Standard Wood Co. v. Hall, Gardner & Co.

239 F. 241, 152 C.C.A. 229, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2205
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1917
DocketNo. 2135
StatusPublished

This text of 239 F. 241 (Standard Wood Co. v. Hall, Gardner & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Wood Co. v. Hall, Gardner & Co., 239 F. 241, 152 C.C.A. 229, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2205 (3d Cir. 1917).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff in error (plaintiff below) is a kindling wood company. The defendants in error (defendants below) compose a partnership doing business as a saw mill company. This action was brought by the kindling wood company for breach of a written contract between them. At the trial two questions were raised. The first, a question of fact, was whether the terms of the con[242]*242tract had been changed by the parties; the second, a question of law, was the construction of the contract, either as changed or unchanged, according to the fact found. The verdict was for the saw mill company, and the kindling wood company brought this writ of error. The specifications of error, in number and scope, cover the whole case, and will therefore be considered under a general review.

The contract is in writing. In the main, there is neither ambiguity in its terms nor uncertainty in its meaning. It appears that in 1898, the year of its date, the saw mill company owned large tracts of land in the Counties of Élk and Forest, in the State of Pennsylvania, from which they proposed to cut hemlock timber and manufacture it at their mill at Hallton. In order to dispose of their slabs and edgings this contract was entered into, and by its terms the saw mill company agreed to sell and the kindling wood company to buy, without limit as to time, all their hemlock slabs and edgings cut in lengths suitable for kindling wood manufacture, delivered at a designated factory of the kindling wood company, at a price of about seventy-five cents per cord, graduated somewhat by varying market conditions. In order to take and consume the slabs and edgings to be delivered under the contract, the kindling wood company agreed to erect and did erect a kindling wood factory of a given capacity at Portland Mills, a suitable location for the economical shipping and handling of the product. !

To insure uninterrupted deliveries to its factory and to avoid loss of its investment consequent upon stopping the timber operation, the' kindling wood company required, and the saw mill company agreed, that if the saw mill should be destroyed by fire or otherwise, they would promptly rebuild or repair it.

Under the terms of the contract as originally drawn, the parties acted for many years, one satisfactorily disposing of a by-product of little value and the other manufacturing its finished product from a cheap raw material always at hand.

. From the terms of the contract the parties seldom deviated and then only by agreement. In 1903, the kindling wood company, upon representations that it was necessary to divert “a certain quantity” of the wood from shipment to its factory at Portland Mills to another of its plants, secured the acquiescence of the saw mill company, and shipments were made elsewhere. After a brief period, the parties returned to the original contract and resumed shipments exclusively to the factory at Portland Mills. Again in 1907, in conversations between the parties and confirmatory correspondence, the parties agreed to depart from the contract with respect to shipments. It appears that an officer of the kindling wood company wrote the saw mill company that:

“We .find it necessary to ship out some of the wood from Hallton [i. e. to ship wood elsewhere than to its factory at Portland Hills] as the conditions of trade will not permit us to manufacture this.”

The conditions referred to were market conditions for kindling wood in the cities, and the fact that there were piled at the kindling wood factory about 5,000 cords of slabs, indicating a large supply on hand. The saw mill company replied by saying:

[243]*243“Relative to changing the shipment of wood, from Portland Mills to other points, would say that it will be entirely satisfactory to us, and we will take great pleasure in billing the stock wherever you designate.”

The kindling wood company wrote the saw mill company:

“Referring to the writer’s recent interview with Mr. Lockhart relative to shipping out the Hallton wood, we desire to ship this for the present to the Hartje Paper Mfg. Oo., Steubenville, Ohio, via P. R. R. delivery, and if you will kindly issue the necessary instruction we will appreciate it very much.”

Knowing, as it is testified, that the kindling wood company had on hand a large supply of wood, and that the conversations and the correspondence referred to a diversion of shipments not as to all but only with respect to “some of the wood,” not permanently, but only “for the present,” the saw mill company readily subscribed to the change in its temporary character, and made the shipments to the paper, company as directed.

During this period, the kindling wood factory was not operated. This was known by all the parties and not objected to. It developed, however, that after about seven months, the saw mill company made inquiry as to when operations were to be resumed and found that the kindling wood plant had been dismantled, the machinery shipped away, and, the larger part of the structure tom down. Thereupon, the saw mill company resorted to what is termed the “forfeiture clause” of the contract, and attempted by notice to terminate the contract pursuant to their undérstanding of its meaning. This clause is as follows:

“It is further understood and agreed that the party of the second part [kindling wood company] may at any time shut down its kindling wood factory, and during such shut dowm or suspension of business, the party of the second part shall not be required to take and pay for any slabs or edgings under the terms of this contract, provided, however, that the party of the second part shall give thirty days’ notice in writing to the parties of the first part of its intention to shut down or suspend as aforesaid, and provided further, that if such shut down or suspension shall continue for a period of ninety days, the parties of the first part [saw mill company] may at their option declare this contract terminated.”

With the notice given, shipments were stopped. It is pertinent here to note that so long as hemlock slabs had only a by-product value to one of the parties and only a cheap raw material value to the other, the two moved contentedly along under the contract, but when trade conditions in the paper industry gave hemlock slabs a raw material value for paper far greater than their value for kindling wood, the parties to this contract were subjected, one after the other, to a temptation which they could not withstand. The kindling wood company found that slabs for which it was paying seventy^five cents a cord could be sold to the paper company for three dollars a cord. It therefore stopped the manufacture of slabs into kindling wood, diverted shipments to the paper company, and under the influence of greatly increased profits, did the unwise thing of dismantling and demolishing its kindling wood factory. When the saw mill company found this out they attempted to terminate the contract under the forfeiture clause and did terminate shipments, thereby leaving the kindling wood company without wood with which to carry on its contract with the paper [244]*244company.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F. 241, 152 C.C.A. 229, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-wood-co-v-hall-gardner-co-ca3-1917.