Kirk v. Nice

2 Watts 367
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Watts 367 (Kirk v. Nice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirk v. Nice, 2 Watts 367 (Pa. 1834).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J

plaintiffs in error were the defendants, below, against whom the defendant in error brought this action to recover damages on account of the inferior and bad quality of eleven and. a half tons of bar iron received by him of them in part satisfaction of a large quantity of store goods previously sold and delivered by him to them, according to the terms of a special agreement made between them.

The agreement was reduced to writing, and is as follows:

“ Memorandum of agreement made and concluded on the 5th day of October 1830, between William Nice, of the borough of Milton, of the one part, and Kirk and Kelton, of Lycoming county, of the other part, witnesselh, that the said William Nice doth agree to sell to the said Kirk and Kelton his entire stock of store goods now on hand at first cost, for which said Kirk and Kelton are to pay him in bar iron of Centre county metal, drawn to a reasonable bill, and to be delivered at Milton, at 110 dollars per ton; the iron to be delivered say not later than May next.

“Kirk, Kelton & Co.

“William Nice.”

The goods amounting to 2027 dollars 53 cents, according to an account thereof, made out by the parties shortly after entering into the agreement, were delivered by the defendant in error to the plaintiffs in error. The plaintiffs in error also, within the time and at the place fixed by the agreement, delivered to the defendant in error the full quantity of bar iron thereby required, all made out of Centre county metal, according to a bill furnished hy the defendant in error. The counsel for the plaintiff below filed a declaration, intending it, I presume, to be in assumpsit; in which, after reciting the agreement [368]*368and averring the value of the store goods, and a delivery thereof by him to the defendants, he concludes it, without assigning any breach, in the following terms: “ nevertheless, the said Kirk, Kelton & Co. their promise and assumption aforesaid little regarding, but contriving and fraudulently intending him the said William in this behalf craftily and subtilely to deceive and defraud, eleven tons ten hundred weight and seven pounds of bar iron of an inferior and unmerchantable quality to the said William at Milton aforesaid did deliver, well knowing the same to be unmerchantable and of inferior quality, and contrary to the bargain and agreement between them made, under pretence that the said bar iron was of the same value and goodness as Centre, county metal of a good quality, to the damage of the said William Nice 450 dollars.” From the declaration it is apparent that the whole quantity of bar iron is impliedly admitted to have been made of Centre county metal, and to have been delivered in due time at the proper place. The only complaint is, that eleven tons ten hundred weight and seven pounds were of inferior'and unmerchantable quality, and that the defendants below knew it to be so at the time of delivery without communicating it to the plaintiff.

Several errors have been assigned which it is unnecessary to notice, because the fourth error alone raises an objection to ihe right of the plaintiff below to recover in this action that is insuperable and cannot be got over. This error is founded upon the charge of the court to the jury, in answer to the first point submitted by the counsel of the defendants below, which is in these words: “ the counsel for the defendants respectfully requests the court to charge the jury in this cause, that even if they believe all the evidence that has been introduced by the plaintiff in support of this action, he is not entitled to recover under the present declaration and pleadings.” To this the court in their charge advised the jury that “if, from the whole evidence given upon that subject [the good and merchantable quality of the iron], they should believe that the iron was not good and merchantable, it will then be proper for the jury to inquire whether the defects in its quality were known .to the defendants or not’ at the time of furnishing it to the plaintiff. If the iron was not merchantable and the defendants knew it, and the defects were concealed from the plaintiff, your verdict should be for the plaintiff In leaving the case to the jury with this direction, .the court decline answering the first point of the defendants’ counsel in the' affirmative, and answer the same in the negative.”

In order to decide the question here presented, correctly, it is proper-first to ascertain and to state the nature and extent of the obligation incurred by the plaintiffs in error, on entering into the agreement as recited above. It is to be observed that at the time of making this agreement the plaintiffs in error do not appear to have been .the owners of a furnace situate in Centre county, nor concerned in any way in making Centre county metal. On the contrary, it appears, from the record of the suit brought by the plaintiffs in error against [369]*369Harris and others, of Centre county, which was given in evidence by the defendant in error, very much too against the will of the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, that the plaintiffs in error bought their Centre county metal of Harris and others, the manufacturers of if, in Centre county, on the 1st of November 1830, after the making of their agreement with the defendant in error, out of which they made and delivered to him the eleven tons ten hundred weight and seven pounds of iron before mentioned. It is obvious, from the terms of the agreement, that it did not apply and had no reference whatever to bar iron, then manufactured by the plaintiffs in error, and on hand, out of Centre county metal, but to bar iron to be manufactured or made thereafter, by them, out of Centre county metal, according to a reasonable bill. This bill, upon a fair construction of the agreement, the defendant had a right to furnish, and to require of the plaintiffs in error that they should make the iron in conformity to it, if it were reasonable, because they bound themselves so to do. Having no Centre county metal on hand then, nor contract for the future delivery of any when they made their agreement with the defendant in error, they likewise bound themselves expressly to make the bar iron, for the defendant in error, out of Centre county metal, and consequently it was understood between the parties that the plaintiffs in error would procure such metal. This they were willing to do, and obligated themselves accordingly, but no further: to this the defendant in error acceded, and beyond this he had no right to require any thing at the hands of the plaintiffs in error. They did not undertake to deliver, to him bar iron of a good and merchantable quality, nor bar iron made of Centre county metal of a good and merchantable quality, but simply bar iron made out of Centre county metal. Hence it is manifest that the plaintiffs in error, on the one hand, were willing to bind themselves, at all hazards, to procure Centre county metal, and to make the bar iron of it, according to a reasonable bill, but unwilling to be answerable further for its properties or quality.

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Related

Boyd v. Wilson
83 Pa. 319 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Watts 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirk-v-nice-pa-1834.