Patterson & Co. v. Robinson Bros.

159 F. 303, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5012
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Middle Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 3, 1908
DocketNo. 33
StatusPublished

This text of 159 F. 303 (Patterson & Co. v. Robinson Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Middle Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson & Co. v. Robinson Bros., 159 F. 303, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5012 (circtmdpa 1908).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, District Judge.

Incident to a sale made by the plaintiffs to the defendants of the Lock Haven Clay Works, it was agreed by the defendants that they would take all the manufactured pipe on hand, paying a certain price for No. 1. and another price for No. 2, which is of less value. These are two well-established grades of sewer pipe, and cover everything in that line which is considered marketable; pipe which is neither No. 1 nor No. 2, while sometimes used for farm drains and the like, having no commercial rating. This suit is for the price of the pipe so claimed to have been sold. The defense is that there was none of either of the grades called for; and that whether there was or not, in case of a disagreement, was to be left to arbitrators ;' as to which it was specifically provided in the contract of sale that, upon a disagreement between the parties as to the grade of the pipe, it should be settled, by each party selecting an arbitrator, and the two so chosen appointing a third, whose decision should be final. The works were sold in December, 1901, and, the defendants having assumed possession, the preliminary steps were taken to determine to what extent the pipe came up to the standard, but it never got beyond that. Each party promptly named one of their own number to represent them, who almost immediately fell apart as to the quality of the pipe, and were equally unable subsequently to agree upon an umpire. A number of names were suggested, and one man, Mr. C. M. Bechtel, was acceptable to both sides, but unfortunately he declined to act, not being willing to be drawn into the controversy, and they did not get together upon any one afterwards. The jury were instructed that, as a condition precedent to a recovery, it was necessary that the pipe should be appraised in the manner provided by the contract, if it was reasonably possible to accomplish it, and that only in case the plaintiffs made a proper effort to bring this about, and the failure to secure it was not chargeable to them but to the defendants, could they maintain this action. The verdict was in favor of the defendants, the. jury putting it upon the specific ground that these requirements had not been complied with. It is now urged, in avoidance of this conclusion, that as an appraisement involved a physical inspection, by breaking" up as. well as disposing of a large quantity of pipe, as it is said they did, the defendants dispensed with the necessity, for it, and made themselves liable without reference to it.

It is no doubt true that any material interference with or disposition of the pipe in the way suggested, by which an arbitration was rendered ineffective, would relieve the plaintiffs from the necessity of attempting it. Astrich v. Insurance Co. (C. C.) 128 Fed. 477; Id., 131 Fed. 13, 65 C. C. A. 251. And there was evidence as to this from which the jury could have found in the plaintiffs’ favor. But it was not undisputed, nor was it so preponderating that the court could declare them absolved as a matter of law. Nor was there indeed a request that the court should do so. As was thus recognized, the ques[305]*305tion was therefore for the jury under proper Instructions, and the only thing to be considered now is the correctness, in this respect, of the charge which ivas given.

It is to be observed, as to this, that not only was the j ury told in the general charge that if a material part of the pipe was broken up or taken away, which would possibly grade up to the required standard, the plaintiffs would be relieved from the necessity for an arbitration; but also, in answer to the plaintiffs’ second point, it was specifically declared that, if the defendants intended to rely on the stipulation for an arbitration contained in the contract, they had no right to break, sell, or otherwise dispose of or remove, the pipe and fittings, or at least any material part of them, which by any possibility could be regarded as within the two grades mentioned, before the same had been duly appraised and graded, and the quantity of each grade ascertained by the arbitrators provided for; and that, if they did so break or dispose of the pipe, they could not avail themselves of the provision for an arbitration, at this time, but were liable for as much No. 1 or No. 2 pipe as was in the yard at the time of the consummation of the sale, as shown by the evidence. While then, on the one hand, the jury were told that an arbitration was necessary, as called for by the contract, and that the plaintiffs could not recover unless the provision for it failed without fault of theirs; they were also advised, with equal explicitness, if not to the full extent asked for, that this was not required, if there was a breaking up or disposal by the defendants of any material part of the pipe, which by any possibility would grade up to the standard specified.

It is said, however, that the plaintiffs’ point should have been squarely affirmed, without any qualification, a material part of the pipe having to be broken up, according to the charge, in order to relieve the plaintiffs from the effect of the stipulation; whereas they were entitled to have the pipe kept absolutely intact and undisturbed, as it lay at the works, if the provision for an appraisement was to be insisted on. This is no doubt true, but the destruction of an immaterial part of it would surely be of no consequence, which is the sense of the instruction, putting it in the alternative. And the same is to be said of the breaking or disposal of pipe that by no possibility would come up to the grades in question. The extreme character of these qualifications is not to be lost sight of. It may be that they were unnecessary, and that the point could have been well affirmed without them. But they served to caution the jury, as they were intended, that the breaking up or disposal of an inconsiderable portion of the pipe, or of such of it as under no circumstances could be of any consequence, was not enough to avoid the express stipulation for an appraisement. As the whole character of the pipe at the works was left open by reason of there being no appraisement, it cannot be said that the plaintiffs were prejudiced by what was so said. Nor was it a begging of the question, nor a making of the defendants judges in their own cause, as it is charged, even though it may have been for the arbitrators to declare, after an inspection of the pipe, as to the character of each and every part of it which the breaking or disposal of any of it to such extent prevented. That some pipe had been broken up and some removed — although not [306]*306by the defendants — was not disputed. But material ■ provisions of a contract are not to be avoided by inconsequential, and unless we are prepared to hold that the breaking up or removal of any of the pipe, whether material in character or quantity, absolved the plaintiffs from the necessity for an appraisement of it, there can be no just criticism of the caution introduced in these instructions.

. But complaint is also made that the plaintiffs’ third point was unduly qualified. “Defendants having set up the stipulation for arbitration * * * as a defense,” as the point suggests, “the burden of proof- is on them to show by competent evidence, to the satisfaction of the jury, that the failure to choose arbitrators was entirely the fault of the plaintiffs, and not in any way the fault of the defendants.” Striking out the word “entirely,” as possibly loo strong an expression, this was declared by the court to be a correct statement of the law. It may be that it would have been just as well to have affirmed the point as it stood. But even if that be so, the change could not have worked any detriment.

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Related

Astrich v. German-American Ins. Co.
128 F. 477 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Middle Pennsylvania, 1904)
Astrich v. German-American Ins.
131 F. 13 (Third Circuit, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 F. 303, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-co-v-robinson-bros-circtmdpa-1908.