Poole Engineering & MacHine Co. v. Swindell

157 A. 763, 161 Md. 571, 1932 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1932
Docket[No. 61, October Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 A. 763 (Poole Engineering & MacHine Co. v. Swindell) 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
Poole Engineering & MacHine Co. v. Swindell, 157 A. 763, 161 Md. 571, 1932 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Walter B. Swindell, Charles J. Swindell, and Walter B. Swindell, Jr., co-partners, trading as Swindell Brothers, have for many years been engaged in the manufacture and sale of bottles at their factory at Bayard and Russell Streets in the City of Baltimore.

The process of manufacturing the bottles which they sell consists of reducing certain materials to a mass of molten glass and by means of machinery transforming that mass into bottles of divers sizes and shapes. In the course of it the molten glass is discharged from a feeder, in lumps or gobs approximately uniform in size, into moulds in a bottle-making machine through which by the application of condensed air it is forced into the desired shapes. Tlie machinery employed in the operation is extremely complicated, and its efficiency depends largely upon its capacity to maintain the flowing glass at fixed temperatures for definite periods through the several stages of manufacture.

The bottle-making machine used in the final stage of manufacture is heavy, durable and designed to stand the wear and tear of continuous use under working conditions over considerable periods of time. The moulds are more fragile, have a comparatively short life, under usual operating conditions must be frequently replaced, and are sufficiently expensive to constitute a material element in the economical operation of the business. They naturally vary as the size and shape of the bottle to be made varies, and, as the number of bottles of a given shape made from a single set of moulds increases, *574 the expense of the moulds allocated to each hottle decreases. The machines ordinarily used by the appellees prior to the occurrences referred to in the declaration in this case were designed to operate with twelve moulds. The expense of making so many moulds to produce a comparatively small number of bottles of a given size or design necessarily made the cost of each bottle proportionately higher than it would have been had a greater number been produced. For that reason the use of a machine which would operate with four moulds would be more economical in producing a small number of bottles of a given size and shape than the use of one which would not operate effectively with less than six or more. There was, therefore, in the bottle manufacturing business, a need for a machine which would operate effectively with a small number of moulds, and Clarence Reuben Nixon, an employee of the appellees, undertook to design and construct such a machine, and at the same time to test on it a device which he had invented for producing a more perfect bottle than those ordinarily made on standard machines.

At that time, what might be called the standard method of manufacture, in making each bottle, utilized two moulds, the receiving mould into which the gob of molten glass was first discharged by. the feeder, and the final or “blow mould,” into which it was transferred after its treatment in the receiving mould had been completed. Nixon’s device introduced an intermediate stage, by having the forming bottle transferred from the receiving mould to a forming mould before it was finally completed in the blow mould. In that method the1 first mould is called a “preliminary blank or pattern,” the second the “forming blank or pattern” and the third the “mould.”

He finally constructed a machine having four moulds and utilizing the device which has been described, but which was so made that, in order to preserve the ratio of time and temperature to the volume of the flowing glass essential.to the moulding process, it was necessary to alternately drop one gob from the feeder into the receiving mould and one into a reeeptable called a “basement,” so that one-half the material discharged by the feeder was wasted. That waste could be *575 avoided if the bottle-making machines were of snch a size that two of them could be operated in connection with a single feeder, and when so operated such machines would effect- a material economy in filling “small orders.”

There was evidence in the case tending to show that the Nixon machine when completed adequately demonstrated its own practical utility, as well as the value of the Nixon device, and the appellees were so impressed by its possibilities that they formed the design of having it strengthened, perfected, manufactured, and sold to the trade. While they manufactured their own moulds and did much of their own repair work, they were not equipped for the construction of such machines, so that, while that which Nixon constructed was adequate for experimental purposes, it was not apparently strong enough to stand the strain of prolonged operation under -ordinary working conditions, and appellees felt it necessary to have the machine, which they had in mind, manufactured by some company regularly engaged in the manufacture of machinery. Subsequently negotiations began between them and the Poole Engineering & Machine Company, the defendant below, and the appellant here, for the construction of such a machine. Whether they were initiated by them or by tbe appellant does not clearly appear and is not material, but it does appear that they began prior to March 5th, 1928, and that on May 11th, 1928, one of the appellees addressed the following letter to the appellant:

“I have just returned from a convention at Atlantic City and find your letter of May 8 before me, hence the delay in answering.
“I am very glad you are progressing so satisfactorily with the drawings and general lay-outs for the new machine. In accordance with your request, I enclose one of our order blanks on which we give you authority to proceed with this work for us, and this will become a matter of record with your order department.”

Following that letter, the appellant, hereinafter referred to as “Poole,” undertook the construction of a bottle-making machine for the appellees at the cost of construction plus *576 twenty per cent, thereof, and in July, 1929, it delivered what purported to he such a machine at the appellees’ factory. The machine was subjected to different tests, the last,of which was made on December 27th, 1929, and on March 21st following that test Poole demanded of the appellees payment of a balance claimed by it to be due for work and materials furnished in the- construction of it, amounting to $1,431.64. In reply to that letter the appellees stated that the machine was worthless, that they rejected it, and they not only refused to make any more payments on account of it, but demanded that Poole refund to them payments they had made to it, aggregating $23,881.64, on account of the construction of the machine, and upon the failure of Poole to comply with that demand, on September 8th, 1930, brought this action in the Baltimore City Court to- recover such payments, which in an amended bill of particulars filed in the case were shown to aggregate $23,701.51, made as follows:

“June 10, 1928, $241.41; July 13, 1928, $194.30; Aug. 11, 1928, $461.63; 'Sept. 13, 1928, $427.05; Oct. 12, 1928, $175.19; Nov. 16, 1928, $2,863.12; Dec. 28, 1928, $1,-330.39; Jan. 24, 1929, $2,999.57; Eeb. 21, 1929, $7,504.56; May 1, 1929, $4,354.09; May 3, 1929, $1,317.81; June 17, 1929, $816.09; July 9, 1929, $699.61; Aug. 12, 1929, $316.69.” The case was.

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Bluebook (online)
157 A. 763, 161 Md. 571, 1932 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-engineering-machine-co-v-swindell-md-1932.