Lansburgh v. M. P. Howlett Fish & Oyster Co.

138 A. 269, 153 Md. 312, 1927 Md. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 9, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 138 A. 269 (Lansburgh v. M. P. Howlett Fish & Oyster Co.) 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
Lansburgh v. M. P. Howlett Fish & Oyster Co., 138 A. 269, 153 Md. 312, 1927 Md. LEXIS 46 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The judgment in this case was rendered for a balance claimed on account of the purchase price of a carload of frozen fish sold by the plaintiff to the defendant, as to part of which there was a refusal to accept delivery and make payment. The sale included two hundred and eighteen boxes of fish, and by agreement they were placed in a cold storage warehouse in Philadelphia, where the plaintiff’s business was conducted, to await shipment on successive orders to the defendant in Baltimore. Deliveries aggregating one hundred and five boxes were made on the defendant’s orders, and seventy-seven boxes were sold in the market by the plaintiff at the request of the defendant for the same price, eleven cents per pound, which he had agreed to pay, leaving thirty-six boxes in storage subject to his order. The defendant refused to accept further shipments, and also declined to pay for the last two consignments, of ten boxes each, on the ground that the fish no longer conformed to the description and sample by which they were purchased. Payment having been made for the accepted shipments, the plaintiff sued the defendant for the contract price of the twenty boxes of fish delivered and not paid for, and the thirty-six boxes still in the warehouse which the defendant refused to receive. Tender was made by the defendant of an amount, less than the purchase price, which he considered to be the actual market value of the twenty boxes of fish last delivered. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff for the amount claimed, and from the judgment entered on the verdict the defendant has appealed.

*315 The contention of the defendant is that the fish were represented by the plaintiff at the time of the purchase to be Jersey trout, and that the sample box forwarded for his inspection contained fish of that description, as did also the consignments which were accepted, but that the two final shipments were of Virginia trout, which are said by the defendant and his witnesses to be of inferior size, quality, and market value. It is insisted, however, by the plaintiff, that the fish were sold simply as trout, without designation of the locality where they were caught or packed, and that they were of good quality and size, and in conformity with the description and sample. The theory that there is any recognized difference in the market between Jersey and Virginia trout was disputed by the plaintiff and witnesses whom he produced at the trial. It was agreed that the contract of sale had reference to “round” trout, which is a term indicating that the entrails of the fish have not been removed, and all of the fish in question were in fact of that description.

The first exception in the record was taken because of the refusal of the trial judge to permit what he considered to be an unnecessary repetition, on cross-examination, of an inquiry addressed to a witness for the plaintiff, as to the number of fish on the top layers of the boxes in which they were packed. The witness had three times stated his inability to answer the question, and we find no abuse of discretion in the refusal to allow the cross-examination on that relatively unimportant point to be continued. Richards v. State, 129 kid. 184.

Over the defendant’s objection, the court admitted in evidence a carbon copy of a bill said to have been sent to the defendant soon after the carload of fish was purchased, the general manager of the plaintiff corporation having testified that he had mailed the original of the bill to the defendant, and notice for the production of the original having been admitted, but possession or receipt of it by the defendant having been denied. The second exception was reserved be *316 cause of this ruling. It is objected that the evidence as to the mailing of the bill to the defendant is not sufficient, because it was not proved that the defendant’s place of business was specified by street and number on the envelope containing the bill, which, according to the testimony, was addressed to him at Baltimore, Maryland, and because it was not testified that the envelope was stamped. When the defendant objected to the admission of a copy of the bill on the ground that the mailing had not been properly proved, the court stated that the objection would be overruled. Further questioning of the witness then on the stand, who had testified to having mailed the bill, might have disposed of the objection now specifically urged. But the general statement of the witness that he mailed the bill in an envelope addressed to the defendant at Baltimore, Maryland, was hardly sufficient proof of a proper mailing to raise a presumption that the bill reached its destination. In 22 C. J. 98, a number of cases are cited in support of the text statement: “Receipt of a letter by the person for whom it was intended cannot be presumed unless it is proved that the letter was properly addressed to him, at the city or town where he resides or has his place of business, with the street and number if it is a city of considerable size, * * In the same volume (page 99), cases are cited to the proposition that “a letter is not duly mailed so as to give rise to a presumption of receipt by the addressee, unless it is proved that the postage was prepaid,” while in other cases, .there noted, the prepayment of postage is held to be implied from proof that the letter was mailed. There was affirmative evidence in Wolf v. Union Trust Co., 150 Md. 385, as to the prepayment of postage for the mailing there alleged. If, in this case, we assume, though without deciding, that the proof of mailing implies the use of the postage required for due transmission, we have not the requisite information as to the course of correspondence between the parties to enable us to determine that a letter directed to the defendant in so large a city as Baltimore, without the designation of the *317 street and number of his place of business or residence, was sufficiently addressed to raise the presumption of its receipt, for the purpose of secondary proof of its contents.

But we have not found in the ruling on the point just considered any reason for a reversal. The bill allowed to be proved by the introduction of a carbon copy, on the ground that the original had been duly mailed to the defendant and had not been produced on notice, was a memorandum of the quantities and prices of the purchased fish under the general description of “round trout.” It was proved on behalf of the plaintiff that the omission to describe the fish as Jersey trout was without significance. While the defendant’s statement that the fish were represented to be Jersey trout was contradicted, it was testified fox the plaintiff that, even if such a representation had been made, the fish would not have been specified otherwise than as “round trout” in the bill. It appears from the letters of the defendant, ordering shipments of the fish, that he described them simply as “trout.” In view of the plaintiff’s virtual disclaimer in the testimony of any advantage to his theory of the contract from the fact that the bill did not designate the fish as Jersey trout, and of the similar omission of that term from the defendant’s orders, we have been unable to conclude that the action of the lower court in admitting the bill in evidence is a sufficient ground upon which to remand the case for retrial.

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Bluebook (online)
138 A. 269, 153 Md. 312, 1927 Md. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lansburgh-v-m-p-howlett-fish-oyster-co-md-1927.