Phillipsborn Co. v. Fineman

129 A. 31, 148 Md. 188, 1925 Md. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 A. 31 (Phillipsborn Co. v. Fineman) 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
Phillipsborn Co. v. Fineman, 129 A. 31, 148 Md. 188, 1925 Md. LEXIS 19 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Alkie's, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court..

Solomon Fineman, plaintiff and appellee, in June, 1923, contracted with Philipsborn Company, Inc., the appellant, to make for it valances or window curtains for $250. They were to be made from a sketch furnished by appellant. The material was selected by Bertram S. Bice, president of Philipsbom Company, from swatches shown by Fineman. The curtains were hung on August 10th, 1923. Bice did not like the style, claiming that the curtains did not droop properly. Fineman’s contention is that this was due to the material selected, and that as the matter of details was left to him, he made them as he thought best for that material. However, he took them down, and undertook to remake them by a sample procured by Bice from Murray K. Martin. On completion of one section, Fineman testifies, he hung it in Bice’s office, and as it satisfied him, the order was completed and sent to be hung in the windows. This was about September 16th, 1923.

The curtains looked very satisfactory except two of them r “One or two were a little short and after I saw them up I stopped in the store and told them about it and said I would take it down and correct it, possibly two' inches short. I heard nothing from them until some time in Hovember when we sent them an invoice and statement to press them for payment of the bill and then we received a letter from Mr. Bice telling us the curtains were 'there without his sanction.” The invoice was sent the day the curtains were hung the second time, and no complaint was made between that time *193 and October 1st, when a statement was sent; still there was no complaint; another statement was sent November 1st and there was no complaint, the first complaint being received November 6th, 1923, in a letter from Rice.

On cross-examination Eineman said he did not know how many times he was in defendant’s store after September 18th, which was the last time curtains were hung', hut was positive he stopped once; that “I noticed that the front piece was short and I knew he would not accept it that way. No one else would accept it that way”; that it was never fixed because defendant would not allow him to get it “although we sent for it”; that he told Mr. Oliver, defendant’s window trimmer, that the curtain was short and to take it down and he would correct it, and sent up to get it; that the curtains were bung on rods and it would take about five minutes to take one section down; that tbe window was dressed, and be told them, whenever they would take it down he would correct it.

Miss Paul, who made the curtains, testified that the material was “stubborn material.” “It wa;s not really suitable for that style of curtains. It was a good curtain for tbe valances hut not for the drop they wanted. It was all right for the window hut not for the drop they demanded on the second order”; that the first time she made them she had no specific instructions but went by the sketch and made them in the best manner possible, which was a perfect piece of work in that style, hut they complained that the plaits did not drop enough and 1 explained why they could not. “I told him, if he would get a, sample I would make it like it, which he did. I remade the curtains and plaited it up according to that sample. No one else came to me personally with any complaints”; that in making” the curtains she had not made them according to Mr. Oliver’s ideas because it would look better the way she made it as it would not fall soft 03“ in graceful folds.

Ferdinand Volkman, testifying for plaintiff, said Mr. Oliver of Philipsborn’s was there when he hung them and *194 directed his attention to some things about the curtains which he objected to and that he recognized those conditions; that after plaintiff saw them he called witness up> and told him to take them down; that the second time he hung them the’same trouble existed, except that the plaits had been changed, but this did not overcome the complaints.

Bertram S. Rice, for defendant, testified that when plaintiff showed him the swatches, he did not say anything about the material not’ being suitable; that witness asked him if the material would make up curtains satisfactory and suitable for the windows and he answered “yes”; that he said that he could’ make them up “that way exactly as the drawing” ; that when the curtains, were put up the first time they were not festooned or draped properly according to the sketch but were straight plaits running straight across, which were entirely different from the drawing and he objected to the appearance, and Mr. Eineman said he would make them over according to the drawing, and he took them back and found he could not do it the way the drawing showed, and he agreed to have Murray K. Martin make á sample of the way it should be, and Philipsborn had the sample made at its expense and delivered it to Eineman and the curtains were taken away and brought back and hung a second time. At this point the curtains were shown to the jury as "they were last hung, the witness pointing out the alleged imperfections. The witness further testified that he refused to accept them and the man was told not to hang them, but he insisted upon hanging them so that witness could pass on them after they were up; that after they were hung witness had his secretary get in touch with plaintiff immediately on the ’phone, who told him to come up so that he could see for himself, as the curtains were not satisfactory; that plaintiff “was to come up the following Monday but at four o’clock I had to go to Hew York. Eineman came up a couple of times during September. Unfortunately I was in Hew York and not there to see him. Evidently he got tired of coming and the matter rested”; that at the time the curtains were ordered the. window was trimmed in blue and the curtains were to *195 match the carpet and witness wanted the bine to be fast color, “and Fineman stated they were absolutely guaranteed sun fast” and that under that condition witness ordered the blue trimmings. Otherwise he would not have bought them of blue, knowing the sun was strong.

At this point the correspondence between the parties was introduced and the letters filed as exhibits, viz: letters of Nov. 6th, 1923, from defendant to plaintiff; letter in reply dated Nov. 8th, 1923, and a letter in reply to the last mentioned letter dated Nov. 10th, 1923.

The letter of Nov. 6th returns a bill and states that the valances were put up in defendant’s window without its .sanction, as the hanger was instructed to only hang a section; that defendant does not want the curtains as they are botched and unsatisfactory. Plaintiff is requested to- call for the curtains “as we will not keep same in the condition in which they are.” “As far as we are concerned the matter now stands closed, as we intend to give out another order to some one else who can do the work right.”

Plaintiff’s letter of Nov. 8th in reply denied that the valances were bung without defendant’s sanction and stated that, on the contrary, plaintiff had received a ’phone call from defendant urging' that the curtains be hung, as defendant was going to dress its windows; that if curtains did not suit when they werp hung defendant could have had them, taken down immediately instead of waiting seven weeks.

Defendant’s letter of Nov.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A. 31, 148 Md. 188, 1925 Md. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillipsborn-co-v-fineman-md-1925.