Rylance v. James Walker Co.

99 A. 597, 129 Md. 475, 1916 Md. LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 13, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 A. 597 (Rylance v. James Walker Co.) 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
Rylance v. James Walker Co., 99 A. 597, 129 Md. 475, 1916 Md. LEXIS 161 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In December, 1911, the appellee, The James Walker Company, of Baltimore, sent to the appellant, James A. Rylance, of London, England, an order for forty-seven coils of Hoth’s Russian Bolt Rope at $13.50 per hundred pounds. In September, 1912, the appellant shipped to the appellee a different kind of rope and drew a draft on the appellee for *477 tlie pricey which the appellee paid in advance of the arrival of the rope. When the rope shipped arrived in Baltimore the appellee discovered that it wasi not the rope ordered, and immediately wrote the appellant accordingly, and stated that as the appellee had paid the draft in advance of the arrival of the rope, it would charge the amount of the draft against him, and hold the rope subject to his order pending’1 receipt of shipping orders from him. The appellant in reply requested the appellee to dispose of the rope for him, and after further correspondence, the- appellee wrote the. appellant in April, 1913, that it had not been able to dispose of the rope for him, and that, while it did not mind holding the rope for him until he, the appellant, could dispose of it, the appellee would like to have a cheek for the amount of the draft- paid by it.

On September 2nd, 1913, the appellee sent the appellant another' order for seventy coils, of Bolt Rope,, to be shipped as soon as possible', “and in tbe usual way.” At the same time the. appellee again requested shipping instructions for the rope, shipped to it in the fall of 1912, and which the appellee was holding for the appellant. The rope specified in the order of September 2nd, 1913, was shipped by the appellant to the appellee about the 5th of November, 1913, via steamship Potomac, and arrived in Baltimore about the 23rd of December following. The appellant had the hill of lading made out to his “order,” and sent the same, properly endorsed by him, with a draft for the price of the rope attached, to Hambleton & Company, Baltimore bankers-, with directions “to turn over the hill of lading” to the appellee upon payment of the draft. When the draft arrived, Hambleton & Company presented the same, with the hill of lading attached, to the appellee and requested it to pay the draft- and take delivery of the rope. The appellee refused to pay the draft unless the appellant would allow it to deduct therefrom the amount of the draft which the appellee had paid for the shipment made in 1912. The appellant declined to *478 allow the deduction and refused to deliver the hill of lading. When the rope arrived in Baltimore, the appellee was notified, and the rope was unloaded and after remaining on the dock for a few days, was stored by the dock authorities, without any order from either the appellant or appellee, “in a U. S. Bonded Warehouse” where it was subsequently, about February 18th, 1914, destroyed by a fire. The agreed statement of facts states: “Neither plaintiff nor defendant exercised any acts of ownership over the rope after its arrival in Baltimore.”

In April, 1915, the appellant brought suit in the Superior Court of Baltimore City to recover the contract price of the rope, etc. The narr. contains the common counts and two special counts. The first of the special counts alleges the sale and shipment of the rope in compliance with the defendant’s order, and that it arrived in Baltimore “and was delivered to the defendant, or, but for the defendant’s delay and neglect to accept delivery after a request from the plaintiff so to do would have been delivered to the defendant, but the defendant in breach of its contract, neglected and refused to pay for said rope or any part thereof, though payment has often been demanded.” The last count alleges the order for the rope, the acceptance of the order and the shipping of the rope in consideration of the promise of the defendant to pay therefor upon its arrival in Baltimore, and that the defendant, although it had due notice of the arrival of the rope, and was requested to accept delivery of the same, “in breach of its contract delayed and neglected to accept such delivery and to pay for the rope or any part thereof, by reason of which neglect and delay,' and without any order or request from the plaintiff, the rope aforesaid was stored in a warehouse in Baltimore, Maryland, and while stored was entirely destroyed by fire.”

The defendant pleaded “never promised” and “never indebted” and a set-off. The case was tried before the Court without a jury, upon issues joined on the first two pleas and *479 on the replications of never promised, etc., to the defendant’s plea of set-off. This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the defendant for the amount of the draft paid by it in the fall of 1912 produced in evidence.

The only exception in the record is to the ruling' of the Court on the prayers. The Court below rejected the plaintiff’s second, third and fifth prayers and granted the defendant’s second prayer. These prayers are as follows:

Plaintiff 2nd Prayer.—The plaintiff prays the Court to rule as a matter of law that if the Court, sitting as a jury, find that an order for the rope mentioned in the declaration was given by the defendant to the plaintiff on or about September 2nd, 1913, and that rope of the quantity and quality ordered was shipped by the plaintiff to the defendant on or about November 5th, 1913, by the steamship “Potomac,” and that said rope in due time and in all respects in accordance with the defendant’s order, arrived in Baltimore and was unloaded from said steamship and placed on the dock, and that within a reasonable time after the arrival of said rope, the defendant was notified or knew thereof; and if the Court, sitting as a jury, further find that the plaintiff drew a draft upon the defendant for the price of said rope and forwarded such draft, with the hill of lading attached made out to the plaintiff’s “order” and endorsed in blank by him, to his bankers at Baltimore, and that said hankers requested the defendant to take delivery of said rope, and tendered themselves ready, upon the payment of said draft, to turn over to the defendant the hill of lading for said rope, and that the defendant did not within a reasonable time after such request and tender pay said draft, and that as a, consequence of ihe defendant’s failure to pay said draft the rope was not delivered to the defendant hut was stored in a warehouse, where it was subsequently destroyed by fire (if the Court, sitting as a jury, so find), and that the plaintiff did not exercise any acts of ownership over said rope from the time of its arrival a1 Baltimore, then the verdict must be for the plaintiff. ■

*480 Plaintiff’s 3rd

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 A. 597, 129 Md. 475, 1916 Md. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rylance-v-james-walker-co-md-1916.