McNeal-Edwards Co. v. Frank L. Young Co.

51 F.2d 699, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2960
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1931
DocketNo. 2345
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 699 (McNeal-Edwards Co. v. Frank L. Young Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeal-Edwards Co. v. Frank L. Young Co., 51 F.2d 699, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2960 (1st Cir. 1931).

Opinions

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

Since this case was before us on rehearing, July 1, 1930, when we entered judgment dismissing the cause for want of jurisdiction for lack of personal service upon the defendant, 42 F.(2d) 362, the Supreme Court has had the ease under consideration, reversed our judgment, and remanded the case for further proceedings. Young Co. v. McNeal-Edwards Co. (decided May 18, 1931) 283 U. S. 398, 51 S. Ct. 538, 75 L. Ed. 1140.

The Supreme Court, however, failed to pass upon the merits of the controversy and upon which the Young Company had been granted a rehearing. It therefore becomes essential to a disposition of the ease that we should pass upon the merits.

In our opinion of November 12,1929, 35 F.(2d) 829, as to the merits of the controversy, it was held that, inasmuch as the contract contained a provision requiring the plaintiff to return the drums, which the jury had found it had not done within a reasonable time prior to September 15, 1922, and on that date had attached the drums, wrongfully retained by it until that time, it could not recover on the ground that the ease fell within the doctrine of Sipley v. Stickney, 190 Mass. 43, 76 N. E. 226, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 469, 112 Am. St. Rep. 309, 5 Ann. Cas. 611. This is the only question raised in the case meriting further consideration on this rehearing.

In considering this question and the applicability of the doctrine announced in Sipley v. Stickney to this case, it is essential that we should point out in a concise way just what the facts in this ease are.

By a contract of January 5, 1922, the Me-Neal-Edwards Company, a corporation doing business in Virginia, contracted to sell to [700]*700the Frank L. Young Company, a corporation doing business in Massachusetts, one thousand to twelve hundred drums of Prime A Crude Menhaden Fish Oil at 33 cents per gallon,-in seller’s drums, to be delivered f. o. b. at a railroad in Baltimore for shipment to the Young Company, payment to be made in cash against documents, not including the drums. The contract also contained a stipulation that the Young Company should return the drums to the seller, freight prepaid. There were other provisions in the contract guaranteeing that the oil should be under 5 per cent, acidity, and that in ease a sample, to be drawn by George A. Thompson, showed, according to Gascoyne’s test, at the time of the gauging, to be in excess of 5 per cent, acidity, then the seller was to make an allowance of 1 per cent, per gallon for each per cent, or fraction thereof above 5 per cent. F. F. A.; and that the oil was to be gauged and sampled by Thompson at the time of the shipment.

The MeNeal-Edwards Company shipped under the contract 1,107 drums of oil, the price of which came to about $18,000, and the Young Company paid for the same in full in March, 1922, but without prejudice to its claim that the oil was not Prime A Crude Menhaden Fish Oil as contracted for. The oil turned out to be of such a character that it could not be removed from the drums during the cold weather, as it would not run from the containers. There was also a long period of time during which the parties were in controversy as to the acidity of the oil, and as to whether it was or was not of the quality contracted for.

During July and August of that year, the oil was exposed to the heat of the sun, and was finally emptied from the containers about the 22d of August. The drums, however, were retained in the possession of the Young Company down to September 15, 1922, when it brought suit against the MeNeal-Edwards Company, alleging breach of warranty of the quality of the oil, and attached the drums. In answer to this suit on the contract for breach of warranty, the defendant pleaded a general denial and, further answering, alleged (1) that the oil furnished was of the quality and description ordered and agreed to be furnished; (2) that with respect to the quality and description of the oil sold the plaintiff was bound under the contract by the gauging and analysis made by George L. Thompson and the Gascoyne Company, or either of them, who were designated by th(e plaintiff as its agents and representatives for that purpose; and (3) that the plaintiff, before action brought, accepted the discount provided by the contract in case of excess of free fatty acids, and had adjusted its claim against the defendant by deducting such discount and paying the defendant the difference between that amount and the purchase price.

The jury found that the oil delivered was-not of the quality and grade called for by the contract, and that the Young Company,, by reason thereof, was damaged in the sum of $10,730.17.

The MeNeal-Edwards Company also brought an action against the Young Company to recover damages, alleging that the Young Company had violated the provision of the contract relating to the return of the drums, in that it had not seasonably returned them. This ease was tried with the one previously spoken of.

In answer to special questions submitted, the jury found that the retention of the drums by the Young Company from the time they were received (about January 28,1922): to September 15, 1922, when they were attached, was unreasonably long, and that Mc-Neal-Edwards Company-was damaged, because of the unreasonable detention of the-drums, in the sum of $100.

At the close of the testimony, the Me-Neal-Edwards Company, as defendant in the first suit, submitted the following requests for rulings, among others:

“1. Upon all the evidence your verdict-must be for the defendant, MeNeal-Edwards-Company.”
“6. That where a person owes a duty to do an act by virtue of the obligation placed upon him by a valid contract, he has no right to knowingly do another act which will make it impossible for him to fullfil that obligation. To apply this to the ease at bar Frank L. Young Company, owing a duty to return the drums promptly, had no right by their intentional act to cause the drums to be placed in eustodia legis, that is, under attachment, and to- claim that they were therefore unable to so return them to MeNeal-Edwards Company.
“7. To so place them under attachment as described in the foregoing request, and to still retain them, constitutes a breach of the contract in suit, and your verdict must be for the defendant.”

These requests were refused, and their refusal was assigned as error.

[701]*701It is not questioned but that tbe contract contained a warranty that tbe oil sold was of tbe quality and grade known in tbe market as Prime A Crude Menhaden Fish Oil. And it is unquestionable that the Young Company, having examined the oil before payment and finding that it did not correspond to the warranty, could have returned it or paid for the same according to contract, and sued for damages for breach of the warranty. It took the latter course. This being so, the parties, under the terms of the contract, understood that the only condition precedent to the Young Company’s right to maintain an action on the warranty was that it should first pay the price, which it did. The stipulation in the contract that the Young Company should return the drums, freight prepaid, was an independent stipula^ tion and not a condition precedent to its right to maintain an action on the warranty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 F.2d 699, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneal-edwards-co-v-frank-l-young-co-ca1-1931.