Maffei v. Ginocchio

132 N.E. 518, 299 Ill. 254
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1921
DocketNo. 13955
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 N.E. 518 (Maffei v. Ginocchio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maffei v. Ginocchio, 132 N.E. 518, 299 Ill. 254 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Ginocchio, Costa & Co., of' Chicago, executed a contract through a New York agent, R. G. Berlingieri, with H. N. Maffei, of Naples, Italy, a dealer in nuts, for the shipment of 300 bags of No. 1 Sorrento walnuts and 300 bags of Mountain Naples walnuts. The Sorrento walnuts were shipped and received. The Mountain Naples walnuts were shipped on a later vessel, the Ancona, which was sunk by a submarine. The question here in litigation is whether the buyer or the seller should bear the loss of these last named nuts under the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the case. The cause was tried in the municipal court without a jury and a judgment rendered in favor of Ginocchio, Costa & Co., plaintiffs in error here. On appeal to the Appellate Court the judgment of the trial court was reversed and a judgment entered in the Appellate Court for $2545 in favor of defendant in error, and this writ has been sued out to review that judgment.

The parties entered into the contract here in question August 5, 1915. It provided that the terms should be “ninety days confirmed bankers’ letter' of credit,” and shipment was “to be made about the middle of October, 1915, on a direct steamer to New York, in bond to Chicago.” It further provided for “marine and war insurance to be covered by consignees,” and that defendant in error was “not responsible for failure in shipping goods on account of shortage of tonnage or lack of steamers or other reasons beyond control.” A cablegram offer and an acceptance were interchanged between the parties, and the original sales contract went forward from Chicago’ accompanied by letter of August 13, 1915, in which it was stated that letter of credit would be mailed direct to shipper. On August 14, 1915, the Continental and Commercial National Bank of Chicago issued a letter of credit authorizing defendant in error to draw “on Banca Commerciale Italiana, Naples, at ninety days’ sight, for any sum or sums not exceeding in all lires 33,500, for account of Ginocchio, Costa & Co., Chicago, Illinois, against October shipment on a direct steamer to New York, in bond to Chicago, of”—describing the nuts before mentioned. This letter also provided that the Naples bank pay defendant in error for the nuts upon presentation of bills of lading issued to shipper’s order and endorsed in blank, and further stated: “Insurance, including war risk, effected by the importers. * * * This credit to be in force until October 31, 1915.” The letter written by plaintiffs in error to defendant in error accompanying the letter of credit also stated that they enclosed the letter of credit inpayment of said 600 bags of nuts, and closed with the following statement: “We recommend to you to ship us nothing but the very best quality, and to make shipment as per contract and as soon as possible with a direct steamer to New York, in order that the merchandise would arrive here in good condition.” The 300 bags of Sorrento walnuts were shipped on the steamship Patria on October 26, 1915, and were received and accepted by plaintiffs in error. The 300 bags of Mountain Naples walnuts here in dispute were loaded on the steamship Ancona on October 30, 1915. An ocean bill of lading dated October 30 for this shipment was introduced in evidence as an exhibit. Defendant in error made a demand upon the Banca Commerciale Italiana in Naples on November 3 for payment for the shipment, and the Italian bank refused payment on the ground that the letter of credit was not confirmed and in any case was overdue. The reason the demand was not made prior to November 3 was, the testimony shows, that the seller did not obtain from the steamship company the shipping documents to deliver to the bank until after banking hours on Saturday, October 30, 1915, and that the next day was Sunday and the next two days regular holidays in Italy for banking purposes, and that the first opportunity to present the documents was November 3. On that date the defendant in error presented the letter of credit, together with the bill of lading properly endorsed, and the bank refused payment on the ground that the letter of credit authorized payment only to October 31. November 1 defendant in error cabled his New York agent that he had placed 300 bags of Mountain Naples walnuts on board the Ancona for plaintiffs in error, and the same day the New York agent wrote plaintiffs in error that the walnuts had been shipped on the steamship Ancona. On November 3 plaintiffs in error acknowledged receipt of this letter. When the Naples bank refused him payment for the nuts on November 3, defendant in error took the matter up by cable with plaintiffs in error, and on November 8 plaintiffs in error wrote the New York agent, stating that they had countermanded the letter of credit but that on that date they had again authorized payment of the letter. Upon ascertaining that the Ancona had been torpedoed and sunk, and payment not having been made on the letter of credit, the bills of lading were forwarded to plaintiffs in error and payment demanded. The evidence tends to show that on account of the war troubles the time vessels would sail, the number of them and the available cargo space were so uncertain that no one could tell whether a vessel would sail on the date scheduled or at another date or at all, or that a particular boat would carry the merchandise even though it did sail at the appointed time, because there was a great shortage of shipping space. On November 8 Berlingieri, the New York agent of defendant in error, wired to plaintiffs in error confirming the fact of the shipment and asking for an extension of the letter of credit, which request was complied with, plaintiffs in error giving such directions to its bank and advising Berlingieri that they had done so. Plaintiffs in error had not procured insurance, and on making inquiry about the Ancona learned that it had been sunk November 7, and thereafter countermanded the prior order and canceled the letter of credit.

It is argued by defendant in error that the letter of credit plainly stated that it was to be in force until October 31, and having been enclosed by plaintiffs in error in their own letter was a modification of the contract as to the shipment being made “about the middle of October,” while plaintiffs in error argue that as the last named shipment of nuts was not made until October 30, long after the time the nuts should have been loaded, therefore they were not obliged to accept them. True it is, by the contract of August 5 the nuts were to be shipped “about the middle of October,” but it is also manifest that on August 16 plaintiffs in error wrote defendant in error a letter in which they enclosed the letter of credit from the Chicago bank to the Naples bank, the letter of credit reading in part: “This credit to be in force until October 31, 1915.” Counsel for plaintiffs in error argue that this provision only extended the time within which payment might be made but did not extend the time of carrying out the contract. With this we cannot agree. It is clear that the Naples bank would have paid the-letter of credit upon presentation to it of a proper bill of lading up to October 31, without regard to when the nuts were actually placed on the vessel. Furthermore, the shipment of the Sorrento nuts was made several days after the middle of October, 1915, and they were accepted and paid for by plaintiffs in error. There can be no question that plaintiffs in error by the acceptance of this first shipment showed clearly that they were not insisting on the nuts being shipped technically by the middle of October.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 N.E. 518, 299 Ill. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maffei-v-ginocchio-ill-1921.