Jessup & Moore Paper Co. v. Piper

133 F. 108, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5368
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 1902
DocketNo. 27
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 133 F. 108 (Jessup & Moore Paper Co. v. Piper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jessup & Moore Paper Co. v. Piper, 133 F. 108, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5368 (circtedpa 1902).

Opinion

J. B. McPHERSON,

District Judge. Gentlemen of the Jury: There is a question of fact in this case to be submitted to you, and I shall endeavor to explain it in a few words. There is no dispute between the parties as to what the contract between them was, and there could be no dispute, because the contract is in writing.

[109]*109W. H. Piper & Co., the defendants in this suit, agreed to deliver to the Jessup & Moore Paper Company a certain quantity of coal at a given price — $1.82, I think it was, a ton — delivered upon the siding near their works, somewhere in the neighborhood of Wilmington. They agreed to deliver from seventeen hundred tons a month up to— I do not think the amount was specified, but it was to be as called for, as I recall.

Mr. Dale: Up to ten thousand tons.

The Court: The maximum was ten thousand tons, but the amount to be delivered was, I think, not specified.

Mr. Schick: Was to be ten thousand tons at the buyer’s option.

The Court: The amount was to be at the buyer’s option, between seven thousand and ten thousand tons. At all events, the precise amount to be delivered per month is not in dispute. The contract was to run from the 1st of October until the 1st of April, and the deliveries, of course, were to be made within that period. There was no difficulty about the deliveries in the month of October, and I ought to say before I make that remark, even, that at the time the contract was made there was no reason that either party should anticipate a shortage in the supply of cars. Nothing appears in evidence to justify the defendants in anticipating that any shortage would occur. It would be entirely right for you to draw the inference, on the contrary, that both sides assumed that cars would be on hand to deliver the coal as it should be needed. In point of fact, in October there was no difficulty about it, and seventeen hundred tons were delivered to the plaintiffs at their mills. In November the supply of cars began to be somewhat difficult to obtain, although even in that month between seven and eight hundred tons were delivered. The difficulty arises here, during the last four months, December, January, February, and March; and during those months I think the jury would be justified — the parties, indeed, do not seem to be in any dispute upon that subject — in finding that there was a shortage of cars; that is to say, the railroad company did not deliver at the colliery of the defendants cars sufficient to enable them to fulfill all their contracts for delivery during those months. The question is how far that scarcity of cars operated to relieve the defendants from the obligation of this contract. As a matter of course, if the contract had been out and out to deliver so many tons per month within this specified period, the mere shortage of cars would have been no answer. If Messrs. Piper & Co. had undertaken to deliver, it would have been their lookout whether the cars were actually present or not; and, if the cars were not present, no matter if it were the fault of the railroad company that the cars were not on hand, notwithstanding that, 'the loss must have fallen upon Piper & Co., because of their unqualified contract to deliver.

There is a clause in this contract that they will not be responsible for the fulfillment of it if it be prevented by strikes or by hindrances beyond their control. I have not given you precisely the language, but I have given you what I have no doubt is the essential meaning of the clause. “Hindrances beyond their control” is the phrase that concerns us now. What, in the light of the evidence before us, would be a hindrance beyond the control of the defendant? It appears that this colliery is situated upon a line of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and that [110]*110road is the only means by which the coal can be moved in the first instance. Of course, after a while it will reach a point where some other road connects, and then it may go elsewhere, but for the first movement of the coal the defendants are dependent upon the Penns)dvania Railroad. Therefore, if the Pennsylvania Railroad should decline absolutely to furnish them any cars whatever, of course the defendants could not move a pound of coal, except so far as their own cars might suffice to carry it. There is no allegation that the railroad companj1, absolutely refused to deliver them any cars, but that it refused to deliver them cars in sufficient quantity to enable them to fulfill their contract.

It is at that point that we approach the question of fact that is to be submitted for your determination — that is, the allegation upon the part of the defendants that they did not have sufficient cars to enable them to fulfill their contracts, and therefore that they did the next best thing; that is to say, they apportioned their cars among all their customers, giving to each one his due and ratable share. If the facts were as averred by the defendants, I think that would be a fair, a reasonable, and proper thing to do. I do not think the defendants could be called upon to carry out one contract in full at the expense of all the other contracts for which they were equally bound, but that if there was a genuine scarcity of cars, so that it was impossible for them, for example, to carry out more than twenty-five per cent, of their contracts, if they carried out twenty-five per cent, of each contract I think that would be perfectly fair and proper and lawful to do, under such a contract as lies before us.

But the allegation of the plaintiff is that the facts were different, and that the scarcity of cars which prevailed to some extent was made use of by the defendants for the purpose of extorting a larger sum of money for their coal; that they went to their customers and said: “Now, you cannot get the coal we have contracted to deliver to you, unless you agree to make a new contract. If you agree to pay so much more for the coal, we can make an arrangement by which we can carry out our contract with you, and you can get your coal, although you will have to pay a higher figure for it.” It is said that the evidence shows that such of their customers as came in to the arrangement of that sort did receive the coal which they had contracted for, and received it in full, but that persons such as the plaintiff, the Jessup & Moore Company, that declined to pay a higher price, were allowed to get it as best they might, and were simply given such coal as the defendants chose to give them. You will have to determine what the facts are upon those questions. Was it within the power of the defendants to carry out this contract? If the plaintiff, the Jessup & Moore Paper Company, had paid that higher price, would the contract have been carried out? Would the defendants have been able to carry it out if this higher price had been contracted for and paid? That is an important matter for the jury to determine, because, if the defendants were using the situation as a mere cover and pretext to extort a higher price for the coal, and if, in point of fact, it was able to carry out its contract by arrangement with the railroad company, as a matter of course such conduct could not be tolerated. It is bound to carry out its [111]*111contracts even with that clause in, so far as — at all events — to put forth all reasonable and proper exertion to overcome whatever hindrances may be offered to the carrying out of its contracts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 F. 108, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jessup-moore-paper-co-v-piper-circtedpa-1902.