McFarland v. Savannah River Sales Co.

247 F. 652, 159 C.C.A. 554, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1815
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1918
DocketNo. 2275
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 247 F. 652 (McFarland v. Savannah River Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFarland v. Savannah River Sales Co., 247 F. 652, 159 C.C.A. 554, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1815 (3d Cir. 1918).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This is an action in assumpsit, brought by the Savannah River Sales Company against james B. McFarland, Jr., trading as McFarland Lumber Company, to recover the price for a portion of the contract quantity of lumber delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant.

The defendant is a wholesale lumber dealer in Philadelphia. ‘The plaintiff is a lumber manufacturer with a mill at Wiggins, South Carolina. In October and November, 1915, the parties entered into a contract by correspondence and the exchange of orders and acceptances, whereby the plaintiff agreed to sell and the defendant to purchase 2,000,000 feet of lumber under terms and conditions of which the following only are pertinent to this controversy.

“Terms: Cush less 2 per cent. 80 days from date of shipment.
“Trice: If. A. S. barge or vessel Wiggins Mill.
“Delivery: To begin prompt, and be completed within 75 to 90 days.
“Shipment: Shipment will be made as above or as nearly as possible, delays by fires, strikes, shipwreck or other unforeseen contingencies excepted.” ,

As the contract orders bear different dates, it was agreed at the trial that the time for delivery under all orders expired on February 3, 1916.

After the contract was made, the defendant chartered from the Southern Transportation Company, a shipping concern engaged in coastwise trade, four barges to report at Wiggins before February 1, 1916, and load the lumber for transportation to Philadelphia.

The first shipment was made on November 30; and was invoiced to the defendant at the sum of $4525.84. On December 30, the defendant paid $4000.00 on account of the invoice, and held back $525.84 [654]*654pending the unloading and “counting of the lumber thereon.” To this the plaintiff made no protest. On counting the lumber, the defendant found a shortage, which, in money, amounted to $8.23. But he did not then or later remit the plaintiff the difference between this small shortage and the substantial amount retained to cover it. This is one item sued for in this action.

As the barges were slow in arriving at Wiggins, and as the defendant understood that he “must move all stock purchased from (the plaintiff) by February 3d,” he endeavored, by letter of December 22, to effect new arrangements with the plaintiff whereby he could secure barges and make shipments after the expiration of the time prescribed by the contract. In this he was not successful, for the plaintiff replied by letter of December 27, as follows:

“I am in receipt of your letter of the 22d, beg to advise you that we will expect you, to move your order as per contract.”

Continuing, the plaintiff proposed a modification of the contract, which, had it been accepted, would have relieved the defendant of some of his difficulties. It is as follows:

“If, at the expiration of the contract, there is not over one ha.rf/e, say 400 to 500 M ft. to be shipped, we will allow you the privilege of either cancelling this balance or advancing 90 per cent, against the same.”

The defendant made no reply to this offer until January 31.

During this correspondence the second barge arrived. It was loaded and the lumber invoiced under date of January 1, 1916. Payment was due, it is claimed, 30 days thereafter.

No other barge reported at Wiggins for several weeks. On January 25, the plaintiff wrote the defendant :

“We wish to call your attention to the fact that the-time for moving your orders will expire on the 3d of February.”

On January 29, the plaintiff replied to a letter of the Transportation Company (not in evidence, but written evidently with reference to delays or difficulties in getting barges to Wiggins), as follows:

“I have yours of the 27th inst. and note carefully all you say.
“This is a matter that we are unable to discuss with you. We made a contract with the McFarland Lumber Co. with the understanding that the lumber would be moved within 00 to 90 days. The 90 days will expire on. Feb. 3d, after which date it is not our intention to furnish them any more lumber on this contract.”

The Transportation Company sent this letter to the defendant, whereupon, the defendant wrote the plaintiff on January 31, stating, that he would expect the plaintiff to make deliveries after February 3, inasmuch as delays in shipment were due to weather conditions and not to any fault of his or of the Transportation Company, promising to mail on the next day (February 1) a check for 90 per cent, of the invoice of January 1 (without referring to the- balance due upon invoice of November 30), and promising also to mail a check for approximately 90 per cent, on the fifth barge “as per special arrangements of your letter of December 27th.” The letter referred to is the one in which the plaintiff said, that “if there is not over one barge” [655]*655of lumber remaining to be shipped “at the expiration of the contract,” it would give the defendant the privilege of cancelling the balance or advancing 90 per cent, against it.

At the time of this correspondence, but two barges had been loaded; the third had just arrived; the fourth was nowhere reported; and there was substantially “over one barge” of lumber remaining to be shipped. The plaintiff began loading the third barge. The defendant, evidently fearing or expecting that the plaintiff would refuse deliveries after the expiration of the contract period, did not remit the amount due on the second invoice, as he had promised, but, instead, sent a check for $4000.00 as a 90 per cent, advance against the “fifth” cargo. Not having received the remittance promised, and recognizing the legal purport and effect of accepting an advance on a cargo it was not obliged by the contract to deliver, the plaintiff returned the check, stopped loading, recovered the lumber that had been loaded, and notified the defendant that it rescinded the contract. After correspondence between the parties, which in no way altered their relations or affected their rights, the plaintiff brought this action to recover the balance due upon the first invoice and the whole amount due upon the second.

The court directed a verdict for the plaintiff on the ground that the failure of the defendant to make payments as required by the contract constituted breaches on his part, which gave the plaintiff the right to recover upon the contract in so far as it had been performed and to rescind the contract as to the remainder. The defendant sued out this writ of error.

The assignments of error resolve themselves into the question: Was the defendant obliged to move all the lumber by February 3, 1916, and pay for each shipment within 30 days? Upon this question the defendant submitted several propositions, which we shall consider separately.

First: The contract did not require the defendant to move all lumber by February 3.

In discussing this proposition we shall view the contract as it was originally made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 F. 652, 159 C.C.A. 554, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfarland-v-savannah-river-sales-co-ca3-1918.