Stock v. Towle

54 A. 918, 97 Me. 408, 1903 Me. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 4, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 A. 918 (Stock v. Towle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stock v. Towle, 54 A. 918, 97 Me. 408, 1903 Me. LEXIS 33 (Me. 1903).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is an action to recover damages sustained by the plaintiffs by reason of the refusal of the defendants to accept a car load of flour, alleged to have been bargained and sold to them by the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs were proprietors of flouring mills at Hillsboro, Michigan, with a branch office for the wholesale of flour at Lewiston, Maine, and the defendants were wholesale dealers in flour and grain at Bangpr, Maine. The case comes to this court on report.

At the time of the alleged contract, the price of old wheat flour was well advanced, but new wheat flour was coming into the market and the price was likely to fall. The defendants informed the plaintiffs by telephone that they desired to purchase a car load of old wheat flour for immediate use, but the conversation by telephone failed to result in the mutual assent of the parties to the same proposition. In the afternoon of the same day, however, the plaintiffs, from their office in Lewiston, sent the following telegram to the defendants at Bangor:

“July 29, 1902.
Dated, Lewiston, Me.
To J. C. Towle & Co.,
Bangor, Me.
Advise quick book one car four ten delivered.
E. W. Stock, Jr. 4-25”

This telegram was received by the defendants the same day and at six minutes past five o’clock, the same afternoon, the defendants telegraphed to the plaintiffs the following answer:

“July, 29, 1902.
Bangor, Me.
To E. W. Stock & Sons.
Accept car Stocks, best patent at offer transit car.
J. C. Towle & Co. 5-6 P. M.”

The introduction of the term “transit car” in this answer being a materia] modification of the terms of the offer, operated in law as a [410]*410rejection of it and constituted a new proposal, which, however, was equally ineffectual to complete the contract until it was assented to by the plaintiffs. But the next day, July 30th, the plaintiffs sent the following letter to the defendants:

“Lewiston, Me., July 30, 1902.
J. C. Towle & Co.,
Bangor, Me.
Gentlemen:
Received your wire last night and have booked you one car flour $4.10 delivered Bangor. Will give you the first car to arrive. Thanking you for your favor, I remain,
Yours truly,
F. W. Stock & Sons,
Per F. W. S. Jr.”

This constituted an acceptance of the defendants’ proposal. It warranted the conclusion that the plaintiffs had “booked” the defendants a “transit car” as specified in the proposal. ' It is in evidence and not in controversy that the phrase “transit car” had a well defined and uniform meaning in the trade, well understood by both parties. In this instance, it meant a car already loaded, and on its way from Hillsboro to Maine.

No further communication took place between the parties until August 11th when the following letter was sent from the defendants to the plaintiffs, namely:

“Bangor, Me., August 11, 1902.
F. W. Stock & Sons,
Dear Sirs: —
July 30th we bought of you one car of your best patent with the understanding that the car was in transit and that we were to have the first car that arrived, as you have not seen fit to give us the first arrival, please cancel the order.
Yours truly,
J. C. Towle & Co.”

To this the plaintiffs made the following reply:

[411]*411“Lewiston, Me., August 11, 1902.
J. O. Towle & Co., Bangor, Me.
Gentlemen: —
Replying to your favor will say that I have plenty of cars on the way but not one arrival that has not been sold. The very first car arriving for my account I expect to forward to you.
Yours truly,
F. W. Stock & Sons,
Per F. W. S. Jr.”

To this letter the defendants replied as follows:

“Bangor, Me., August 13, 1902.
F. W. Stock & Sons,
Dear Sirs:—
Yours of the 11th received. Please cancel the order as we shall not take the car flour. Your letter of July 30th says that you will give us the first car that arrives and as you have not done so, we shall consequently refuse the car.
Yours truly,
J. C. Towle & Co.”

It appears from the evidence that on July 29th and 30th the plaintiffs did not have a car load of best patent flour in transit from their mills at Hillsboro to Portland and that a car load of this quality of flour did not leave the plaintiffs’ mills at Hillsboro, Michigan, until August 2nd, and did not arrive in Portland until after August, 12th. It is in evidence that eight or ten days are required for a car to come from Hillsboro to Portland. It is not in controversy that this car load was duly tendered to the defendants and that an acceptance of it was refused by them.

The plaintiffs accordingly contend that they performed their part of the contract and are now entitled to damages for a breach of it on the part of the defendants. On the other hand, the defendants insist that the plaintiffs failed to perform the contract according to its terms, for the reason that their tender of the flour was more than three days later than it would have been if the car had been in transit July 30th, according to the understanding of the defendants and the requirement of the contract.

[412]*412It is the opinion of the court that the contention of the defendants must be sustained. The plaintiffs were informed during the preliminary negotiations for the flour that the defendants wanted it for immediate use, and must have understood that the term “transit car” was inserted in the order, by the defendants, for the purpose of insuring the delivery of the flour at Bangor at the earliest practicable hour. The stipulation for a “transit car” was therefore a substantial and important element in the proposal. Time was of the essence of the contract and a condition precedent to the plaintiffs’ right and the defendants’ obligation.

But it is contended that the defendants’ letters of August 11th, and August 18, show that they refused to accept the flour because the plaintiffs did not see fit to give them the first car that arrived from the west, and that they must be deemed from the language of their letters to have waived their right to insist on a “transit car” as a condition precedent in the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 A. 918, 97 Me. 408, 1903 Me. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stock-v-towle-me-1903.