J. Weil & Co. v. Quidnick Manufacturing Co.

80 A. 447, 33 R.I. 58, 1911 R.I. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 80 A. 447 (J. Weil & Co. v. Quidnick Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Weil & Co. v. Quidnick Manufacturing Co., 80 A. 447, 33 R.I. 58, 1911 R.I. LEXIS 124 (R.I. 1911).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

This is an action in assumpsit brought by J. Weil and Company of the city and State of New York against the Quidnick Manufacturing Company, a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Rhode Island, to recover the amount due on a bill of goods sold and delivered to the defendant on its written order. The case was tried before a justice of the Superior Court with a jury on the tenth day of January,. 1911. Upon the conclusion of the defendant’s testimony, the trial justice directed the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiffs for the full amount *59 of their claim, and a verdict was returned for the plaintiffs for $769.19. The defendant duly excepted to said direction of a verdict. Several exceptions were also taken by the defendant during the trial to the rulings of the court excluding testimony offered. Defendant’s bill of exceptions was duly allowed and the case is now before this court on said bill of exceptions. Said exceptions are as follows:

1. “To the exclusion of answer of the witness Villard to question 47 on page 11 of the record.”

2. “To the exclusion of answers of the witness Hambly to questions 19 and 20 on page 31, to question 21 on page 32, to questions 22 and 23 on page 34.”

3. “To the exclusion of answers of the witness Nicker-son to questions 6 and 7 on page 42, to questions 8, 9, and 10 on page 43.”

4. “And to the court’s direction of a verdict for plaintiffs as shown on page 44 of the transcript.”

The plaintiffs, who are engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling steel and steel files, had as an agent for selling its said.steel one Max Villard. Said Villard went to defendant’s office on May 18, 1909, and saw the Superintendent, Alton L. R. Hambly. Villard (p. 4) testified: “Q. 17. What did you have with you in regard to selling? A. I had some little samples which I showed Mr. Hambly and I told him about the steel and everything and he was very much interested and he told me he wants to give me an order. Q. 18. Now, tell us just what was said about that order; how it was arranged? A. Well, I told him that all over every factory they use chisels of octagon. So I told him for chisels we use % octagon and 1% and 1% square for blacksmiths’ tools and I make a little paper. I told him, 'Mr. Hambly, we generally sent out steel in bundles from Europe.’ I told Mr. Hambly, 'I will ship you a bundle of 12 bars,’ which would be a small order, so Mr. Hambly said, 'All right, you can ship me that.’ I said to Mr. Hambly, 'Kindly give me a written order’ and he went up with my little paper to the stenographer and told *60 the stenographer just exactly give him a little order like this. Q. 19. Did he sign that order which he gave to you? A. It was handed later on to me by Mr. Hambly and signed by Mr. Hambly. Q. 20. I hand you this paper and ask you if that is the order which you took? A. Yes, this is the order what I took.” The order was put in evidence as Plaintiffs’ Exhibit A. and was as follows:

“Quidnick Manufacturing Co.
Supt’s Office: Quidnick, ft. I., May 18, 1909.-
A. L. R. Hambly, Supt.
J. Weill & Co.,
Mulhouse, Alsace.
Gentlemen:
Please enter our order for the following Tool Steel:
4 bars Vs" Octagon for Chisels,
4 bars VyV' Square for Blacksmith Tools,
4 bars V/i" Square for Blacksmith Tools.
Length of Bars, 15 ft. to 18 ft. long, 49 cents Lb., F. O. B.
Quidnick, R. I.
Yours truly,
Quidnick Mfg. Co.,
A. L. R. Hambly, Supt.”
“Q. 24. Now, Mr. Villard, after taking that order what did you do? A. Well, then I thank Mr. Hambly for it and I hope he will be very satisfied with the steel and everything like that and then I went away again. Q. 25. Did you send it to your house? A. I sent it to my house then. Q. 26. How long were you with Mr. Hambly in all? A. Perhaps half an hour, something like that. Q. 27. Was any copy of this order, which is marked Exhibit A. taken by Mr. Hambly? A. I couldn’t say exactly but when Mr. Hambly handed me out this order I asked Mr. Hambly if he took a copy of this so Mr. Hambly went up to the stenographer and asked the stenographer if he took a copy of this so the stenographer said, 'We have a copy of this gentleman’s writing, that little slip; it is not necessary,’ *61 and then Mr. Hambly said, 'No, it is not necessary.’ Q. 28. That was the little slip you yourself wrote? A. I wrote myself. Q. 29. I will ask you if that is yours, the copy you made? A. Yes, sir, it is my copy.” The paper was put in evidence as Plaintiffs’ Exhibit B. and was as follows:
“J. Weill & Co. Mulhouse,
(Alsace)
4 Bars %” octagon for chisels
4 Bars square for Blacks. Tools
4 Bars l]/¿" square for Blacks. Tools
49 cents per lb. f. o. b.
Bars from 15 to 18 ft. long.”
“Q. 30. This is what you wrote? A. This is what I wrote. Q. 31. This is in your own handwriting? A. My own handwriting.” He testified that the steel was shipped to the Quidnick Manufacturing Company and refused. Asked, “Where is it now, as far as you know?” he answered, “Well, it is lying in some warehouse, I think. The company refused to accept it again. Q. The Weill Company refused it also? A. Yes.” He said he didn’t know how much the steel weighed.

Mr. Hambly testified (p. 28): “Q. 7. What were you doing when he came? A.. I think I was in my private office when he came. Q. 8. Well, now, tell what was said by him and by you. A. I came out of my private office, and saw him at the door of the glass partition in our main office and he stated his business. Q. 9. What did he say? A. Said he had a specially treated steel he would like to have us try. Q. 10. He had testified he had small samples of pieces of steel. Was that so? A. I don’t remember of seeing any samples at all. Q. 11. Well, now, go on. A. I told him we were a small cotton’mill and used very little steel and he urged me very strongly to try a sample of it and at last I told him I would take a sample of the smallest possible quantity he could possibly send and he asked for a piece of paper to write out an order. We gave him a piece of *62 paper and lie wrote out in lead pencil the order which you see there and he asked to have it typewritten and signed. He laid it on the desk and during that time I was talking with another salesman at the door of the glass partition. Previous to that he came inside and sat down on an armchair and wrote that on a table with a lead pencil.

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Bluebook (online)
80 A. 447, 33 R.I. 58, 1911 R.I. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-weil-co-v-quidnick-manufacturing-co-ri-1911.