May Oil Burner Corp. v. Munger

152 A. 352, 159 Md. 605, 1930 Md. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 19, 1930
Docket[No. 19, October Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 152 A. 352 (May Oil Burner Corp. v. Munger) 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
May Oil Burner Corp. v. Munger, 152 A. 352, 159 Md. 605, 1930 Md. LEXIS 154 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

*608 Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On or about March 25th, 1921, the May'Oil Burner Corporation, the appellant, entered into a written contract with Mrs. 0. A. Monger, the appellee, under which in consideration of $1,658 it agreed to install one May Automatic Oil Burner in each of two boilers located in the Peabody apartment house, which she owned, at Thirtieth and Calvert Streets-in Baltimore City. That contract in part provided that:

“It is understood that purchaser will have boiler, flues, and chimney clean, same to contain no obstruction or opening, and chimney he of sufficient capacity, as we assume no responsibility for defects in the heating plant or chimney, or for any damages resulting therefrom or for any consequential damages due to the installation or operation of the burner.
“It is further understood that title to the burner or equipment will not pass to- the purchaser until the same has been fully paid for as stipulated herein; and that there are no understandings, verbal or otherwise, pertaining to this proposal which are not set down herein.
“Guarantee: The Quiet May Automatic Oil Burner is guaranteed -against any imperfection in materials and workmanship for one year, and to heat your furnace to its normal rated capacity as determined by standard heating methods.
“We will furnish, deliver and install the above described equipment complete with the necessary pipe, valves and fittings, electrical connections and automatic controls for the sum of one thousand six hundred and fifty-eight dollars ($1,658.00).
“Terms of Payment: $200.00 cash with order, $200.00' when tank and pipe work are installed, balance upon completion of installation. A cash discount of 5% will be allowed on the above quotation if paid in full upon completion of installation, or balance may he paid by notes in twelve (12) equal monthly payments.
“This proposal when signed by purchaser and approved by a duly authorized officer of the corporation *609 will constitute a contract for the installation of the burner described herein.”

But the terms of payment stated in the body of the contract were modified by the following supplementary clause written at the foot of it: “$100.00 when installed, note $400.00 due Nov. 1st, 1927, balance 12 monthly notes $96.50, 1st note due Dec. 1st, 1927. Or less 5% of contract price if paid in full on or before Nov. 1st, 1927.

The two burners were installed and finally inspected on October 20th, 1927, and from that time until February, 1929, when they wore removed from the boilers, they appear to have been used to heat the building in which they were installed. No part of the purchase price for the burners was paid, nor were the notes referred to in the supplementary clause of the contract ever delivered. But shortly after they were installed a dispute arose between the purchaser and the seller as to whether the burners as installed complied with the requirements of the contract, and on April 24th, 1928, the May Oil Burner Corporation, the appellant, brought an action in assumpsit against Mrs. Munger, the appellee, in the Superior Court of Baltimore City to recover the purchase price stipulated in the contract. Both before and after that date there were negotiations between the parties looking to the correction of alleged defects in the burners, but these attempts to adjust their differences were unsuccessful, and eventually the burners were removed from tbe boilers, and this action proceeded to a trial, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, and from that judgment this appeal was taken.

The record submits some sixty-three exceptions, sixty-two to rulings of the trial court on questions of evidence, and one to its rulings on the prayers.

The appellant’s contention in effect is that it sold the appellee two oil burners, known and described by a recognized trade name, to wit: “May Automatic Oil Burners,” under a wuitten contract of sale which contained a warranty guar *610 anteeing them against imperfections in materials and 'workmanship for one year, and guaranteeing that they would heat the furnace in which they were to- be installed to its “normal rated capacity as determined by standard heating methods”; that it delivered the burners in substantial compliance with its contract and that the appellee in fact accepted them, but that whether she accepted them or not, since they were installed in compliance with the terms of the contract she became liable for the purchase price thereof when they were actually installed in the boilers.

The appellee’s contention appears to be that the written contract between the parties should be construed in the light of the circumstances under which it was made. That so construed the appellant not only warranted the burners free from imperfections of material or workmanship, but warranted that they would heat the furnace in which the boilers were so as to produce steam in the radiators installed in said property, that they failed to do that; that such failure was a breach of the warranty, and that for that reason, as well as because the burners as installed were defective in material and workmanship, she was entitled to rescind the contract.

At the close of the' whole case Mrs. Munger, the defendant, attempted to set out her theory of the law in four prayers, of which the first was refused and the others granted. That ruling, which is the subject of the sixty-third exception, erroneously numbered fifty-nine, will be first considered.

The plaintiff offered no prayer, so that the three prayers granted at the request of the defendant were the only instructions as to the law of the case given to the jury.

By the defendant’s second prayer the jury were told that if they found the execution of the contract “as mentioned in the evidence, and if the jury further find that the said Quiet May Automatic Burners so installed in said property were imperfect in materials and workmanship, and that such imperfection in materials and workmanship was reported by the defendant to the plaintiff, but the plaintiff did not remedy the same, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action.”

*611

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Bluebook (online)
152 A. 352, 159 Md. 605, 1930 Md. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-oil-burner-corp-v-munger-md-1930.