a high quality that it is sometimes sold as smithing coal for smithing purposes and is so used, although it is commonly sold for ordinary fuel purposes. Suehlcoal might be called smithing coal and averred, to be such. This suggests the employment of’ the phrase in the regulation. It must be smithing coal and not so-called smithing coal;, it must be the kind of coal which when sold at free sales is bought and used for smithing purposes, and is the kind of coal which is sold only to those who buy and use it for smithingpurposes and smithing purposes only. In other words, it must be real, genuine smithing coal, which commands the higher priee of such coal and sells for more than coal bought* for the ordinary steam making fuel purposes.-.

[727]*727We have the same thought conveyed in reverse in the custom law provisions. High priced rugs may be imported at one rate; dunnage cloths at a lower rate or free. Rugs might, however, be used for dunnage and claim to come in. at the lower rate or free. A law might in consequence be enacted that “dunnage cloths when used for dunnage purposes only” should be admitted at a low rate or free. This would not mean that high priced rugs, although called dunnage and temporarily so used, would be admitted under the dunnage schedule. The meaning of the regulation then is that the mine may sell at the market price any coal which is real smithing coal and which, if the government had not intervened, would have been sold for this purpose and this purpose only, and thus really commanded the higher price of genuine smithing coal. If it does not mean this, then it means that the buyer fixes the price not by the value of what he gets but by the use to which he devotes it, no matter to what higher priced use it may be adapted. In other words, if a price was fixed on wood fuel with a provision such as the one before us, that the market price should be charged for lumber taken when used for building or manufacturing purposes, then the government divertee who took curly walnut or mahogany lumber would get it at the price fixed for wood fuel, provided he did not use it for making furniture but used it only as fuel and for fuel purposes.

The very capable counsel for the defendant does not run away from this conclusion, but accepts it as the logical consequence of his reading of the regulation. He accepts it without demur because ita lex scripta est.

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Related

McFadden v. Lineweaver Co., Inc.
146 A. 901 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 725, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-e-i-du-pont-de-nemours-co-paed-1930.