Lenape Hydraulic Pressing & Forging Co. v. Ellis Resilient Wheel Corp.

251 P. 885, 141 Wash. 571, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 997
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1927
DocketNo. 20110. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 P. 885 (Lenape Hydraulic Pressing & Forging Co. v. Ellis Resilient Wheel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lenape Hydraulic Pressing & Forging Co. v. Ellis Resilient Wheel Corp., 251 P. 885, 141 Wash. 571, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 997 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

*572 Tolman, O. J.

Appellant, a Pennsylvania corporation, sued to recover a balance of $5,537.72, with interest, alleged to be dne it under certain written contracts for tbe manufacture of patented resilient automobile truck wheels for the defendant, claiming that the wheels were in all respects made according to plans and specifications furnished by the defendant and under the direction and supervision of its officers, a part of the purchase price having been paid in advance, a portion of the wheels having been delivered, the remainder being in possession of the plaintiff in storage and subject to storage charges because of the failure of defendant to give shipping directions.

The defendant answered, admitted the contracts and the advance payments on account, the delivery so far as claimed; denied that the wheels were manufactured according to its plans and specifications or under its supervision and direction; denied the alleged reasonable value; and affirmatively pleaded a breach of an implied warranty to manufacture and assemble the wheel's in good and workmanlike manner, of good material and suitable for the purposes intended; pleading specifically a considerable number of defects in the Wheels as manufactured, which made them wholly useless for the purposes intended and without value to the defendant. Defendant sought recovery of the advance payments and for loss of profits, in amounts aggregating upwards of ten thousand dollars.

The case was tried to a jury, which found for the defendant, permitting no recovery to either party. The trial court, having denied the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, entered a judgment to the effect that the plaintiff take nothing by its action; that the defendant have and recover from the plaintiff all the wheels manufactured and remaining in plaintiff’s possession, free *573 and clear from all claims for storage, excise taxes, etc., and also for possession of all dies; and that defendant recover its costs.

From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed, assigning as error: (1) that the trial court commented on the facts, (2) admitted secondary evidence of the plans, blueprints and specifications, (3) repeatedly admitted evidence of defects not specified by the answer, (4) that the judgment is uncertain and ambiguous and not in conformity to the verdict, and (5) that it was error to deny the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

The pleadings are so voluminous that we have felt obliged to give only the barest outline of the principal issues, and the facts are so involved, technical and contradictory that we shall treat of them only so far as is necessary to an understanding of the several points involved.

During the presentation of the defendant’s case, a letter written by plaintiff, together with its enclosure, was identified and received in evidence. Defendant’s counsel then inquired of opposing counsel for the original letter written by defendant and mailed to plaintiff in reply to the communication which had just been received. Plaintiff’s counsel denied any knowledge of such a letter and a carbon copy thereof was produced, properly identified as a copy of the original which had been duly mailed and offered in evidence. The trial court was at first inclined to receive the copy in evidence, but on reflection ruled:

The Court : I think I would make an error. I will have to reverse myself. This witness has testified positively on that matter. That letter would only be corroborative any way. The letter being from this witness would really not be any more than corroborative. I believe that I would make a mistake if I let that in. You have his evidence on that anyway. I have to sustain that objection.”

*574 Also, after the plaintiff had rested, the defendant in opening made a demand for the production of the blueprints and specifications furnished to and used by the plaintiff in manufacturing the wheels; to which counsel replied, in effect, that they did not have and had never seen these documents; that plaintiff was' a Pennsylvania corporation, its offices were at a distance, that no prior or reasonable demand had ever been made and that it would he utterly impossible to then produce the papers. Later, .without further notice or demand, counsel for defendant asked a question calling for the giving of secondary evidence as to the contents of these documents; to which an objection was interposed. In ruling on the objection the cpurt said:

“Objection overruled. I understand that those specifications are in Pennsylvania in the office of the plaintiff.”

And in the colloquy which followed, the court said:

“No. They are in your possession. . . . You have the specifications and it is the misfortune of counsel that you haven’t got them here. . . . It is not proper for the court to tell what the evidence is, hut you had notice when you took the depositions that they claimed certain defects in these holts, and that they were not according to specifications. Now the specifications were in your possession. . . .”

and made some further like explanatory remarks. All of these remarks were addressed to counsel as explaining to them the reasons for the court’s ruling and in no sense addressed to the jury. We are satisfied that no intelligent juror would or could have been misled or influenced thereby. In many recent cases we have refused to reverse on such a showing. State v. Elder, 130 Wash. 612, 228 Pac. 1016, and cases there cited.

The second assignment of error is based upon the admission of secondary evidence of the contents of *575 the blueprints and specifications, the salient facts with reference to which have just been set forth. There seems to be respectable authority holding that where documentary evidence is shown to be beyond the jurisdiction of the court, secondary evidence of its contents may be received.- Jones on Evidence, vol. 2, § 828; Burton v. Driggs, 87 U. S. (20 Wall.) 125; Gordon v. Searing, 8 Cal. 50; Pullin v. McGee, 143 Ga. 184, 84 S. E. 443; Dwyer v. Salt Lake City Copper Manuf’g Co., 14 Utah 339, 47 Pac. 311. But we are not called upon to adopt or reject that doctrine here. Later in the trial, evidence was produced to the effect that plaintiff did not then have these blueprints and specifications, but that they had been by it returned to the defendant or its representatives; and in turn, defendant’s officers, in counter affidavits, denied such return and denied that they had had possession of, or seen, the papers since the time they were in the possession of the plaintiff, being used in the manufacture of the wheels. The trial court construed these affidavits as showing that the documents were lost and that such a showing made secondary evidence competent, and thereupon denied a motion to strike the secondary evidence. Manifestly that ruling was correct, as it would have been folly to strike the evidence because of a supposed error in the earlier ruling, and then call the same witnesses to repeat the same testimony after the loss of the documents had been shown.

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 885, 141 Wash. 571, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenape-hydraulic-pressing-forging-co-v-ellis-resilient-wheel-corp-wash-1927.