Richmond Leather Manufacturing Co. v. Fawcett

107 S.E. 800, 130 Va. 484, 1921 Va. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 23, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 107 S.E. 800 (Richmond Leather Manufacturing Co. v. Fawcett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richmond Leather Manufacturing Co. v. Fawcett, 107 S.E. 800, 130 Va. 484, 1921 Va. LEXIS 168 (Va. 1921).

Opinion

Saunders, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding in the form of a motion for a judgment on the part of Frederick J. Fawcett, a commission merchant and jobber of the city of Eoston, against the Eichmond Leather Manufacturing Company, a concern making rawhide shoe laces and other leather products in Eichmond, Virginia. The action is to recover damages alleged to have been suffered by the plaintiff by reason of the alleged defaults of the defendant in respect of the delivery of certain rawhide shoe laces to the plaintiff, pursuant to contracts between the parties.

There are four orders in controversy. These orders were given by Fawcett to the defendant as follows:

Order No. 4026, of July 14, 1917.

Order No. 4033, of July 16, 1917.

Order No. 4092, of August 3, 1917.

Order No. 4194, of August 31, 1917.

There was a prior order, but deliveries under the same were completed, and while it is referred to in aid of the ascertainment of the precise contract between the parties' With respect to orders 4026 and 4033, it is not in issue.

[489]*489The foregoing orders were the same in form, as will be seen from order No. 4026, which is typical.

“Order.
“Put this number on invoice — 4026
“Boston, July 14, 1917.
■“Messrs. Richmond Leather Company, Richmond, Ya.
“Please deliver to Frederick J. Fawcett, 132 Lincoln street, 58,000 36" 3-16 rawhide laces, $0.78 per hundred feet. Confirmation of wire of even date of which we send you enclosed copy.
“Terms: 2% 60 days, F. O. B. Boston.
“Frederick J. Fawcett.”

Order 4026 was for 58,000 36" 3-16 rawhide laces, orders 4033 and 4092 were, respectively, for 116,000 and 200.000 of same, and 4194 was for 500,000 laces, 7-32 30" 1-8.

Plaintiff’s claim for damages was for 38,000 laces undelivered on order 4026, 116,000 undelivered on order 4033, 200.000 undelivered on order 4092, and 339,000 undelivered on order 4194.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,905.95. This verdict the defendant moved to set aside on various grounds, but the court overruled the motion. Thereupon, the defendant applied for and secured a writ of error to the judgment of the trial court.

The plaintiff in error assigns as error the action of the trial court in various particulars.

I. “In not sustaining the demurrer to the notice, and motion to quash the same.” This assignment is not insisted upon, and further it does not seem to be well taken.

[490]*490II. “In admitting the testimony of the plaintiff, Fawcett, as to certain correspondence between the said Fawcett and the defendant company, prior to the making of the contracts sued upon.”

The admission of this testimony was not error.

III. “In permitting the plaintiff to introduce a letter of Geo. F. Smith, of the committee on supplies of the War Industries Board, Council of National Defense.”

This letter was properly admitted.

[1-2] IV. “In admitting the testimony of the plaintiff (a) as to the contracts made by him for the laces purchased by him from the defendant covered by orders 4020, 4026, 4023 and 4194, for the reason that as to the orders involved petitioner had no notice of such sub-contracts, and (b) as to -the market price in Boston of the laces covered by order 4092, and which plaintiff testified could have been resold at a profit, for the reason that this contract had been can-celled (along with all the other contracts) by the plaintiff himself.”

The evidence as to the contract of re-sale for the laces covered by order 4020, which- was discharged in full, was immaterial. The evidence as to the contracts of resale made by Fawcett for the laces covered by orders 4026, 4023 and 4194 was proper. Fawcett was entitled to show that he' had contracts for resale of these laces, and the terms of these contracts, as evidencing the damages he had suffered by the defendant’s failure to complete his deliveries. The defendant was aware that the purchases were made for resales. It was not entitled to be apprised of the details of these contracts of resale, the persons with whom they were made, and the terms of such resale, at the time that it made its contracts with the plaintiff, unless these resales had been for exceptional and unusual profits. This does not appear to have been the case in reference to the market price of laces in Boston. Hence, it was in no wise material [491]*491to the defendant in discharging its duty of making delivery pursuant to its contracts, to know the names of the plaintiff’s contractees, and the terms of resale. See Perry Tie Co. v. Reynolds, 100 Va. 272, 40 S. E. 919. For the purpose of establishing his damages, the plaintiff was entitled tr show that he had definite contracts of resale for the undelivered laces, and the terms thereof.

[3] With respect to the undelivered laces covered by order 4092, the plaintiff had the right to prove the market price of such laces in Boston. If he was entitled in law to recover from the defendant, then the difference between the defendant’s price to the plaintiff and the price at which the laces could have been resold on the Boston market, if delivered in due course, represented the plaintiff’s damages.

V. “In giving the instructions asked for by the plaintiff, any or either of them.”

VI. “In refusing to give instructions asked for by your petitioner, or any of them.”

VII. “In refusing to modify the instructions given for the plaintiff, one to four, any, or either of them, by adding thereto the following clause: ‘Unless the jury shall believe from, the evidence that the plaintiff by his conduct or course of dealings waived his right to demand deliveries as called for in the contract.’ ”

VIII. “In refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury and award a new trial on account of various errors assigned, and because the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence.”

Assignments 5, 6, 7 and 8 raise questions which we will now proceed to' consider.

‘ A material ground of defense relied upon by the defendant is that whatever may have been its defaults, in respect of delivery, “the plaintiff had waived the strict performance of the contracts, as to deliveries (regardless of what [492]*492the contracts may have been), both expressly and by his conduct and course of dealings, and by repeatedly accepting deliveries after the times, according to the claim of the plaintiff, deliveries were called for by the contracts;” and that ‘‘following such waiver the defendant was proceeding to make deliveries, and was ready to complete his contracts when, without notice, the plaintiff refused to accept any further deliveries under the contracts.”

[4] There is a conflict between the parties relating to the terms of delivery under orders 4020, 4026 and 4033. The plaintiff contends that the contract of the defendant was to deliver laces in reasonable amounts, and within a reasonable time after acceptance of said orders.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.E. 800, 130 Va. 484, 1921 Va. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-leather-manufacturing-co-v-fawcett-va-1921.