Kleiman v. Orion Knitting Mills

115 A. 857, 139 Md. 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 A. 857 (Kleiman v. Orion Knitting Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kleiman v. Orion Knitting Mills, 115 A. 857, 139 Md. 550 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants, who are engaged in the City of Baltimore in the purchase and sale of cotton and woolen goods as “jobbers,” on January 15th, 1920, ordered from the appellee, a. manufacturer of such merchandise located at Kinston, Worth Carolina, sixty dozen pairs of stockings at six dollars per dozen. The contract of sale provided that the articles purchased were to be shipped to the appellants at Baltimore in March, but it also contained this, provision:

“This order is not subject to cancellation except by agreement. Seller shall not be held liable for late or non-delivery caused by strikes, fires or other causes beyond our control. The acceptance by railroad or other carrier shall constitute delivery. These goods *552 shall not be returned, nor will allowance be made for any cause after five days from receipt. All terms of sale and deliveries are set forth on this copy of order. If not in exact accordance with conditions agreed upon, it must be returned for correction within five days from its receipt. This order is given and accepted subject to a limit of credit determinable at any time by Mfg. or Seller. Delivery dates mentioned are approximate only.”

The stockings were not shipped until May 19th, 1920, and did not arrive at their destination until June 29th, 1920.

In the meantime the appellants had received from the appellee a bill for them and, in reply to that demand, they wrote the appellee on May. 31st, 1920, that they would return “the goods” as soon as they received them, because “the order was placed” for “March 1st” delivery and because they had never received an acknowledgment of it. To this letter the appellee replied that it had not shipped the goods sooner because of labor troubles, and that it had not acknowledged the order because it had been accepted by its duly accredited agent, and no further acknowledgment was needed.

After some further correspondence between the parties, which failed to affect their respective positions, this suit was brought by the appellee for the purchase price of the stockings. The verdict and judgment being for the plaintiff, the. defendants took this appeal. In addition to the facts to which we have referred, the uncontradicted evidence showed that the delay in shipment was due to a shortage of labor and material, and to a congestion of transportation facilities, which prevented the appellee from securing supplies necessary for the manufacture of the articles sold to the appellants, and that all of-these causes were beyond the appellee’s control.

It also appeared that it was necessary for the appellants to have the goods ordered “around the month of March so that” they could make immediate deliveries for the spring of the year, and that since they failed to receive the merchan *553 clise ordered from the appellee at that time they had to go out and buy other goods.

The important question presented by the appeal is whether these facts were legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover, and that question is the subject of the sixth and seventh exceptions.

The sixth exception refers to the court’s refusal of a prayer offered by the defendants at the close of the plaintiff’s case, in which the court was asked to direct a verdict for the defendants on the ground that there was no evidence legally sufficient to support the plaintiff’s claim. After the refusal of this prayer, the defendants proceeded with their case and offered testimony in support of their contentions. In doing that they waived this exception to the court’s ruling on their prayer, and it cannot be reviewed in this Court. Wilkin Mfg. Co. v. Melvin, 116 Md. 108; Barabasz v. Kabat, 91 Md. 55; New York, P. & N. R. Co. v. Jones, 94 Md. 35; United Rwys. Co. v. Deane, 93 Md. 624.

The subject of the seventh exception is the court’s! refusal to grant a similar prayer at the close of the whole case. The appellants contend that this prayer should have been granted because the goods were not shipped within the time stipulated in the contract of sale. It is well settled that time is of the essence of commercial contracts! of the nature of that sued on in this ease (Penn Oil Co. v. Triangle P. & G. Co., 136 Md. 574) and, if the contract had contained no provision as to the time other than that the shipment was to be made in March, the appellants would have had the right to cancel the contract and refuse the shipment, since it was not made within that time. But the contract provides expressly that “delivery dates mentioned are approximate only,” and since both parties executed it and are bound by its terms, the only question is whether under those conditions it can be said as a matter of law that a delay of forty-nine days was sufficient to warrant the defendants in cancelling the contract and refusing to accept the goods, and the answer to that question turns *554 largely upon the meaning to be given the word “approximate.” Literally the word means,“near to,” and in ordinary usage it is equivalent to “about,” “a little more or less,”' “close.” Oxford Dictionary; Standard Dictionary; 4 C. J., 1465.

In the contract under consideration it is used to' qualify the stipulation as to the time when the shipment was to be made and to an extent made that time indefinite, and since, in the construction of contracts, the primary rule is to ascertain and effect the mutual intent of the parties (13 C. J., 522), it becomes necessary to inquire what meaning the parties intended it to have as used in this contract. In determining that intention “the contract itself must be read in the light of the circumstances under which it was entered into” (Saunders v. Ducker 116 Md. 479), because since the purpose of the inquiry is to learn “the meaning of the writing at the time and place when the contract was made*, all the surrounding circumstances at that time necessarily throw light upon” its meaning and aid in interpreting it. Williston, Contracts, par. 618. Applying these rules to the facts before us, it is clear that by the use of the word “approximate” the parties intended to enlarge and not to restrict the time of shipment.

At the time the contract was made, the evidence conceded by the prayer showed there was a shortage both of labor and material and “a general congestion in transportation,” conditions which had a tendency to hinder and delay the manufacture and shipments of such merchandise as was the subject of this contract, and which were “abnormally unfavorable for shipments at fixed definite times,” and which could not be prevented by “the most diligent efforts that the manufacturer could and did make.” Under such circumstances the most natural and probable desire of the manufacturer would be to secure some latitude'in the time limited for the performance of the contract, and that purpose and the reason for it must have been patent to- the buyer, since both knew that *555

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Bluebook (online)
115 A. 857, 139 Md. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kleiman-v-orion-knitting-mills-md-1921.