Kemp & Burpee Mfg. Co. v. Mitchell
This text of 215 F. 935 (Kemp & Burpee Mfg. Co. v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The evidence fully sustains the findings of fact of the learned referee.
A waiver may be inferred from the acts and conduct and declarations of the parties; and may be proved by parol. Hyde v. Kiehl, 183 Pa. 414, 38 Atl. 998; Allen v. Sowerby, 37 Md. 410; Kribs v. Jones, 44 Md. 396; Herzog v. Sawyer, 61 Md. 344.
The second and third exceptions relate to the findings that the Mitchells knew that sales were made by J. B. Kemp Manufacturing Company, licensees of the Kemp & Burpee Manufacturing Company, in the restricted territory of the Mitchells during the years 1903, 1904, 1905, and 1906 under such license. The findings of knowledge, together with the other findings of fact, are amply sustained by the evidence.
The evidence clearly shows that the contracts of 1904, 1905, and 1906 were entered into with a full knowledge upon the part of the Mitchells of their terms, -and with the full knowledge upon their part [937]*937of the existence of the license to J. S'. Kemp Manufacturing Company, and that J. S. Kemp Manufacturing Company was manufacturing and selling manure spreaders under their license in the restricted territory. That the Mitchells by their acts, conduct, and declarations waived their right to claim damages for alleged breach of the contracts by failing to assert their rights during the period of existence of the contracts; by making payment to the Kemp & Burpee Manufacturing Company during that period without any claim for damages or set-off; by failing to rescind or to claim damages, or to give any notice of intention to claim damages for the alleged breach.
“Waiver is where one in possession of any right, whether conferred by law or by contract, and of full knowledge of the material facts, does or forbears the doing- of something inconsistent with the existence of the right or of his intention to rely on it. Thereupon he is said to have waived it, and he is precluded from claiming anything by reason of it afterwards.” Bishop on Contracts, § 792; Pokegama Sugar Pine Lumber Co. v. Klamath River Lumber & Improvement Co. (C. C.) 96 Fed. 34.
“Where a person tacitly encourages an act to be done, he cannot after-wards exercise his legal right in opposition to such consent, if his conduct or acts of encouragement induced the other party to change his position, so that he will be pecuniarily prejudiced by the assertion of such adversary claim.” Swain v. Seamans, 9 Wall. 254. 19 L. Ed. 554.
“Waiver of a right or benefit may be established by the actions, declarations, acquiescence, even silence, of a party, as well as by his expressed consent and approval. * * *
“While a waiver is not in the proper sense of the term a species of estoppel, yet where a party to a transaction induces another to act upon the reasonable belief that he has waived or will waive certain rights, remedies, or objections which he is entitled to assert, he will be estopped to insist upon such rights, remedies, or objections to the prejudice of the one misled.” Marine Iron Works v. Wiess, 148 Fed. 158, 78 C. C. A. 279.
For the reasons above stated, the exceptions of Benjamin C. Mitchell and B. C. Mitchell & Son to the referee’s report and award are dismissed, and the report is confirmed.
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215 F. 935, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemp-burpee-mfg-co-v-mitchell-paed-1914.