Industrial Products Mfg. Co. v. Jewett Lumber Co.

185 F.2d 866
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 22, 1951
Docket14139
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 866 (Industrial Products Mfg. Co. v. Jewett Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Products Mfg. Co. v. Jewett Lumber Co., 185 F.2d 866 (8th Cir. 1951).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

Federal jurisdiction of this action existed by reason of diversity of citizenship and amount involved.

*867 The Industrial Products Manufacturing Company, a Missouri corporation, filed its complaint as plaintiff against the Jewett Lumber Company, an Iowa corporation dealing at retail in lumber and associated products at Des Moines, as defendant, to recover the agreed purchase price of materials which plaintiff alleged it manufactured and shipped to defendant pursuant to a contract evidenced by writings set forth in the complaint.

The writings included an itemized order for merchandise written on three pages of conventional printed order blanks numbered, respectively, 5040, 5041 and 5042. It described each item ordered, the quantities and unit prices, the amount to be paid for each item and the total amount to be paid, $10,354.50. The order showed on its face that it was an order given by the defendant to a corporation called The Elaterite Corporation, not a party to the action, but plaintiff alleged that the order was signed by the defendant and The Elaterite Corporation on February 22, 1949, and delivered on that day to The Elaterite Corporation and that The Elaterite Corporation delivered it to plaintiff. That the plaintiff not being satisfied with the credit rating of The Elaterite Corporation, refused to fill the order for that corporation unless and until the defendant lumber company would agree to accept the merchandise and pay plaintiff for it. That thereafter the defendant was notified that the order would not be filled for The Elaterite Corporation but would be filled if the order was made direct by defendant to plaintiff. That thereafter on March 7, 1949, the defendant telegraphed plaintiff as follows:

“Reference Elaterite Order 5040 through 42 cut in half item by item and ship your convenience.
“Jewett Lumber Co.”

That thereafter and on March 10, 1949, the defendant by its letter of that date to the plaintiff directed the plaintiff to manufacture the goods and ship the same to defendant direct. The letter was received March 11, 1949, and read:

“Industrial Products Mfg. Co.
“1208 Iron Ave.
“N. Kansas City, Missouri
“Gentlemen:
“This is your authority to bill us direct for shipment you make against order numbers 5040, 5041 and 5042 given by us to The Elaterite Corporation on February 22, 1949, per our shipping instructions in our telegram to you on March 7, 1949, and in accordance with the terms of that order.
“Jewett Lumber Company,
“Homer H. Jewett,
“By Homer Jewett, Secy.
“The foregoing is in accordance with the agreement between The Elaterite Corporation and Industrial Products Mfg. Co., March 9, 1949.
“The Elaterite Corporation,
“By J. Bernard Hagan, President.”

That on about March 11, 1949, plaintiff accepted the order and on March 15, 1949, shipped the merchandise as itemized and priced in the said order, one-half in amounts and quantities, as directed by the telegram, and invoiced the defendant therefor in the sum of $5,177.25. That the defendant received the same and retained the goods until about June 2, 1949, when it shipped them back to plaintiff. The plaintiff refused to accept them. Plaintiff prayed judgment for one half of $10,354.50 or $5,-177.25, with interest and costs.

Defendant in its answer admitted that it executed the order and sent the telegram and the letter as set forth in the complaint, and that it received the goods and was invoiced therefor as therein alleged, and that it retained them for a period and then shipped them back to plaintiff.

It pleaded as defense that on March 3, 1949, before it sent the telegram or the letter to plaintiff as set forth in the complaint, the defendant and The Elaterite Corporation by agreement between them modified the terms of the order for merchandise and endorsed upon the order the following:

“The payment agreed to on this order dated February 22, 1949, and covered by *868 orders # '5040, 5041, and 5042, and dealers franchise even date is as follows:
“Cash discount 3% — 10 days from receipt of goods — or 3% discount with trade acceptance on receipt of invoices dated 30, 60, 90, or 120 da., or net 30, 60, 90, or 120 days with TA’s JBH HJ.
“All goods purchased on these orders may be exchanged at any time for other items in the company line, or they may be returned for credit at invoice price any time within 180 days from date of order.
“Jewett Lumber Company
“By — Homer H. Jewett, Secy.
“Homer H. Jewett, Secy.
“The Elaterite Corporation,
“By — J. Bernard Hagan, President.”

That such modification of the order was signed by said parties and delivered to each of them and became a part of the order on March 3, 1949. That although the order had been signed on February 22, 1949, it was not actually delivered to The Elaterite Company until March 3, 1949. Defendant pleaded that it requested the shipment from the plaintiff and the plaintiff made the shipment pursuant to the order as it was amended on March 3, 1949. As so amended the defendant had reserved the right to return the goods within 180 days at invoice prices and it had so returned them. It also pleaded that it had entered into an agency or dealer contract with The Elaterite Corporation on February 22, 1949, for selling Elaterite goods and that there was included in said contract a provision that “any unsold merchandise exchanged or credit memo issued within 180 days from above date [date of dealer contract].” It attached a copy of the dealer contract to its answer. It prayed that plaintiff’s action be dismissed.

In its reply to the answer the plaintiff pleaded that if the order was amended as alleged the plaintiff had no knowledge or notice of it until long after it shipped the goods and that defendant was estopped to assert the amendment to their contract for the'reason plaintiff had acted in relation to the contract of February 22, 1949. Plaintiff also alleged that the goods were shipped under a contract between plaintiff and defendant and that the undertaking between plaintiff and defendant was original in character. It prayed judgment as in its complaint. Defendant traversed the reply.

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Bluebook (online)
185 F.2d 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-products-mfg-co-v-jewett-lumber-co-ca8-1951.