Nazareth Foundry & Machine Co. v. Marshall

101 A. 848, 257 Pa. 489, 1917 Pa. LEXIS 764
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1917
DocketAppeal, No. 103
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 101 A. 848 (Nazareth Foundry & Machine Co. v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nazareth Foundry & Machine Co. v. Marshall, 101 A. 848, 257 Pa. 489, 1917 Pa. LEXIS 764 (Pa. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Potteb,

This was an action of assumpsit brought to recover upon a bond given by defendants to plaintiff, dated July 24, 1913, for the sum of $6,800. The bond contains a recital that the Marshall Machinery and Supply Company is indebted to plaintiff in a sum of about $1,800 in addition to the cost of construction of two Marshall paper-making engines, and that it is deemed advisable by all parties interested that the former company furnish a good and sufficient bond to plaintiff, conditioned for the prompt payment of the purchase-price of the two engines.

The condition of the bond is that the Marshall Machinery and Supply Company shall pay or cause to be paid to plaintiff company the sum of $1,400 within three days after one engine shall be received from the Cylin[492]*492der Paper Company, and also the sum of $2,000 within three days after the other engine shall be received from the John Lang Paper Company. It was further made part of the condition that “if after due trial, and after Mr. Marshall has used every effort to make the above-mentioned engines satisfactory to the purchasers, and the said engines or either of them are rejected by the said purchasers, and promptly returned to the Nazareth Foundry and Machine Company in as good a condition as when shipped, reasonable wear and tear excepted, that then and in any such case, the penal sum payable under this bond shall be reduced by the sum of $1,400 if the machine shipped to the Cylinder Paper Company is returned, and $2,000 if the engine to be shipped to the John Lang Paper Company is returned.”

In plaintiff’s statement of claim it is admitted that the engine shipped to the Cylinder Paper Company had been accepted and paid for by the purchaser, and that the price, $1,400, had been received by plaintiff, but it is averred that the purchase-price of the other engine had not been paid, and that the engine had not been returned to plaintiff in good condition. Plaintiff claimed to recover on the bond $2,205.97, with interest.

In the answer and counter-claim of defendants it is averred that the Marshall Machinery and Supply Company had paid its entire indebtedness to plaintiff and that, in accordance with the terms of the bond, Mr. Marshall had used every effort to make the engine which had been returned satisfactory to the purchaser, but that the same had been rejected and returned to plaintiff in as good condition as when shipped, reasonable wear and tear excepted.

Upon the trial, after plaintiff’s testimony was concluded,. defendants’ counsel moved for judgment of compulsory nonsuit on the ground chiefly that no proof had been made that the Marshall Machinery and Supply Company had ever received from the John Lang Paper Company the sum of $2,000, the price of the machine [493]*493shipped to that company. The trial judge granted the motion, whereupon plaintiffs counsel moved for a rule to strike off the nonsuit, which was denied, as was a motion to strike off the nonsuit. Plaintiff has appealed.

The first and second assignments allege error in the refusal of a rule, and of a motion to take off the nonsuit. The motions were made immediately after the nonsuit was entered and they were at once denied by the trial judge. This was not in compliance with the statute which authorizes the entry of compulsory nonsuits. The Act of March 11, 1875, P. L. 6, Sec. 1, provides that a judgment of nonsuit may be entered “with leave, nevertheless, to move the court in banc to set aside such judgment of nonsuit,” and a writ of error (now appeal) is given only to the refusal of the court in banc to set aside the nonsuit. No appeal lies to the entry of the nonsuit, but only to the refusal to take it off: Bausbach v. Reiff, 237 Pa. 482, 488. In that case it was said: “The Act of 1875, above referred to, provides expressly that such rule [to take off the nonsuit] shall be considered and disposed of by the court in banc, not by the trial judge alone. The act contemplates consideration of the questions involved by the court in banc. This they did not receive in the present case.” The same thing may be said of the case at bar. The trial judge himself refused the motion to strike off the nonsuit, and the questions involved did not receive the consideration of the court in banc, as is contemplated by the act of assembly.

No opinion was filed, and we can gather the reasons for the entry of the nonsuit only by reference to those stated by counsel for defendants in their motion. The principal one was that the plaintiff did not prove that the Marshall Machinery and Supply Company had received from the John Lang Paper Company the price of the engine, being the sum of $2,000. To relieve the obligors, it must appear either that the Marshall Machinery and Supply Company had paid to plaintiff the respective sums of $1,400 and $2,000 within three days after [494]*494the receipt of those sums from the purchasers of the engine, or that, after due trial and after Marshall had used every effort to make the engines satisfactory to the purchasers, the engines had been promptly returned to plaintiff in as good condition as when shipped, reasonable wear and tear excepted. There was ample evidence at the trial to show that the engine was not returned in the condition required to comply with the terms of the bond. If this was the cáse the defendants were not relieved of their obligation upon the bond. The nonsuit was therefore improperly entered, and the refusal to take it off was error.

The argument of counsel for appellant that the bond should be construed as a primary and principal obligation “to pay the whole indebtedness of the Marshall Company” is not sound. The bond is merely one for the payment of money, to be discharged on the performance of certain conditions. The only question to be determined is whether those conditions have been performed or not. We are unable to find in the bond any agreement on the part of the obligors “to pay the overdue account,” Reference to that account appears to have been made only to show the reason for requiring the full purchase-price of the engines to be paid to plaintiff. There is an express recital that the bond is to be conditioned “for the prompt payment of the purchase-price of the two engines,” and an alternative condition that the return of the large engine in good condition shall entitle the defendants to a credit upon the bond of $2,000. The amount named in the bond, $6,800, was clearly a penal sum, as there is no pretense that the real debt exceeded $3,400. Had the full amount of the purchase-money been paid, the bond would have been satisfied, or if both engines had been returned in good order, reasonable wear and tear excepted, a credit equal to the amount of the purchase-money must have been allowed. Under the evidence of plaintiff, the engine intended for the John Lang Paper Company was returned in a damaged condition. For whatever amount was necessary to restore [495]*495that engine to as good a condition as when shipped, reasonable wear and tear excepted, the plaintiff was entitled to recover from the defendants in this action.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A. 848, 257 Pa. 489, 1917 Pa. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nazareth-foundry-machine-co-v-marshall-pa-1917.