Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Northy

123 N.W. 47, 158 Mich. 530
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1909
DocketDocket No. 43
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 123 N.W. 47 (Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Northy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Northy, 123 N.W. 47, 158 Mich. 530 (Mich. 1909).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

By the terms of the contract made by the parties, defendant bought of the plaintiff, and plaintiff agreed to furnish, 1,200 to 1,500 tons of coal, delivered afloat at Houghton, at the price of $2.45 per ton. The grade of coal specified was 11 inch, thin vein, Youghiogheny lump. It was to be delivered when ordered, and the contract, which was dated May 24, 1905, expired November 1, 1905. The contract contained this provision:

“ Deliveries of coal shall be subject to delays occasioned by strikes, lockouts, accidents and other unavoidable casualties in the operation of seller’s mines, the want of car supply, the failure of the railway companies to deliver or place cars at the mines for loading, or other causes beyond the control of the seller.”

Under date September 23, 1905, defendant made the quantity of coal certain by his letter of that date, ordering 1,300 tons. Defendant had a dock at Houghton, with certain facilities for unloading coal, a fact which was known to plaintiff, and later, probably on October 14, 1905, 93? tons and 600 pounds of coal in the schooner Allegheny was delivered to defendant at the dock and was unloaded. Later defendant asked plaintiff to deliver 700 tons of contract coal, and was told by plaintiff that only 400 tons were due to him. No further delivery was made or was tendered at defendant’s dock. An invoice of the coal so delivered was forwarded, the amount of the demand, less the lake freight, being $2,015.20, to which was added insurance $8.06, making the total sum $2,023.26. January 22, 1906, the defendant paid on this account $1,500. The action is assumpsit, to recover the balance claimed to be due to the plaintiff for the coal which it delivered to the defendant; the declaration containing the common counts only. With his plea the defendant gave notice that the coal was sold under a special agreement in writing; that the plaintiff had failed to perform the contract on its part in the following particulars:

(1) It did not deliver 1,200 to 1,500 tons of the grade of coal specified in the contract, but only the amount of coal [533]*533above stated, by reason of which the defendant was obliged to purchase coal elsewhere at a higher price than the contract price to supply the demands of his trade.

(2) That defendant was not able to purchase from others sufficient coal to make up the balance of the amount agreed to be furnished by the plaintiff, and was unable to supply all of his customers with coal of that quality and kind.

(3) That the coal furnished by the plaintiff was not of contract grade and quality, but was of an inferior grade and quality, and that defendant, after having sold some of it to his customers, was obliged to reduce the selling price because of the inferior kind and quality of the coal, and for the same reason customers would not purchase the coal at the price which defendant could have received if the coal had been of the contract kind and quality. By reason of the premises the defendant had been damaged, and would recoup his damages against the demand of the plaintiff.

Both with respect to the pleadings, and, it may be added here, with respect to the trial, the defendant has treated the contract as apportionable, and has not contested the right of plaintiff to recover for the coal delivered, at the contract price, if it was of the contract quality, subject to a reduction of its demand by the amount of damages suffered by defendant for failure to deliver the contract quantity.

The cause coming on to be tried before the court and a jury, and the facts hereinbefore stated having been admitted or established, plaintiff was permitted to introduce certain testimony in support of its theory that it had been prevented, by causes beyond its control (inability to secure water carriage for the coal), from making any further delivery, and had therefore substantially performed the contract. In this connection it was permitted to prove its efforts to induce defendant to accept delivery of 400 tons of coal at the railroad dock of the Copper Range Railroad Company in Houghton, from which dock the coal might have been, at considerable expense, carried in cars to defendant’s dock by an existing side track or spur. Much of the testimony was admitted over the objections of defend[534]*534ant, and many exceptions to the rulings of the court were taken. The specific objections have for the most part become unimportant in view of the charge of the court. It is a contention of appellant, however, that the testimony objected to was of a character likely to, and the verdict indicates that it did, influence the jury unfavorably to defendant with respect to the issues submitted to them. The court in the charge to the jury withdrew from their attention and consideration all issues except those now to be stated.

The court said to the jury:

“Nowthe Pittsburgh Coal Company, having contracted to deliver afloat, Houghton, has delivered 937 tons. Mr. Northy is entitled to have the 1,300 tons delivered at the agreed price. They have not done it. Now what damages is he entitled to on account of the failure of the company to deliver ? Just such an amount as he has lost by that failure, and that is to be measured-by the amount he would be required to pay, above the contract price, to obtain coal in the same position within a reasonable time after the coal company had failed to deliver the coal.”

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $583.06 damages, for which sum a judgment was duly entered. It is said in the brief for appellee, and the computation is not challenged, that, assuming the bill for this coal to be due December 15, 1905 (it was sold on 60 days’ time, and was delivered October 14th), and computing interest on the amount unpaid at 5 per cent, after that time, there was due to plaintiff at the time of the trial $606.46, indicating that the jury found the damages of the defendant to be $23.40. A large number of errors are assigned, and they are discussed in the brief of counsel for the appellant under six heads, the first four of which relate to rulings upon the admission of testimony offered by the plaintiff, the fifth to the refusal of the court to give defendant’s requests to charge, and the sixth to the charge of the court as given.

Considering the errors assigned in the inverse order in which they are discussed in the briefs, attention is given, first, to errors assigned upon the charge of the court. We [535]*535are impressed that the jury could not have misinterpreted the meaning of the following language, used hy the learned trial judge, after he had stated that defendant claimed the right to recover damages, because the coal was not of the contract quality, and because plaintiff had failed to deliver the contract quantity:

“Now, when parties enter into a contract — business men, farmers, working men, mechanics — the contract is always- to be considered in the light of what is customary in that line of business, and a man may be perfectly competent to make a contract with regard to his own business because he knows the customs that pertain to his business. For instance, a man says he will work a day for you, and he works a certain number of hours, and the man refuses to pay him because he has not worked 24 hours, and the man. says 24 hours is a day, you will say that is nonsense. When people make contracts in the coal business, the customs that have obtained in the coal business are part of that contract.

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Bluebook (online)
123 N.W. 47, 158 Mich. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburgh-coal-co-v-northy-mich-1909.