L. & S. Bearing Co. v. Morton Bearing Co.

93 N.W.2d 899, 355 Mich. 219
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1959
DocketDocket 53, Calendar 47,189
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 93 N.W.2d 899 (L. & S. Bearing Co. v. Morton Bearing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. & S. Bearing Co. v. Morton Bearing Co., 93 N.W.2d 899, 355 Mich. 219 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Voelker, J.

This case involves the interpretation of a contract consisting of a letter from plaintiff to defendant and a return purchase order from the defendant to the plaintiff. The relevant portions of the contract are:

(1.) Letter from plaintiff:

"Dear Mr. Morton,
“Confirming our telephone conversation of yesterday, we can manufacture the 39,000 #RS-5305-W bearings for you at a price of 73.6(5 each, f.o.b. Ann Arbor, Michigan, subject to the following conditions:
He * *
“2. You will authorize us to purchase, for your account, all material required to manufacture the rollers, stake-pins and end-plates at a total cost to you of 13.3^ per bearing.”
(2.) Purchase order from defendant:
“Make and assemble 39,200 RS-SSOSW for approval on ordnance part No. 707727 drawing No. CAMX1.4 coated with rust preventive oil and shipped in bulk in containers for satisfactory arrival at our plant at $0.736 fob our plant.
“In addition to above price we will supply the following materials: * * *
*222 “4. You are authorized to purchase for our account material for roller, stake pins and end plates at a total cost to us of 13.3^ per bearing.”

The question is: Must the defendant pay 73.6‡- per unit, in addition to the material charge of 13.3^ per unit that was previously charged to it (as plaintiff claims), or must he instead pay 73.6^ minus the material charge (as defendant claims)? Considerable evidence was presented on both sides in the trial court. Upon the conclusion of proofs both parties moved for a directed verdict, without reservation, thus causing the judge to dismiss the jury and decide the case himself. The court then ruled that the contract was ambiguous and upon the evidence presented entered judgment for the defendant.

Plaintiff made a timely motion for a new trial, which the defendant resisted. After hearing thereon the trial judge decided to treat plaintiff’s motion as one to reconsider his previous judgment. To this-end he said:

“Plaintiff thereupon filed a motion called a motion for a new trial. Inasmuch, however, as the basis of the motion was the claim that the court had erroneously held the contract to be ambiguous, the motion could more appropriately be called one for reconsideration of the main issue and the decision thereon, and will be so considered by the court.”

Upon reconsideration the judge set aside his-previous judgment and entered a new one finding-for the plaintiff. In his opinion he said, in substance, that upon reflection he now considered that the-contract was not ambiguous, after all, and that he-had been led into error in his previous decision by erroneously considering the oral evidence presented at the trial.

Defendant on its own part then made a motion for new trial alleging certain errors by the trial court.. *223 The trial court denied this motion in an opinion filed December 5, 1956, and this appeal has resulted.

Michigan Court Rule No 66, § 6 (1945) provides that when error is claimed in the denial of a motion for new trial we shall review the decision of the trial court. Appellant lists several questions that are involved in this appeal which we shall discuss in the order presented.

First, is the contract in question ambiguous? As noted, the plaintiff offered to make the bearings in question for 73.6(5 each, “subject to the following conditions(Emphasis added.) It then outlined several conditions, the following included:

“2. You will authorize us to purchase, for your account, all material required to manufacture the rollers, stake-pins and end-plates at a total cost to you of 13.3(5 per bearing.”

We do not think this offer is ambiguous. If the plaintiff had intended to pay for all the material there would scarcely have been any point in including the above-quoted condition. Even had there been any ambiguity in the offer we think the defendant’s acceptance finally dissipated it when, after describing the bearings and stating the 73.6(5 price, the purchase order said: “In addition to above price we will supply the following materials.” (Emphasis added.) That list included:

“4. You are authorized to purchase for our account material for roller, stake pins and end plates at a total cost to us of 13.3^ per bearing.”

We think that the words “In addition to the above price” (73.6(5) can hardly be reasonably interpreted to mean 73.6(5 per unit minus 13.3^ as contended by appellant. On this we quote with approval from *224 'the opinion of the trial judge where he aptly remarked :

“Another little point is this — that if it had been expected that the plaintiff would provide these particular materials listed under item 4, it would not have been interested in a maximum price to be paid for them. It would have been sufficient to say that if we pay for those items, whatever the cost is will be subtracted from 73.6‡.”

Having determined that the contract is not ambiguous we have, in essence, also answered appellant’s second question, that is: Is the interpretation of the contract subject to the subsequent acts of the parties? In Michigan the law is clear that where a written contract is not ambiguous the intention of the parties as expressed on the face thereof must be followed and extraneous matter will not be considered. See Michigan Chandelier Co. v. Morse, 297 Mich 41, 48:

“Practical interpretation by the parties can only be regarded where the contract is of doubtful or ambiguous meaning. Extraneous evidence is not allowable to interpret a writing which has no need of interpretation.”

Appellant’s third allegation of error is that the trial judge did not have authority to convert the motion for new trial into a motion for reconsideration. We agree with appellant to the extent that we know of no specific statute or court rule that expressly gives the trial court the authority to do that particular act. Notwithstanding we submit that a trial judge must do many things which he is not expressly authorized to do. In the absence of plain provisions to the contrary we are reluctant to hobble him from doing that which ought sensibly to be done. To have granted a new trial in this case would have been blindly to follow a possible procedural path to *225 absurd lengths. It would have benefited neither party, but would rather have only further congested the docket of an already overburdened court.

It is apparent that the trial court treated the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial in the nature of a motion to vacate the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.W.2d 899, 355 Mich. 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-s-bearing-co-v-morton-bearing-co-mich-1959.