St. Regis Sales Corp. v. Wilson Cabinet Co.

90 A.2d 488, 47 Del. 261, 8 Terry 261, 1952 Del. Super. LEXIS 174
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 11, 1952
DocketCiv. A. No. 349, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 488 (St. Regis Sales Corp. v. Wilson Cabinet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Regis Sales Corp. v. Wilson Cabinet Co., 90 A.2d 488, 47 Del. 261, 8 Terry 261, 1952 Del. Super. LEXIS 174 (Del. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

Richards, P. J.:

The plaintiff is a manufacturer of breakerstrip, known by the name of “Panelyte”, for use in refrigeration equipment.

The defendant, a manufacturer of refrigeration units, on May 22, 1947 ordered from the plaintiff certain pieces of “Panelyte” breakerstrip and gave shipping instructions calling for shipments to be made on July 1, 1947, September 1, 1947 and November 1, 1947. This order and shipping instructions was confirmed by the plaintiff and prices on said pieces of “Panelyte” breakerstrip were quoted F.O.B. Trenton, N. J., net 30 days. Thereafter, the plaintiff commenced the manufacture of said material in compliance with said order. The defendant accepted the first shipment of “Panelyte” breakerstrip delivered at Smyrna, Delaware, on or about July 1, 1947, paid for the same *263 in compliance with the contract and subsequently used said material in the manufacture of its products. In August 1947, the defendant began having difficulty with said “Panelyte” breakerstrip and requested plaintiff to stop production pending an investigation of said difficulty. On August 11, 1947, defendant wrote to the plaintiff again requesting plaintiff to stop production of its order pending investigation. On October 10, 1947, defendant wrote the plaintiff a letter stating that because of' the very unsatisfactory results had with the “Panelyte” breaker-strip supplied by the plaintiff, it was necessary to ask the plaintiff to cancel the order in its entirety, with the exception of 350 pieces of part 204-9-5, which it would require for replacement stock on units which had been shipped out of its place. Following the receipt of this letter, the plaintiff advised the defendant of the material then on hand, completed or partially completed, and the value thereof, requesting instructions as to how said materials should be disposed of. On November 12, 1947, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff stating that it would not recognize any responsibility for the disposition of the material on hand because it was defective.

The defendant having refused to pay the plaintiff the value of the material on hand this action was brought on November 29, 1950.

The plaintiff contends that the contract in question is an ex-ecutory sales contract, and that the course taken by the defendant as stated by its letters of August 11, 1947, and October 10, 1947, was an attempted rescission of the contract, or what is known as an anticipatory breach, which entitled the plaintiff to elect to treat such attempted rescission as a breach of the contract as of that time, and bring suit at once for damages arising therefrom, or to ignore the attempted rescission and hold the defendant to performance of the contract according to its terms. The plaintiff further contends that the date for final performance of the contract by the defendant did not arrive until the expiration of the term of credit expressed by the contract, namely, the expiration of thirty days from the date of the last *264 delivery called for by the contract, being November 1, 1947, and that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until that time.

The defendant admits that the contract in question is an executory sales contract, and agrees that under the doctrine of anticipatory breach as applied to such contracts, the plaintiff had the right to treat the attempted rescission as a breach of the contract as of that time, and bring suit at once for damages, or to ignore said attempted rescission, treat the contract as in full force until the time for performance and then bring suit.

The defendant contends, however, that the contract was an installment contract, at least in respect to payments, under the terms of which the plaintiff was bound to send, and the defendant bound to receive, the goods in question in three installments, the defendant being bound to pay for each installment within thirty days after the date of delivery of said installments; that it was the defendant’s duty to receive the first installment on July 1, and pay for the same on July 30, to receive the second installment on September 1, and to pay for the same on September 30, to receive the third installment on November 1st and to pay for the same on November 30; that the statute of limitations began to run as to each installment as soon as it became due.

The defendant further contends that by its letter of October 10, 1947, it definitely repudiated and cancelled the entire contract; that said letter breached that part of the contract that called for him to accept the September installment, but that said letter was merely an anticipatory breach of the November installment; that the plaintiff could have brought suit on Octo- ' her 10th for damages sustained by the defendant’s anticipatory breach of the November installment, or he could have ignored said anticipatory breach of the November installment and held that portion of the contract open until the time for delivery arrived on November 1; that by refusing to accept the delivery of the November installment, the defendant breached the con *265 tract and the plaintiff’s cause of action for said November installment accrued at that time; that the statute of limitations should run as to one portion of plaintiff’s claim from October 10, 1947 and from the remainder of the plaintiff’s claim from November 1, 1947.

In order to recover for the purchase price of any commodity there must be an executed sale and title for said commodity must have passed from the vendor to the vendee.

It is admitted that the contract in question is not an executed contract, but an executory contract and that the plaintiff’s only remedy is for damages occasioned by the defendant’s breach.

It is further admitted that the plaintiff could not sue for the purchase price under the contract because at the time of the defendant’s breach, the plaintiff was still in the process of manufacturing the “Panelyte” breakerstrip, with only a small portion fully completed, which left the contract still executory.

The question of whether a contract is entire or severable cannot he determined from the fact that the payments on said contract are to be made by installments. That is one of the distinguishing characteristics of a divisible contract but it is not conclusive. The nature of the contract depends upon the intention of the parties and this must be gathered from their acts under all the facts and circumstances of the transaction in question. Johnson Forge Co. v. Leonard, 3 Penn. 342, 51 A. 305, 57 L. R. A. 225, 94 Am. St. Rep. 86; Orenstein v. Kahn, 13 Del. Ch. 376, 119 A. 444.

The agreement between the plaintiff and defendant for the purchase and sale of the “Panelyte” breakerstrip, as disclosed by the facts before me, was a complete transaction assented to by them at the time, which made the contract entire, notwithstanding the fact that the delivery and payments were to be made by installments.

*266 The renunciation of the contract by the defendant without the consent of the plaintiff did not terminate it. A breach of the contract by one party alone is not effective as an anticipatory breach.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 488, 47 Del. 261, 8 Terry 261, 1952 Del. Super. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-regis-sales-corp-v-wilson-cabinet-co-delsuperct-1952.