Interstate Folding Box Co. v. Hodge Chile Co.

334 S.W.2d 408, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 544
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 1960
Docket30314
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 334 S.W.2d 408 (Interstate Folding Box Co. v. Hodge Chile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Folding Box Co. v. Hodge Chile Co., 334 S.W.2d 408, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 544 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

RUDDY, Judge.

Plaintiff in this action seeks payment of an unpaid balance due it for certain frozen *410 food cartons manufactured and shipped to defendant pursuant to an order placed with plaintiff by defendant. Defendant in its answer and counter-claim alleges the breach of an implied warranty of fitness for use and failure of plaintiff to ship cartons that were “up to the plaintiff’s sample specifications that had been tested” by defendant. In a trial without a jury the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis found in favor of plaintiff on its petition and against defendant on its counter-claim and defendant appeals from the trial court’s judgment.

Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show the following facts: Joseph A. Louvier, a salesman for plaintiff, in the course of his duties had sold defendant various types of cartons prior to February 1953. In February of 1953 Vern A. Hodge, President of defendant, Hodge Chile Company, talked to Louvier “about packaging frozen chile.” Louvier informed plaintiff of the request and what the cartons were to be used for. Louvier then supplied defendant with samples of “Frostofold” cartons for the purpose of having defendant test the samples to “see if they worked satisfactorily.”

Thereafter, Louvier regularly contacted Hodge and others employed by defendant, and they kept him informed about the progress of the tests they were making with the sample cartons. Louvier was present when some of the cartons were filled with chile and when some of them were opened after the contents had been frozen. All of the test samples he saw were satisfactory and the cartons showed no leaks. The tests were conducted by defendant from February until December of 1953. The method defendant used to test the sample cartons, as described by Louvier, was to take the “chile out of the vats with a dipper.” After filling the carton it would be “heat-sealed” and then placed in a refrigerator for cooling. Later, the filled cartons were taken to an employee’s home and placed in a freezer. The tests were conducted by defendant in the late morning, after the defendant’s production schedule was completed. According to Louvier, when the sample cartons were being filled the chile was not “too hot’? and was not steaming. He was certain the temperature of the chile was not as high as 180°. He said the heat was not turned on under the vats at the time the cartons were filled.

In December 1953, Vern Hodge told Louvier that the tests were completed and the cartons were satisfactory for defendant’s purpose and product. Defendant then executed the following order:

“December 21, 1953
“Interstate Folding Box Co.
“Middletown, Ohio.
“Gentlemen:
“Please Enter our order for the following :
“100,000, six panel reverse tuck cartons with a Thermofoil B inner liner, 4½ x 3⅞ x 1⅜, made from .022 Ster-ilstate board and printed two colors, $31.30 per thousand. Delivery allowed to St. Louis.
“Plates for the above to be charged in addition.
“90 days storage to be provided at completion of order and one fourth to be shipped when order is completed.
“Very truly yours,
“Hodge Chile Company
(S) V. A. Hodge.”

Present on the occasion when the above order was given were Vern A. Hodge and William Meentemeyer, Assistant Secretary and Bookkeeper of the Hodge Chile Company. The order was dictated by Louvier to Meentemeyer who prepared the typewritten order. It was necessary for Lou-vier to dictate the specifications of the cartons because of his familiarity with them. Louvier said the specifications in the order were taken off of a “Frostofold” carton he had with him at the time and that the specifications stated in the order described the specifications of the “Frostofold” cartons submitted as samples for the tests. The only difference in the description was *411 the size of the carton. Defendant wanted a carton of a different size than those submitted for the tests. Louvier testified that ■other “than the size of the box” the language in the order, was an accurate description of the “Frostofold” cartons submitted for the tests. When the carton was manufactured as ordered it was not usable by any of plaintiff’s other customers.

On January 13, 1954, an “Acknowledgment of Order” was mailed to defendant. The only part of the Acknowledgment that might be claimed to be a modification or qualification of defendant’s order, reads as follows:

“8. * * * Suitability of any of the merchandise covered by this order for any particular use by buyer is solely the buyer’s responsibility, and is conclusively presumed to have been heretofore favorably determined by the buyer on tests, whether actually so determined or not. It is understood that all of the merchandise covered by this order is sold without warranties of any kind from seller unless specifically set forth in writing by an officer of seller.”

Defendant denied receiving this acknowledgment. John W. Wilson, Comptroller and Office Manager for plaintiff, testified to the procedure and practice of plaintiff company in connection with the acknowledgment of orders and the mailing of same. He said the acknowledgment “was most certainly mailed” to the defendant and was never returned to plaintiff by the United States Post Office Department.

After the art work to be placed on the cartons was approved by defendant, some of the cartons were processed and manufactured by plaintiff and approximately 25,000 (one-fourth of the number ordered) were shipped by plaintiff and delivered to defendant. Defendant paid for these cartons, together with the cost of the original engraving plates, pursuant to the terms of the order. About five months later the balance of the cartons ordered was shipped to defendant and it refused to receive them. Louvier testified that the cartons ordered ,- and shipped were the same, except for size, j as those given defendant for test purposes./

A' few months after the first shipment and some time before the last shipment, Louvier heard that the cartons were leaking. He then went to defendant’s plant to see if he could help solve defendant’s difficulties with the cartons, but he stated he was not entirely successful. Louvier was present at one of the production runs when the cartons were filled with chile. When he was asked what difference he observed between the way the cartons were filled on the production run and the way the test cartons were filled, he stated: “Well, it was filled on the production run directly out of the vat, through an automatic filler of some sort and, of course, the product was much hotter, and had to be to go through the filler.” He further stated that thereafter the cartons were sealed and were immediately placed in a corrugated case which was then sealed. He said the cartons were packed closer together than they were on the tests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
334 S.W.2d 408, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-folding-box-co-v-hodge-chile-co-moctapp-1960.