Marshall Milling Co. v. Rosenbluth

231 Ill. App. 325, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 46
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 1924
DocketGen. No. 28,535
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 231 Ill. App. 325 (Marshall Milling Co. v. Rosenbluth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall Milling Co. v. Rosenbluth, 231 Ill. App. 325, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 46 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr, Justice Fitch

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal defendant seeks to reverse a judgment against him for $6,593.65, entered in the municipal court upon an instructed verdict for the plaintiff in a suit brought to recover damages for an alleged breach of a written contract for the purchase by defendant from the plaintiff of 1,845 barrels of flour. The plaintiff’s statement of claim set out the written contract in full, alleged that 630 barrels had been received and paid for by the defendant, but that defendant had failed to give shipping directions for the remaining 1,215 barrels, as required by the contract, and claimed the amount above stated as liquidated damages under the terms of the contract. The defenses were that the plaintiff is a foreign corporation doing business in Illinois without a license, and that the plaintiff first breached the contract by delivering a certain quantity of flour of a quality inferior to that specified in the contract. In this court defendant contends that it was error to direct a verdict for the plaintiff because, it is said, there was evidence tending to prove both of the defenses above stated; and contends, further, that in any event the measure of damages adopted by the court in directing a verdict was wrong.

The material facts are not disputed. Plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of Minnesota. Its office is at Marshall, Minnesota, where it operates a mill for the manufacture of flour. It has never obtained a license to do business in this State. At the time of the transaction in question, it had a representative residing in Chicago, named Balch, who solicited orders for the plaintiff’s flour from customers in Chicago and vicinity, and forwarded all such orders to the plaintiff for its approval or rejection. Balch carried business cards reading: “Marshall Milling Co., Marshall, Minn., C. A. Balch, General Manager, Chicago, Ill.,” and used letterheads, furnished by the plaintiff, containing the same words. Two of such letterheads, offered in evidence, contained also a street number, which, the evidence shows, was the residence of Balch in Chicago. He testified that he maintained no office at his residence, and that he was away from his residence most of the day soliciting orders.

The contract in question is dated September 23, 1920. At least six months prior to that date, the plaintiff had shipped from its mill in Minnesota to Chicago, and placed in a public warehouse in that city, the equivalent of 2,000 barrels of flour, contained in jute sacks, weighing 140 pounds each. The plaintiff’s president testified that such flour was shipped to Chicago “for temporary storage awaiting disposition of it later wherever we might desire to use it.” Prom this store of flour plaintiff had sold and delivered prior to September 23,1920, the equivalent of 155 barrels, leaving 1,845 barrels in the warehouse. In the early part of September, defendant was solicited by Balch to purchase the remainder of this stock of flour, and was furnished seven sacks (five barrels) as a test or sample of the lot. On September 23, 1920, defendant agreed with Balch to buy the 1,845 barrels at the price of $11.75 a barrel. This agreement was written by Balch upon a printed contract form, evidently prepared by plaintiff and furnished by it to its salesmen for their use in making contracts, “to sell, by description, goods to be manufactured,” as stated in the printed form. In the blank spaces of this form were written the number of barrels, the size and kind of packages (“140 jutes”), the brand (“Marshall’s Best”) and the price per barrel, all to be shipped to Anchor Mills, Chicago, on or before November 23, 1920, “on shipping directions to be furnished by buyer; buyer to have option of warehouse delivery or mill shipments.” This was signed by defendant and by Balch as “salesman” for plaintiff. Balch at once forwarded this order to the plaintiff at Marshall, Minnesota, from which place plaintiff telegraphed its approval of the same. On September 30, 1920, Balch delivered to the defendant a written order on the warehouse for the delivery to defendant of 700 jutes, or 500 barrels, of “Marshall’s Best Flour,” and under this order the defendant began hauling flour from the warehouse. After 50 barrels had been hauled away, the remainder of the flour was inspected and found to be slightly wormy. Defendant complained of this to Balch, saying plaintiff would have to “recondition” the flour (which means to sift and resack it), or make an allowance therefor. The plaintiff’s president came to Chicago and that matter was discussed. An understanding was reached that defendant should be allowed seventy-five cents a barrel. Thereupon a new blank contract form was filled out, identical in every respect with the first, except that it contained the words: “Buyer to have allowance of 75(5 per barrel on wormy flour. ’ ’ This was confirmed by the plaintiff in a letter written and mailed at Marshall, Minnesota. This contract is dated September 23, 1920, though in fact made and confirmed a month later.

On October 22, 1920, Balch gave to the defendant a second order on the warehouse for the delivery of an additional 500 barrels. Under these orders, the equivalent of 630 barrels of flour was withdrawn from the warehouse by the defendant, and sold to his trade. About the middle of November, 1920, defendant told Balch his customers were complaining of the quality of some of the flour, and on inquiry Balch learned that 217 jutes, or 155 barrels, of the flour talien, from the warehouse by defendant was not the flour sold to defendant, but was flour of inferior quality which had been stored in the warehouse by another milling company. When the mistake was thus discovered, Balch and the defendant wrote to plaintiff about it and plaintiff replied that it was not responsible for the mistake of the warehouse. This reply so angered the defendant that he immediately told Balch that he was “through with the Marshall Milling Company,” and would “not take another bag of flour from the warehouse.” This occurred on November 20, 1920, and defendant did not thereafter take from the warehouse any more of the flour. Defendant then had in his possession plaintiff’s written orders directing- the warehouse to deliver to defendant at least 370 barrels of flour, in addition to the 630 barrels he had taken away. Defendant paid the plaintiff for the 630 barrels he received. Subsequently, he returned 80 barrels to the warehouse, because they were not his flour and had been taken out by mistake. Plaintiff has never repaid or credited to defendant the amount ($880) paid by defendant for the 80 barrels so returned.

The plaintiff’s president testified that the remainder of the flour, left in the warehouse “after the transaction with Bosenbluth,” was shipped east. Defendant’s counsel inquired whether it was sold and, if so, to whom, and at what price, but objection's to these questions were sustained and no answers were given. There is nothing else in the record to show when, how or in what manner snch remainder was disposed of, if at all. In March, 1921, the plaintiff sent the defendant a formal notice stating, in effect, that unless plaintiff received from defendant “shipping directions” for the remainder of the flour covered by the contract, plaintiff would, on March 23, 1920, terminate the contract and sue for the liquidated damages specified therein. Defendant paid no attention to this notice and plaintiff then brought this suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 Ill. App. 325, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-milling-co-v-rosenbluth-illappct-1924.