Phillips Sheet & Tin Plate Co. v. W. W. Boyer & Co.

105 A. 166, 133 Md. 119, 1918 Md. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 20, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 A. 166 (Phillips Sheet & Tin Plate Co. v. W. W. Boyer & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips Sheet & Tin Plate Co. v. W. W. Boyer & Co., 105 A. 166, 133 Md. 119, 1918 Md. LEXIS 128 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees sued the appellant on a contract dated Dec. 3rd, 1915, by which the appellant agreed to sell and the appellees agreed to buy 5,000 base boxes of tin plate, of which the appellant only delivered 2,923 boxes and refused to deliver 2,077 boxes. A verdict for $2,849.38 was obtained by the appellees, and this appeal is froan the judgment entered thereon. There are thirty-four bills of exception in the record—the last one embracing the rulings on the prayers, three of which were granted for the plaintiffs and thirteen offered by the defendant were rejected, and its special exceptions to each .of those prayers of the plaintiffs were overruled.' The provisions of the contract particularly-involved in this appeal are the following:

“Time of Delivery—In approximately equal monthly quantities; each month’s delivery to be treated and considered as a separate contract during the year 1916. Specifications—To be given at least 60 days in advance of shipping date.”

The price named, was “$3.50 f. o. b. mill.” The appellant is a manufacturer—having its general office and one of its rolling, mills at Weirton, W. Va., and it had a selling agency in Philadelphia, under the management of H. M. Davis, who was in the habit of taking the orders personally from the appellees, who are makers of tin cans and packers of canned goods in Baltimore., The parties- had been dealing with each other for about five years.

Edmund O. White, a member of the firm of W. W. Boyer & Co., appellees, was the first witness called. While he was on the stand the plaintiffs offered in evidence a letter to- them dated December 14, 1915, signed in the name of the appel *121 lant by H. M. Davis, another dated January 11, 1916, signed in the same way, one of March 3, 1916, from the appellees to the company, at Weirton, W. Va., and then one from the appellant, by George Mendell, “Manager Order Dept.,” dated March 6, 1916. The first exception was to permitting the witness to. state why he did not make any reply to- the letter last referred to. He said, “I didn’t see any necessity of replying.” And the second was to the question, “They offered you deliveries in August?,” to which he replied: “We couldn’t wait until August, and September for the plate. We needed the plate before that.” Without now setting out those letters, it is. sufficient to say there was no reversible error in either of those exceptions.

The theory of the appellant is that if there was any breach of the contract on its part, it was on April 19, 1916, as shown by a letter of that date, and that hence the letters referred to in the bills of exception from the third to the twenty-ninth, inclusive, all of which were after April 19th, were irrelevant, immaterial or calculated to mislead the jury. We can not undertake to discuss all of them separately, and we will now only say that inasmuch as the appellees claim that the appellant waived the provision in the contract as to furnishing specifications, upon which the appellant relies for its right to refuse to furnish the 2,077 boxes, or is estopped to set up that defense, some of those letters were material and relevant, and we would hesitate to. reverse the judgment for error, if any, in admitting the others. No reversible error appears in the rulings in the 30th, 31st and 32nd exceptions, aa we can not see how any injury could have been done by those rulings, especially when the answers to the 30th and 32nd axe considered. The thirty-third can be more conveniently considered in connection with the prayers.

The language in the contract which we have quoted above would seem to clearly indicate that the parties intended that the 5,000 boxes of tin plate should be delivered in instalments “in approximately equal monthly quantities” during the year 1916, and that specifications should be furnished the seller *122 by the buyer “at least sixty days in advance of shipping date” fixed by the purchasers. Although the specifications could not have been given in time for shipments in January, as the contract was not made until December 3, 1915, they could have been given in time for an early shipment in February, and have been continued until the end of the year. It was not intended that those for each shipment should be precisely for the same proportion of the 5,000' boxes, as the contract was “in approximately equal monthly quantities,” and it would ’have been impracticable, if not impossible, to make said shipments in precisely the same amount, hut the shipments could have been made to comply with the spirit of the contract by adding something like the eleventh part of a month’s supply to each month’s specifications. There can be found no possible justification in tbe contract itself for the purchasers refusing to furnish specifications until they saw proper to do so>, and then sue for damages for refusal to furnish the boxes that were to he delivered in the early part of the year. If they could do so for four or five months, why not wait until the last sixty days and require the seller to furnish all at once ? The provisions of the contract in reference to “time of delivery” and “specifications” would be rendered useless if that could he done—particularly that part which said “in approximately equal monthly quantities.”

, The question, then, is whether the seller waived those provisions, or is estopped from relying on them. While the contract is dated December 3rd, the record shows that the seller in ,a letter of .December 4th enclosed two copies of it to he signed by the purchasers, one copy to he retained by the latter and the other to he returned to the seller. On December 14th the seller wrote to the purchaser:

“Owing to the unprecedented demand for tin plate which has caused a congestion at the mill such as has never heretofore existed, we would suggest and try to impress upon you the necessity of letting us have specifications now, against your contract, for whatever material you will require for shipment during Eeb *123 ruary and March. Ye are bringing this to your attention now for several reasons: First: You know there is a clause in the contract to the effect that specifications must he furnished sixty days prior to time of shipment desired. Second: Specifications are placed on the mill in the order received. Third: If you delay, you may he disappointed in getting the material when you want it. Wo will exert ourselves to the utmost to take care of your requirements if you will assist us to the extent of giving us specifications sixty days in advance of shipping date. Sincerely trusting that we may have your co-operation during 1936, we aro, Yery truly yours.”

Ho reply was made to that, and the seller on January 11th, 1916, wrote as follows:

“We again beg to advise you that the steel and tin plate situation has reached such an acute stage, owing to the unprecedented demand upon all mills, it will be to your interest to specify for as remote delivery as you can possibly estimate your requirements. Specifications have already come to us in such volume that all of our mills will be taxed to capacity for several weeks, and if you do not specify promptly, we fear you will be sorely disappointed by not having plate at the time you will require it.”

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 166, 133 Md. 119, 1918 Md. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-sheet-tin-plate-co-v-w-w-boyer-co-md-1918.