Thomas v. Allegheny & Eastern Coal Co.

455 A.2d 637, 309 Pa. Super. 333, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5860
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 30, 1982
Docket885
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 455 A.2d 637 (Thomas v. Allegheny & Eastern Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Allegheny & Eastern Coal Co., 455 A.2d 637, 309 Pa. Super. 333, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5860 (Pa. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

VAN der VOORT, Judge:

Plaintiff-appellee, Thomas, contracted by purchase order and several amendments thereto, to supply to defendant-appellant, Allegheny & Eastern Coal Co. (hereafter referred to as Allegheny) 20,000 tons of coal at $14.25 per ton. The coal was to be shipped f.o.b. the mines (in Pennsylvania) and consigned to “Allegheny & Eastern Coal Co. for the Acct. of Foreston Coal Internation, Inc.” The destination was *336 Baltimore, Maryland. The stated “guarantees” on the “Purchase Order” read as follows:

Guarantees: SPECIFICATIONS:
B.T.U. 13000 1 Min. guaranteed (B.T.U.’s will be
determined by samples taken at Baltimore)
Penalty Premium Premium
20<t Per 100 B.T.U. over 13000 Penalty 40<t Per Hundred
under 13000
Sul. 1.5% Over 1.5% Rejection (Footnote supplied)

Thomas actually shipped 19,486.35 tons, 2 and requested payment at $19.25 per ton, for a total of $277,680.49. Allegheny paid Thomas $218,417.41. Thomas filed the present suit in assumpsit seeking payment of the balance of $59,261.08. 3

Delivery was admitted in the pleadings, and the presiding Judge Reilly ruled that the burden lay with the appellant to prove the B.T.Ü.’s of the coal when delivered in Baltimore. In order to carry that burden Allegheny offered the report of a chemist, employed by Wiley & Co., Inc., a testing laboratory. Judge Reilly ruled that the report was inadmissible because it was not properly authenticated under the Uniform Business Records as Evidence Act. 4 The Judge then directed a verdict for Thomas calculated at the basic price of $14.25 per ton. After the jury was discharged, the court molded the verdict to include interest.

On appeal, appellant-Allegheny raises four contentions:

A. That plaintiffs-appellee should have been nonsuited for failure to prove that the coal delivered to appellant met the specifications of 12,300 B.T.U.’s;

*337 B. That the court should not have directed a verdict for appellee, because there was sufficient evidence in the case that the coal did not meet the requisite specification of 12,300 B.T.U.’s;

C. That the analysis reports of the testing laboratory should have been received in evidence; and

D. That the court erred in molding the verdict to add interest.

A. The burden of proof.

In essence, this first contention is dependent upon a determination of whether seller or buyer had the initial burden of proving a deviation from the contractually agreed quality of the coal of 12,300 B.T.U.’s.

By admission in the pleadings, appellee proved the contract, the delivery in Baltimore, the acceptance by the buyer, and the payment of a part of the contract price. The trial judge then ruled that the burden shifted to the appellant to prove any pertinent deviation of the B.T.U.’s from the stated standard of 12,300. In the posture of this case we believe the ruling was correct.

It is clear in this case that the tests for B.T.U.’s were to be made at destination (in Baltimore) by or on behalf of the buyer, or of his consignee. Since the tests were intended to be made, and in fact were made in this case in Baltimore, after delivery of the coal, by a testing laboratory chosen by the buyer’s consignee (Foresten Coal), and particularly since appellant was relying upon the results of those tests as a basis of an adjustment of the price to appellant’s advantage, common sense argues strongly that the burden of proof devolved upon Allegheny.

We find support for such a result under two different but related legal principles. If viewed as a warranty problem, the party claiming a breach of the warranty must present proof of it. Ricci v. Barscheski, 179 Pa.Superior Ct. 351, 116 A.2d 273 (1955); U.S. Gypsum Co. v. Birdsboro Steel FDY., 160 Pa.Superior Ct. 548, 52 A.2d 344 *338 (1947). In this case, the agreement guaranteed coal of a quality of 12,300 B.T.U.’s; appellant argues the quality was less; appellant had the burden to prove it.

Another way to approach the current controversy is to decide whose burden it was to prove the negative, i.e., the noncompliance concerning the quality contracted for. Where the non-existence or the negative of a fact can be demonstrated more easily by one party than the other, the burden of proof may be placed on the party more readily able to demonstrate the negative. Barrett v. Otis Elevator Co., 431 Pa. 446, 246 A.2d 668 (1968); accord Meth v. Broad St. & Bonded B. & L., 346 Pa. 331, 30 A.2d 119 (1943). Here Allegheny assumed the responsibility of testing the coal; Allegheny performed the required testing. Therefore the court could properly burden appellant with the showing that the coal received did not comply with the agreement.

B. Evidence in the record of the B.T.U.’s.

Accepting arguendo that the non-suit was properly refused, the appellants contend that there was sufficient evidence, through the evidence of Thomas and of Ross W. Clawges, a field representative of the eventual consumer, Foreston, that the coal did not meet the 12,300 B.T.U. specifications, therefore, appellant claims the lower court erred in directing a verdict for Thomas. This contention is not directly answered either in the lower court’s opinion, or in appellee’s brief in the appellate court, although it was raised below in paragraph 7 of appellant’s post trial motions.

Clawges was present when at least some of the coal was being loaded on the train, and he made some spot analyses which indicated to him that the coal did not meet the 12,300 B.T.U. specification, and he so informed the appellee’s representatives. There was talk that coal of better quality would be added to raise the average to 12,300 B.T.U., but there is no evidence that this was ever done. Mrs. Thomas conceded that the coal shipped on the first half of the order was not meeting specifications. Those *339 portions of the evidence do indicate some reasonable question as to what was the precise quality of the coal, but there is no sufficient proof of the amount of deviation from the standard of 12,300 B.T.U.’s to justify appellant’s imposition of a penalty under the formula set forth in the purchase order.

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Bluebook (online)
455 A.2d 637, 309 Pa. Super. 333, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-allegheny-eastern-coal-co-pasuperct-1982.