Nuside Metal Products, Inc. v. Eazor Express, Inc.

189 Pa. Super. 593
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 10, 1959
DocketAppeal, No. 85
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 189 Pa. Super. 593 (Nuside Metal Products, Inc. v. Eazor Express, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nuside Metal Products, Inc. v. Eazor Express, Inc., 189 Pa. Super. 593 (Pa. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Opinion by

Wright, J.,

Nuside Metal Products instituted an action in assumpsit against Eazor Express to recover the purchase price of two shipments of steel delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff under c.o.d. agreements. Defendant filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings which was denied. Thé case was tried before Judge McKay without a jury, and an adjudication was subsequently entered ordering the entry of judgment in favor of the plaintiff. Defendant’s exceptions to the adjudication were dismissed and final judgment entered. The defendant has appealed. The factual situation, concern[595]*595ing which there is no dispute, appears in the following excerpt from the adjudication:

“The action is in assumpsit to recover the purchase price of two c.o.d. shipments of steel delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff under a c.o.d. agreement. The defendant in turn delivered the shipments to another carrier, which collected the purchase prices from the consignees and remitted the proceeds directly to the plaintiff by two checks which were subsequently dishonored.
“The purchase prices of the shipments were $1171.50 and $490.00, respectively. The connecting carrier was the Albrent Freight and Storage Corporation. Its successor was the Clintonville Transfer Lines, Inc. A Receiver in bankruptcy was appointed for both companies on July 26, 1955. The checks of the Albrent Freight and Storage Corporation covering the two collections were received by the plaintiff on the 27th or 28th of July, 1955 and deposited at the McDowell National Bank, Sharon, Pennsylvania on July 28, 1955.
“Subsequently, but prior to September 27, 1955, the defendant learned of the bankruptcy and also that the checks had been dishonored. On that date, September 27, 1955, the traffic manager of the defendant company wrote to the plaintiff referring to the bankruptcy of the connecting carrier, advising the plaintiff that money collected by carriers for other persons does not belong to them and suggesting that the plaintiff demand immediate payment from the receiver in bankruptcy.
“On or about September 30, 1955, the plaintiff filed a proof of claim against the estate of the connecting carrier corporation. In June, 1956, the plaintiff made formal demand upon the defendant for payment of its claim. In January, 1957, the plaintiff was informed that its claim was classified by the receiver among the [596]*596claims of.general creditors. At the time the present action was brought, no distribution had been made”.

Appellant’s first contention is that the lower court erred “in deciding that the plaintiff’s act of accepting checks and filing a claim in bankruptcy did not constitute a waiver of its right to bring this present action”. It is appellant’s position that appellee’s conduct created a debtor-creditor relationship with the connecting carrier, thus invalidating the relationship which had been created by the c.o.d. contract. Principal reliance is placed on Channing v. Riddle Aviation Co., 10 Federal Carrier, Section 80,888, at page 2093, holding that the conduct of the shipper therein constituted a ratification of an improper-act by the carrier and barred the shipper from proceeding under the c.o.d. contract. The Channing case is distinguishable on the ground that the carrier there accepted a check from the consignee instead of cash. The consignee’s check was delivered to and deposited by the consignor. When payment of the check was stopped, the consignor brought suit against the carrier. It was held that the consignor, by accepting the check, ratified the carrier’s wrongful act in failing to collect cash from the consignee. In the instant case the connecting carrier performed the terms of the c.o.d. contract by collecting the price of the shipments from the consignees in cash. The acceptance of checks from the connecting carrier was not a ratification, of any act in violation of the .c.o.d. contract. ■ The delivery-of ■ the checks constituted not an absolute but merely a conditional payment, and the--acceptance of them did-not-release from liability either-the person giving the checks, or any other person liable for the debt, if the debt was not in fact paid: Gerrard Company of Philadelphia v. Tradesmen’s Bank, 318 Pa. 100, 177 A. 760. And see Holmes v. Briggs, 131 Pa. 233, 18 A. 928.

[597]*597Appellant also cites 18 Am. Jnr., Election of Remedies, Section 12, to the following effect: “Two modes of redress are inconsistent if the assertion of one involves the negation or repudiation of the other, as where one of them admits a state of facts and the other denies the same facts or where the one is founded upon the affirmance, and the other upon the disaffirmance, of a voidable transaction”. Such a situation may exist where a bailor has the right either to sue upon a note or to recover the property leased, in which event the exercise of either remedy acts as a waiver of the other: Road Roller Co. v. Schlimme, 220 Pa. 413, 69 A. 867; Jacob v. Groff, 19 Pa. Superior Ct. 144. However, in order to have the selection of one remedy operate as a bar to the pursuit of the other, or to compel an election between remedies, it must appear that the remedies sought to be enforced are inconsistent, and not merely cumulative: Harper v. Quinlan, 159 Pa. Superior Ct. 367, 48 A. 2d 113. See also Messmore’s Estate, 290 Pa. 107, 138 A. 81. As a general rule, a party may have as many remedies as the law gives provided they are consistent.. Moreover, the doctrine of election between inconsistent remedies against a defendant does not generally apply to an attempted enforcement of allegedly inconsistent causes of action against different persons: Sheriff v. Eisele, 381 Pa. 33, 112 A. 2d 165. Thus, in Clark v. Wilder, 25 Pa. 314, it was held that the pend-ency of a suit against a common carrier for the value of goods destroyed by fire in a warehouse in the course of shipment was not a bar to a recovery from the warehouseman of the amount of insurance received by him on account of such goods. Again, in Walter v. Graham, 80 Pa. Superior Ct. 518, the fact that the plaintiff had already recovered from, a common carrier for damage to goods in transit was .held not to be a waiver of his claim against one. who had undertaken .to crate and [598]*598load the goods in a proper manner. See also Simpson v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 127 Pa. Superior Ct. 386, 193 A. 309.

We conclude, as did the court below, that appellant and its connecting carrier each became liable to appellee for the failure to reimburse it for the prices of the two shipments which had been collected by the connecting carrier from the consignees. Appellee had the right to proceed first against the connecting carrier, which it did by filing a claim with the receiver in bankruptcy. It is significant that this was done at appellant’s suggestion. Such action did not preclude appellee from subsequently proceeding against appellant in the present suit. Appellee did not thereby assume inconsistent positions. Neither action affirms facts which the other disaffirms. While appellee is not entitled to a double recovery, any amount collected from the connecting carrier in the bankruptcy proceeding would merely go to the reduction of the appellant’s obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
189 Pa. Super. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nuside-metal-products-inc-v-eazor-express-inc-pasuperct-1959.