Lamborn & Co. v. Apollo Supply Co.

88 Pa. Super. 334, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1926
DocketAppeal 169
StatusPublished

This text of 88 Pa. Super. 334 (Lamborn & Co. v. Apollo Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamborn & Co. v. Apollo Supply Co., 88 Pa. Super. 334, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

After plaintiffs had proved their claim, defendants counterclaimed against it for damages resulting from plaintiffs’ alleged breach of contract to sell sugar to defendants. The court refused to direct a verdict for plaintiffs, and instructed the jury to find for defendants and to assess the damages. Plaintiffs moved for judgment, n. o. v., and their motion was refused. Judgment against the plaintiffs was entered on the verdict as directed.

This appeal depends on the meaning of the contract which is the basis of the counterclaim. It provided: “We [plaintiffs] have this day sold to you for account of ourselves 1000 bags (of about 224 lbs. each) ten per cent more or less Java White sugars at twenty-two (22) cents per pound less two (2) per cent duty paid f. o. b. cars New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore. Shipment to be made during July-August 1920 at option of the sellers from Java by steamer or steamers to New York, Philadelphia or Baltimore. Names of such steamers to be declared later. Should steamer or steamers declared against this contract fail to arrive at port of destination for any cause, sellers are relieved of responsibility under *337 this contract.......Payment to he made by net cash on presentation of sight draft with invoice and bill of lading attached in New York. ' Buyers to open within five (5) days confirmed irrevocable letter of credit in favor of [sellers] for the full invoice value of 1100 bags with [designated bank]----...”

Such a credit was established and on June 14, the Bank of Pittsburgh, for defendants, notified plaintiffs that a draft on defendants for $53,123.84, the purchase price of 1100 bags, would ‘.be honored. On August 23rd plaintiffs notified defendants: “We have received advices that the S/S ‘Clan McBean’ with your 1000 bags of Java sugar sailed from Java on August 15______On October 13th they notified defendants that the steamship “is now in the port of Philadelphia with 1100 bags of sugar to apply against your contract of June 7 and we will endeavor to ship in the course of a few days.” defendants replied that they had purchased only 1000 bags and gave shipping instructions therefor, but plaintiff shipped 1100 bags. Defendants took the sugar 'saying, “The shipment of 1100 bags being thus forced on us, we wish to state to you that we shall sell the extra 100 bags for your account at the current market price and charge the difference in the price, which we will ask you to refund......” The fall in' the price of the 100 bags was the basis of the counterclaim and= of the recovery directed by the court as.has.been stated.

1. Our first inquiry is how .much sugar must the sellers deliver to discharge their oblijgation. The trial court was of opinion that the provision “10% more or less” did not mean what.it said, but that it “referred to subordinate matters which might thereafter arise and which neither could foresee at the time the contract was written; but those words did not give to either party the solé right to determine the quantity to be delivered without proof of why the change was made.” That conclusion was said to be *338 sustained by precedents holding that indefinite expressions like “more or less,” or “about,” provided only against accidental variations arising from slight and unimportant excesses or deficiencies in number, measure, or weight (see Brawley v. United States, 96 U. S. 168, and Williston on Sales, 2d Ed., vol. 2, sec. 464).

On the other hand, appellants contend that the possible variation permitted by the expression “more or less” was exactly defined by the choice of a rate per cent of the 1000 bags agreed on, to wit: 10%; that the parties had thereby agreed that the quantity might be 1100 or 900 bags, or any quantity between those limits; that as the indefinitely qualifying words “more or less'” Iwere supplemented by the definite measure 10%, such definite effect must be given to it.

There is an obvious difference in the rule of decision applied in the cases supporting the view taken by the learned court below, and the rule .applied in the decisions supporting the contention of appellants, and we have no doubt that this appeal should be determined by the precedents in which the qualifying words are precisely limited by a definite measure of variation and not those in which the qualifying words had no specific limits prescribed.

The point is, what did the parties intend. The sellers notified the buyers that they had sold to them 1000 bags of sugar to be imported from Java, 10% more or less, and the buyers accepted. The first thing to be done with the sugar after arrival at port of discharge was that the sellers must set it apart from the cargo at one of the ports mentioned, and place it ready for rail shipment to the buyers. The duty to act first in such circumstances has been held to be an element of importance in determining who had the option to select the larger or smaller quantity; in Wheeler v. R. R. Co., 115 U. S. 29, in considering the *339 sale by tbe railroad company to a buyer of 200 to 600 tons of old rails, it is said: (p. 38) “Besides, as it was bound to do the first act in performance of the contract, by delivering the iron, the option, if there was one, was with the railroad company.” See Southern Publishing Co. v. Clements, (Tenn.) L. R. A. 1918, D. 580, and cases there cited in Note.

In addition to inquiring who must act first, light on the intention of the parties may be found by inquiring for whose benefit or protection the option exists. In Wheeler v. R. R. Co. (supra) this rule was also applied, for the court said (p. 38): “It [the railroad vendor] knew that by August it would have a thousand t'ons. It did not know how much more they would have by October 1. It intended to secure the sale of what it might have, between two hundred and six hundred tons”; see also Crystal Paper Co. v. Robertson Co., 289 Fed. 15, 17, 19. In determining the obligation of a seller who sold “200 tons, 5% more or less/’ of an article to be imported, the King’s Bench Division held that arbitrators should treat it as a contract for 190 tons or 210 tons or any number of tons between those limits. The court (speaking by Lord Chief Justice Reading) said: “The answer to that question is that the contract is for the number of tons specified in the document — that is, for 200 tons 5 per cent, more or less.’ That means that the sellers would be performing their obligation under the contract if they delivered 5 per cent, less than the 200 tons or 5 per cent, more than the 200 tons. It is a provision which is inserted into the contract for the sellers’ protection, and it gives them a margin within which to deliver, so that they are not bound to deliver exactly 200 tons, but within 5 per cent, of that quantity, whether more or less. Their legal obligation under the contract was to deliver at least 190 tons, and if they had delivered 190 tons they would have performed the contract, that is to say they *340 would, have delivered the quantity ¡which could be enforced against them under the contract.......

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Related

Brawley v. United States
96 U.S. 168 (Supreme Court, 1878)
Wheeler v. New Brunswick & Canada Railroad
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Stevenson v. Sun Co.
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Pennsylvania Sugar Co. v. Czarnikow-Rionda Co.
245 F. 913 (Third Circuit, 1917)
Taggert v. Brimfield
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Crystal Paper Co. v. Robertson Co.
289 F. 15 (Sixth Circuit, 1923)
Standard Sugar Refinery v. Castano
43 F. 279 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
88 Pa. Super. 334, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamborn-co-v-apollo-supply-co-pasuperct-1926.