Pet Milk Co. v. Boland

185 F.2d 298, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3270
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 1950
Docket162_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 298 (Pet Milk Co. v. Boland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pet Milk Co. v. Boland, 185 F.2d 298, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3270 (8th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

DEWEY, District Judge.

This is the second appeal of this case. Upon a former appeal the case was reversed and remanded, and was tried again on the same pleadings and substantially the same evidence, resulting in a second jury verdict for the plaintiff.

The opinion in the first appeal of Pet Milk Company v. John V. Boland, 8 Cir., 175 F.2d 151, sets out in detail the essential facts which need not here be repeated.

For convenience we will refer to the parties as J ohn V. Boland, plaintiff, and the Pet Milk Company, defendant.

The controversy revolves around a writing which was signed by the plaintiff’s agent on April 26, 1944, designated as “purchase order”.

The defendant claims that this writing constitutes a contract, is a verity, and that parol evidence was inadmissible to vary, alter, or contradict its terms, and that any oral agreement or understanding between the parties was merged therein. The plaintiff claims that this writing was not intended or understood by the parties to be a contract, and seeks to establish by parol evidence an oral agreement between the parties, which he claims was the contract.

The trial judge in his instructions to the jury succinctly and carefully summed up the controversy; a part of which is as follows:

“The plaintiff further claims that after plaintiff had completed a substantial portion of the work aforesaid, the defendant submitted to plaintiff for execution by plaintiff a writing, designated as a purchase order, for the construction of said sewer line and said water supply line; that plaintiff on or about the 26th day of April, 1944, informed defendant that said purchase -order contained provisions and conditions with respect to the method of computing excavation which were not acceptable to plaintiff, which were not applicable to the conditions under which had been done a substantial portion of the excavation work theretofore done and under which would have to be done a substantial portion of the excavation work remaining to be done, and to which the plaintiff could not and would not agree; that the defendant then and thereupon stated and represented to plaintiff that an executed purchase order was essential, under defendant’s method of doing business, for payment to be made by defendant for any work done or materials furnished, and that if the purchase order prepared and submitted by defendant was executed by plaintiff, and *300 if the work -of constructing said sewer line and said water supply line was by plaintiff completed, plaintiff would be paid by defendant for the work which plaintiff bad theretofore done and would thereafter do in the said construction work, upon the basis of the work and materials furnished by plaintiff, upon the unit price basis provided in said purchase order and in accordance with plaintiff’s letters to defendant under dates of March 10th and 11th and April 5th, 1944, upon plaintiff submitting periodic estimates of the work completed; and that the plaintiff relied upon such statements and representations, and, in' reliance thereupon, executed said purchase order by signing the same and completed the work of constructing said sewer line and said water supply line. In other words, plaintiff claims that the purchase order which his son signed on April 26, 1944, was not agreed to as the contract between the parties for the construction work done by plaintiff for defendant upon said water supply and escape sewer lines, but that said work was done under an oral agreement and that, in the doing of such work, plaintiff rendered services, performed work, and supplied materials under such oral agreement of the value of Fifty-six Thousand Two Hundred Thirty-one Dollars and Ninety-two cents.

“The defendant, however, contends that, in so far as concerns the exoavation for the sewer line in question, plaintiff is entitled to recover, and defendant is required to pay plaintiff, for such excavation computed upon the basis of a trench only thirty-three inches wide. The defendant claims that payment for such excavation upon that basis is provided for by the purchase order, and that such purchase order is binding upon plaintiff in that respect because, defendant claims, the purchase order-was freely and voluntarily executed by plaintiff, without any statements or representations, such as plaintiff claims, being made by defendant. That is to say, the defendant denies that it made any state-, ments, representations or agreements to plaintiff on April 26, 1944, as claimed by plaintiff,- as an inducement to plaintiff to execute the purchase order mentioned, and defendant claims that said purchase order which was signed by plaintiff’s -son on April 26, 1944, was then agreed to as the sole and only contract between the parties for the construction work upon said water supply and escape sewer lines.

“The defendant, however, concedes that plaintiff has not been fully paid for the services and work performed, and the materials furnished, in the aforesaid construction work done by plaintiff for defendant, and has tendered to plaintiff, on various dates since October 27, 1944, the sum of Six Thousand Nine Hundred Twenty Nine Dollars and Thirty Nine Cents, as full and final payment for the balance due plaintiff for said construction work.”

There was evidence that would warrant a jury in finding, among other things, that the “purchase order” was not intended to be a contract, but was understood and agreed by the parties at the time it was signed, to be only a notation or memorandum; to fix a unit price so that the defendant could use it to keep track of things; and to enable the defendant to make monthly payments on estimates furnished by the plaintiff, and that the real agreement and contract for the measurements of the work and the payment to the plaintiff was to be made as agreed to orally.

The law on the questions also was set out in the former opinion.

Here the plaintiff claims; the lower court has twice held; and this court held in a former opinion, that oral evidence was admissible on the question of whether the “purchase order” was intended and understood by the parties to be the true contract between them or otherwise.

In this appeal the appellant again challenges the right to introduce oral evidence under the facts of the case, but we can see no reason why the rulings and decisions in the former opinion do not constitute the “law of the case”. “The phrase ‘law of the case’ has been employed and applied in many decisions of this and other federal courts. Stated generally, the rule is that, ‘where evidence is substantially *301 the same on both trials, questions of law determined on * * * appeal are “law of the case,” both for trial court and appellate court, on second * * * appeal.’ ” American Surety Co. v. Bankers’, etc., Association, 8 Cir., 67 F.2d 803, 805 ; Pennsylvania Mining Co. v. United Mine Workers of America, et al., 8 Cir., 28 F.2d 851; Thompson v. Maxwell Land-Grant & Railway Co., 168 U.S. 451, 18 S.Ct. 121, 42 L.Ed. 539.

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185 F.2d 298, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pet-milk-co-v-boland-ca8-1950.