Roller v. George H. Leonard & Co.

229 F. 607, 143 C.C.A. 629, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1915
DocketNo. 1333
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 229 F. 607 (Roller v. George H. Leonard & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roller v. George H. Leonard & Co., 229 F. 607, 143 C.C.A. 629, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1585 (4th Cir. 1915).

Opinion

CONNOR, District Judge.

[1] The record, read in connection with the record in the writ of error in the same case, decided by this court on December 21, 1912 (201 Fed. 886, 120 C. C. A. 224), and the opinion of Judge Rose, discloses the history, of the transaction out of which the controversy arose and the questions presented upon the assignments of error. The defendants in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs, were, on and prior to September 12, 1904, engaged in business in Boston, Mass, as dealers in tanning materials, and in their course of business bought and sold oak extract. Their principal witness, Mr. Orth, says:

, “The custom of business was for us, when we received orders from our customers, to send an order, with shipping directions, to the manufacturers, with whom we had contracts, to ship the extract necessary to fill the sale direct [609]*609to our customers. In other words, as we received our orders from our purchasing customers, we gave directions in the form of ‘orders’ to the plants under contract with us to furnish extract, so that the extract would be shipped direct from the plant to the customers, thus placing buying orders with us. We allotted these orders' to the plants under contract with us, as convenience would dictate. In order to enable us to carry on this business, in which we acted in the sense of intermediaries, or sale brokers, it was essential that we know when and in what quantities the extract will be delivered by the manufacturers as without this information we have no guide to enable us to make sales to customers, calling for delivery of a specific quantity of extract at a given time and place. * * * We store no extract ourselves, as our business was to buy for the purpose of selling again. We would sell extract to the tanner and if the tanner did not get his extract on time his hides were injured. In some instances the tanners had facilities for storing a given quantity, but ordinarily* they bought as they needed it for current use. Some of our contracts of sale to customers called for as much as a tank car a week. It is the custom of manufacturers to store extract; one concern I know of * * * insisted on carrying 2,000 barrels all the time.”

The manner in which the testimony of plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as defendant, is printed, does not present a connected story. For the purpose of discussing the questions presented upon the record, it' discloses: That defendant, John E. Roller, was a lawyer residing in Harrisonburg, Va. He says that he “had about quit the practice and was engaged in other operations.” During the year 1903 he organized the Excelsior Oak Extract Company for the purpose of making and selling oak extract used for tanning hides. The plant was located some distance from Harrisonburg. Gen. Roller, the president and principal owner, says that he knew nothing about the details of. the business — the method of manufacturing and selling the extract —relied entirely upon the men employed by him. “I didn’t know a thing in the world about it. I didn’t even know the meaning of certain technical words you use now. I was absolutely without experience.” There is evidence tending to show that the plant, or machinery, used in manufacturing the extract, was in September, 1904, incomplete. G. S. McCarty, president of the American Anniline & Extract Company, engaged in selling extract, visited Gen. Roller at Harrison-burg. Mr. McCarty says:

“During this trip here he took me out to the plant and I looked it over, and while on that trip we made this arrangement, for me to sell his extract on a commission basis. * * - I was to represent him and be his agent. I looked over the plant and made recommendation to him in great detail as to what he might do to make the plant as economically as I then knew. I returned to Philadelphia, and, of course, immediately undertook to dispose of what we estimated he would produce that year.”

After describing his efforts to make contracts for the sale of the extract, and of a contract made with Grattan & Knight, he says that he met Leonard & Co., who were “great buyers” of extract, and became, through his efforts, “interested.” Mr. Orth, of the firm of Leonard & Co., came to Philadelphia, “and we went over the question pretty thoroughly and he said that he could market the extract, and, resulting from that, Gen. Roller came up at my solicitation, of course, to deal directly with Leonard & Co., as I did not wish to make a deal with Leonard & Co. for the output of his plants.” After some [610]*610negotiation, during which it was agreed that McCarty was to receive á commission of 4 per cent., the parties entered into and signed a contract, the essential terms of which are:

“Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 12, 1904.
“American Anniline & Extract Co. — Gentlemen: We hereby buy from you, and you sell to us, a certain quantity of extract to be made by the Excelsior Oak Extract Company, hereinafter specified, at the following prices and under the following conditions, terms, and provisions: Pour thousand (4,000) barrels to eight thousand (8,000) barrels or equivalent in tank cars of chestnut oak extract. This contract shall bei made entirely from chestnut wood, or three-quarters chestnut wood and one-quarter oak wood, with the bark on, or from 85 per cent, chestnut wood and 15 per cent, chestnut oak bark, as we may direct from time to time. As to quantity, it is our option whether we shall take more than four thousand (4,000) barrels, we to declare our option within ten days after you let us know definitely whether you can ship us more than the four thousand barrels. Shipments filling this contract shall be made at fairly regular intervals between September 15, 1904, and September 15, 1905, as we order from time to time.”

The contract contains stipulations as to price, terms of payment, guaranty of percentage of tannic acid, etc., and an agreement for sale of 1,000 barrels of pure oak bark extract at a price fixed “under the same terms and conditions set forth above as to time of delivery, terms of payment, etc.,” and an option to Leonard & Co. to take any further quantity that the other party might make, etc. It was also stipulated that:

“You agree to make no further sales of extract, except the acceptance of the two options you have out, until the settling of the above options. It is further agreed that shipments in tank ears shall be made only when convenient and satisfactory to both parties.”

This proposition was signed by Leonard & Co. and accepted by the American Anniline Extract Company and the Excelsior Oak Extract Company. The entire evidence is in thé record, showing the attitude of the parties and the conditions under which the contract of .September 12, 1904, was entered into. For reasons not necessary to set forth the defendant did not ship the quantity of extract called for by the contract. On July 22, 1905, the parties again met in Philadelphia, and, after discussion and negotiation, entered into a supplemental contract, the essential terms of which are:

“In consideration of our having failed to make deliveries on our contract with you, dated September 12, 1904, according to its terms, and in consideration of your having given us further time in which to fill said contract, we hereby agree to: Report each Wednesday approximate quantity of wood, bark extract, and tank cars on hand, estimated quantity extract will make the next, week.

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Related

Rockingham County v. Luten Bridge Co.
35 F.2d 301 (Fourth Circuit, 1929)
Brevard Tannin Co. v. J. F. Mosser Co.
288 F. 725 (Fourth Circuit, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 F. 607, 143 C.C.A. 629, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roller-v-george-h-leonard-co-ca4-1915.