Tillyer v. Van Cleve Glass Co.

7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209 (Tillyer v. Van Cleve Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tillyer v. Van Cleve Glass Co., 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

The case is sufficiently stated in the opinion.

The parties to this action, on May 6, 1889, entered into a written contract, as follows:

Tillyer and Company say to Van Cleve Glass Company :

[211]*211“ We hereby agree to sell to you 5,500 boxes window glass, at 80* per cent, and 20 per cent, discount from the present price list, said glass to have 20 per cent, in first bracket, and 20 per cent in the second bracket, balance of 60 per cent, to be assorted brackets. Quality to be second and third. Terms of sale to be 2 per cent, from bill, and you to accept our draft at one day sight on presentation of bill and bill of lading; you have privilege of putting in some double at 85 per cent, from list, same terms as above. Glass to be shipped as fast as can be got ready and delivered F. O. B. at Cleveland, by 15th day of July, 1889.”

This was accepted by the Van Cleve Glass Company.

The defendant in error delivered to the plaintiffs in error fifty-one and thirty-four boxes at Cleveland, Ohio. Of this number of boxes, thirty-three hundred and ninety-one purported to be second grade glass, which were branded “Quality A,” and fifteen hundred and forty-three boxes to be “Quality 8,” which were branded “Quality B.” The grade known as “Quality 2” was the same as “ Quality A ” in the trade, and “B” and number 3 were known as the same quality in the trade. This glass was shipped in nine or ten different cars, and with the shipping bill of each car was forwarded a draft on the Van Cleve Glass Company for the price of the amount of glass in the car. These drafts were all paid but the last one, which the Van Cieve Glass Company refused to pay, and this suit was brought for the recovery of the amount of that draft.

The answer of the defendant denies each and all averments in the petition after certain words, designated in the answer. It sets out that the plaintiffs are manufacturers of glass; that the defendant is a wholesale dealer in glass. It admits the contract as pleaded in the petition; and the answer sets out that there are in the glass market :i the United States four grades of window glass, which are known by different names in the eastern and western markets; the four grades and qualities being called in the eastern market, beginning with the best quality, 1st, 2d, 3d and 4th quality : and in the western market, the grades beginning with AA, A, B and C. The grade or quality known in the eastern, market as “ 2d ” being known in the western market as “A; ” and the grade or quality known in the eastern market as “ 3 ” being known in the western market as “ B ” ; and that Tillyer and Company warranted that the quality should be 2d and 3d, and that this referred to the grades or qualities mentioned. That the plaintiffs did not deliver to defendant fifty-five hundred boxes of window glass,"but only fifty-one hundred and thirty-four boxes; and that the quality sold for the M qualityand branded as quality “ A,” were net of that quality, but of an inferior grade and quality known as “ 3 ” or “ B,” or even worse; and that the boxes sold and delivered as quality “ 3,” and branded as quality B,” did not .Contain that, but were of the inferior grade and quality of “ 4” or “ C.” Faefi of said grades or qualities is of different brand or value from -'.11 others; qualities “ 3 ” and “ 4 ” being- of less value than quality “ 2; and quality “ 4 ” of less value than quality “ 3.” That by the failure of the plaintiffs to deliver the qualities specified, which were the qualities ordered of said plaintiffs by said defendant under this contract, said defendant was damaged by said plaintiffs in the sum of $612.32. Neither was the glass properly packed in said boxes, in consequence of which a large amount of said glass, amounting to ten per cent, thereof, when the same was unpacked after delivery to these parties on board the cars at Cleveland, Ohio, was found to be broken, the value of said broken glass amounting to $922.25. Since the making of the contract, the price of glass such as described in the [212]*212contract has increased in the market by the sum of 23 cents per box, and by the failure of the plaintiffs to deliver to defendant the remainder or said fifty-five hundred boxes, defendant has been damaged by plaintiffs in the further sum of $227.18; and that plaintiffs charge defendant with glass as delivered, which was not delivered, amounting, in an invoice on the 23d day of May, to the sum of $4.16. That in an invoice on the 6th day of July, 1889, there was missing one box of 22x28 “B” single, amounting to $2.04. From time to time, as plaintiffs forwarded to defendant their glass, plaintiffs drew on defendant drafts for the price of said glass, which were paid by the defendant, and the defendant attaches an Exhibit, “A,” and marks it part of his answer, which shows the debit side and the true statement of the drafts drawn and paid by the defendant, and the discount to which they were entitled on the payments, showing said shortages, and in fact a complete statement of the entire account as understood by the defendant; and defendant avers that there is due, by reason of the premises, from the plaintiffs to this defendant, the sum of $696.13, with interest thereon from the 15th day of July, 1889.

Numerous errors are assigned here, for which a reversal of the judgment is asked in this court.

Some of these errors assigned pertain to the ruling of the court upon the admission and rejection of testimony. Such of these rulings as we think it necessary to notice, are as follows :

On page 65, of the record, the court ruled out what Yarnell’s man said. It appears from the record, that when complaint was made by the plaintiffs in error to the defendant in error in the quality and condition of the glass, the defendant in error sent a person experienced in the glass business, who was in the employ of Yarnell, to inspect the glass in Cleveland, and it appears, from a letter written by defendant in error, that the expenses of Yarnell’s man were paid by the defendant in error. We are of the opinion that the record shows that this man sent to Cleveland was the agent of the defendant in error, and if that is true, what he said while making the inspection is a part of the res gestae, and should have been submitted in evidence.

On page 66, the defendant undertook to show by Mr. Van Cleve that the quality of the glass was such that it could not be sold in the Cleveland market for glass of the grade for which it was bought, but it had to be sold, if sold at all, as a lower grade. This evidence should have been admitted by the court.

On page 67, the defendant below undertook to show by proper testimony that the drafts accompanying the bills of lading were paid before the glass was received. This the court excluded. This testimony should have been admitted. It is now claimed, that by the defendant below receiving the glass and paying for the same, there was an acceptance of the same under the contract, and that it cannot now be heard to complain. So that it became material for the defendant below to show by proper testimony that it had paid for the glass, so far as it had paid at all, before it arrived in Cleveland.

It was claimed, in the trial of the case, that by the Van Cleve Glass Company receiving the glass and not making any complaint of its quality or condition until some time after its being received, there was a waiver of any defect in the glass, as well as a waiver of the broken condition of the same.

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7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillyer-v-van-cleve-glass-co-ohcirctcuyahoga-1896.