Impervious Products Co. v. Gray

96 A. 1, 127 Md. 64, 1915 Md. LEXIS 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 96 A. 1 (Impervious Products Co. v. Gray) 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
Impervious Products Co. v. Gray, 96 A. 1, 127 Md. 64, 1915 Md. LEXIS 9 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In the year 1911, H. Emory Gray entered into a contract with the State Roads Commission for the construction of a road on Patapsco street, between Eirst street and Pennington avenue, Brooklyn, Anne Arundel County. For the execution of that contract Mr. Gray, among other materials, had occasion to purchase a preparation known as binder, and in the month of September agreed with the Impervious Products Company for the supply of it, which he would need in the construction of the road under his contarct. The terms of that agreement were as follows:

“September —, 1911.
“H. E. Gray, Esq.,
“Brooklyn, Md.
“Dear Sir — We agree to furnish you with Eairfield Binder No. 5 hot at our plant at 9c. per gallon, and guarantee same to comply with the State’s specification.
“Yours very truly, .
“Impervious Products Co.”

A portion of the binder thus contracted for was furnished to Mr. Gray by the Impervious Products Co. in the fall of 1911, and it appears to have fully met the requirements of Mr. Gray’s contract with the State Roads Commission. Dur *66 ing the winter the work under Mr. Gray’s contract was suspended, but with the opening of the spring of 1912 it was resumed, the binder being furnished as before by the Impervious Products Co., but at. this time the binder failed to prove satisfactory, and was condemned by the State Inspector, and a portion of the road which had been built by Mr. Gray during that spring was required to be rebuilt. Where Mr. Gray obtained the binder for the rebuilding does not clearly appear in the record, but apparently from some source other than the Impervious Products Co.

In April, 1913, the Impervious Products Co." instituted suit against Mr. Gray for the sum of $345.60, as the purchase money due for binder furnished between June 17th and June 21st, 1912. To this suit Mr. Gray filed the general issue pleas, and a plea in set off, worded as follows:

“That the plaintiff is indebted to the defendant in an amount greater than the plaintiff’s claim * * * and the defendant claims $600, which amount except for excess claimed by defendant he is willing to set-off against the plaintiff’s claim.”

Then followed a bill of particulars of the defendant’s claim, amounting to $440.05. Upon these pleadings that case went to trial, and after evidence taken and instructions given by the Court, resulted in a verdict for the defendant.

In 1914 the present suit was instituted by Mr. Gray to recover as damages $334.20, and in this suit the plaintiff and present appellee filed a bill of particulars identical with that filed with his plea of set off in the previous sxiit, except that in this account the labor was charged at 15c. an hour, instead of 20c. an hour, as in the first suit.

Numerous exceptions were taken during the trial of this case, all of which, however, revolve around the question whether Mr. Gray was estopped from maintaining the second suit, by reason of the earlier one, and a determination of whether the first suit amounted to res adjudicada.

*67 The first suit was in assumpsit for goods sold and delivered. To this suit a plea of set off, where the nature of the set off claimed was an unliquidated damage; was an improper plea. Westminster Co. v. Coffmann, 123 Md. 619. The plea of set off is a defense of purely statutory creation and is limited to mutual debts; to make a plea of set off good the debts must be mutual, must be of the same kind or quality, and be certain and clearly ascertained or liquidated. 1 Poe on Pleading, section 613.

That the claim of Mr. Gray in the first suit was one in the nature of a claim for damages for non-compliance with the provisions of the contract hereinbefore set out, is perfectly clear, both from the two bills of particulars filed in the respective cases and from the testimony of Mr. Gray himself. But while the plea of set off and evidence given in the first suit could not have been sustained as or under a plea of set off, the evidence was entirely proper to be given under the general issue pleas filed, because it tended to show a right to recoup on the part of Mr. Gray. Numerous cases in this State have sustained the doctrine that a defendant may in an action of assumpsit under a general issue plea, show injury on which to found a claim for recoupment. Doggett v. Tatham, 116 Md. 147; Rawlings v. Nash, 117 Md. 393; Sullivan v. Boswell, 122 Md. 539.

The appellee has strongly urged that the plea of set off having been an improper one, he is not now precluded from setting up his claim of damages, and relies for this on the case of Davidson Chemical Co. v. Miller, 122 Md. 140. In that case, however, while a plea of set off had been filed, the plea was subsequently withdrawn and the issue was not presented to the jury. In the present case the plea of set off never was withdrawn, and the rejection of the defendant’s second prayer in the first suit by no means shows that the claim of the defendant was not submitted to the jury in that case. That prayer as offered was defective for a very patent reason. Under the statute in this State, where a defendant has pleaded a set off, and has proved the items or account *68 which go to make up his set off, the defendant can recover a judgment against the plaintiff for such sum as the proof may show the plaintiff to be indebted to him, over and above the amount of the plaintiff’s claim. In recoupment a defendant may show damages equal to some part or the whole of the plaintiff’s clqim, and have it deducted from that claim; but can recover no affirmative judgment. The defendant’s second prayer, if granted, would have instructed the jury that they might in a matter of recoupment find an affirmative verdict in damages for the defendant, and for this reason was fatally defective. 1 Poe on Pleading, sections, 515, 516; Beall v. Pearre, 12 Md. 550; Harman v. Bannon, 71 Md. 428; Eureka Fertz. Co. v. Balto. C. S. & R. Co., 78 Md. 189.

It has already been pointed out that the bill of particulars filed by the defendant in the first suit was practically the same as the bill of particulars filed by him as plaintiff in the present suit, and his testimony in the present case shows that the claim now made was the same claim as was made in that suit. As early as the case of Shafer v. Stonebraker, 4 C. & J. 355, Judge Dorsey said: “The plea of not guilty (which on the first trial had been the general issue plea), put in issue not only every material fact contained in the declaration, but every defense admissible in evidence under such plea of wffiich the defendant should offer testimony.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Beka Industries, Inc. v. Worcester County Board of Education
18 A.3d 890 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2011)
Yesteryears, Inc. v. Waldorf Restaurant, Inc.
730 F. Supp. 1341 (D. Maryland, 1989)
World Wide Imp. Car Co., Ltd. v. Savings Bk. of Baltimore
396 A.2d 547 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
Hamlin MacHine Co. v. Holtite Mfg. Co.
78 A.2d 450 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1976)
District Agency Co. v. Suburban Delivery Service, Inc.
167 A.2d 874 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1961)
H. J. McGrath Co. v. Wisner
55 A.2d 793 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1947)
Russo v. Hochschild Kohn & Co.
41 A.2d 600 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1945)
Petite v. Homes, Inc.
41 A.2d 71 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1945)
Parker v. Tilghman v. Morgan, Inc.
183 A. 224 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
Seaboard Terminals Corp. v. American Oil Co.
181 A. 746 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1935)
Kraft-Phenix Cheese Corp. v. H. B. Smith Machine Co.
267 Ill. App. 539 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1932)
Employers' Liability Assurance Corp. v. State Ex Rel. Hudgins
161 A. 249 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Poe
128 A. 465 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1925)
Corkran, Hill & Co. v. Fruman
124 A. 878 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1923)
Howe v. Fulton
225 Ill. App. 589 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1922)
Wiley v. McComas
113 A. 98 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1921)
Wilmer v. Placide
111 A. 822 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A. 1, 127 Md. 64, 1915 Md. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/impervious-products-co-v-gray-md-1915.