Sullivan v. Boswell

89 A. 940, 122 Md. 539, 1914 Md. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 89 A. 940 (Sullivan v. Boswell) 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
Sullivan v. Boswell, 89 A. 940, 122 Md. 539, 1914 Md. LEXIS 74 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought, in the Oour-t of Common Pleas of Baltimore City, by the plaintiff, the Sullivan Brothers Coal Company, miners and shippers of coal, at Eckhart, in Alie-. gany County, Maryland, against the defendant, Edward T.-' Boswell, trading as the Boswell Coal Company, of Baltimore-City, Maryland.

The case was removed to the Circuit Court for Allegany County, and was submitted to the Court below, sitting as a jury. Erom a judgment in favor of the defendant for costs, the plaintiff has appealed.

The questions in the case arise upon demurrers to the several pleadings and to the rulings of the Court upon the prayers. There were no exceptions reserved to the rulings of the Court, on the admissibility of testimony.

The declaration as originally filed on the 28th of June, 1912, contained the six ordinary money counts, in assumpsit, to recover the sum of $2,-971.50 the contract price for twenty-three hundred and seventy-six tons of coal shipped by the plaintiff to the defendant, under a contract, dated the day of March, 1911, to be hereafter considered, between the parties, to the-suit. An account showing the number of tons, the weight, price and carload lots, was filed with the declaration.

To this declaration the defendant pleaded the two general issue pleas in assumpsit, and an additional plea of set off. A demurrer to the defendant’s plea of set off was sustained by the Court, with leave fx> amend, and subsequently, after various pleadings, the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s amended plea of set-off, was overruled, and replications were filed to the seven pleas and issue joined on the replications.

*547 Thereafter by leave of Court, the plaintiff amended its declaration by filing an additional count, alleging the terms of the contract and declaring upon a settlement by way of compromise made on the 23rd of May, 1912.

In this count, after setting out the contract, the plaintiff in substance avers, that the defendant failed and refused to pay for the coal in accordance with the contract; and the plaintiff threatened to bring suit upon the claim to recover the sum of $2,971.50, for the coal, which the defendant failed and refused to pay, and that thereupon after negotiations by and between the parties, the claim as due from the defendant to the plaintiff was adjusted, settled and compromised, and that by the terms of the adjustment, settlement and compromise made by and between the parties on or about the 23rd day of May, 1912, in consideration of refraining to bring suit and of the delivery of the coal, the defendant promised and agreed to pay the sum of $2,422.60 in full settlement of the claim, provided the plaintiff would draw promptly on the defendant for. the sum of $2,422.60, with an executed release in full attached to the draft, and that the plaintiff did thereupon promptly issue its draft upon the defendant for the sum of $2,422.60, with the executed release attached to the draft, but the plaintiff refused to honor the draft and failed, neglected and refused to pay the sum of $2,422.60, as agreed upon, in the settlement.

The defendant, thereupon, demurred to this additional count, and the demurrer being sustained by the Court below, the case was tried upon issue joined on the replications to the pleas.

The real questions -then for our consideration are presented (1) upon the rulings of the Court on the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s amended declaration; (2), the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s amended seventh plea of set-off; and (3), to the ruling of the Court, on the prayers.

There was no error in sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s additional count declaring in the same suit upon,settlement and compromise of the 23rd of May, 1912, *548 as stated in the count. The plaintiff had elected in the original suit'to1 stand upon the terms of the contract and to recover for the sale and delivery of 2378 tons of coal, at the value of $2,971.50, but in the additional count they sought to recover the sum of $2,422.60, as agreed upon in the settlement and compromise. The plaintiff could not take two inconsistent positions and was bound by his first election.- 8 Cyc. 535; Cole v. Hines, 81 Md. 479; Bollman v. Burt, 61 Md. 422; Troup v. Appleman, 52 Md. 456; 1 Poe, Pl. & Prac. 302; and Western Bk. v. Kyle, 6 Gill, 350.

The demurrer to the defendant’s amended seventh plea of set-off was overruled, but the Court at the conclusion of the case, granted the plaintiff’s fourth prayer which declared as a matter of law that there was no legally sufficient evidence to entitle the defendant to recover under his plea of set-off. And. in its own instruction declared, “the Court, as a jury, is further instructed that even if it find that there was a verbal telephonic agreement between the parties on or about January 19th, 1912, as to the plaintiff selling and the defendant buying all the coal thereafter mined by the plaintiff, yet if the previous contract be found -as set out in the prayer, there was no consideration for the second verbal contract and therefore there is no legally sufficient evidence to support the plea of set-off, in this case.”

We discover no such inconsistent or contradictory rulings under the facts of the case, or such injury to the plaintiff; thereby, as avouIc! justify a reversal, on the contention of the appellant.

As the main questions of the case arise upon the action of the Court, upon the prayers, we shall now proceed to consider these rulings, in connection with the evidence set out in the record.

The Court below granted the plaintiff’s third, fourth and seventh prayers, and the defendant’s third and sixth, and rejected the rest of the prayers on both sides as offered.

Besides this, it submitted a written instruction of its own, declaring the law as controlling upon the facts of the ease. *549 The Reporter of the Court will set out the Court’s instruction, in his report of this case.

The instructions, we think, fully and. properly submitted the law and facts of the case, to the Court, sitting as a jury, and are hot open to the objections urged against them.

The contract, on which the plaintiff relied as the basis of the suit, was in writing, and was dated sometime in March, 1911. It was offered in evidence by the plaintiff and is as follows:

“Eckhaet' Mines, Md.

Sullivan Brothers Coal Company of Eckhart, Md., agrees to sell, and Boswell Coal Company agrees to buy the following coal at the prices and upon the terms herein named:

Quantity: Rot to exceed gross tons, nor to be less than Thirteen Thousand Five Hundred gross tons.

Kind of Coal: George’s Creek Coal, same as shipped during Eeb. & March, 1911.

Delivery: About equal monthly proportions.

Shipment: Subject to orders of the Boswell Coal

Company.

Price: $1.20 per gross ton to Sept.

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 940, 122 Md. 539, 1914 Md. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-boswell-md-1914.