DENISON, Circuit Judge.
The'Sloss-Sheffield Company, as manufacturing vendor, made a contract in October, 1919, with the Vogt Company, as purchaser, for the delivery to the latter of 200 tons of pig iron in equal monthly installments during the first six months of 1920. Within a few days, and during October, the purchaser expressed a wish to withdraw, and requested cancellation. The request was refused, and much correspondence followed. During the latter part of March, the purchaser’s absolute refusal to accept the shipment, then or thereafter, was made clear. The Sloss-Sheffield Company brought this action in the court below, alleging that the contract was one of sale; that the January and February shipments had been postponed until March at the purchaser’s request; that the purchaser then definitely refused the first three monthly shipments; that during each of the next three months plaintiff offered a proper monthly shipment but defendant refused to give shipping directions; that the market price at the end of March and at the end of each of the next three months was less than the contract price, by increasing amounts; and that the total of these differences made up the damages which plaintiff was entitled to recover. Defendant answered, to the effect that the contract was not one of sale, but of manufacture, and that it had absolutely counter[56]*56manded in October, thus furnishing the date as of ' which damages should be fixed. After trial before a jury, each party requested an instructed verdict, and neither made any other request. The court then instructed a verdict, adopting the theories of contract and of damages set out in plaintiff’s petition.
The. ¡chief controversy between the parties was as to whether this was a contract of sale or of manufacture. If the former, the plaintiff was entitled to the instruction given (with minor exceptions to be noted). If the latter, plaintiff’s recovery should stand upon the basis of lost profits; and, as there was no evidence on that subject, verdict for the defendant should have been instructed.
We are strongly inclined to classify this contract, on its face, as one of sale. The nomenclature and phraseology are, in all respects save one, those of a sale contract, since the clause which designates the iron to be sold as “Grade, Sloss” and fixes the chemical analysis, serves only to identify the property sold. The single exception is the clause which says:
“The seller shall not be responsible for delays caused by strikes, differences with workmen, accidents at the works, shortage of cars, delays in transportation, or other causes beyond its control.”
This clause carries some color of manufacture, but it would not be at all inappropriate in an ordinary sales contract, where the vendor was expecting to buy its needs from manufacturers in that line. What seems to be probably the same form of contract was expressly held to be one of sale, and not of manufacture, in a careful opinion by the Circuit Court of Appeals in the Third Circuit (Kutztown Co. v. SlossSheffield Co., 279 Fed. 627, 631), and we see no satisfactory reason to doubt the same conclusion as applied to our contract.
However, if there were doubt on that subject, that doubt would send us to the evidence for. its solution. It appeared that the plaintiff was a very large manufacturer of pig iron, producing at the time the contract was made 1,500 tons per day, of various qualities and grades, and regularly producing, of the particular grade called for by this contract, some 150 tons per day. There would therefore, naturally, be no buying of materials or factory preparation and operation on account of this particular comparatively trifling contract, and the evidence is express that there was no such preparation. If there was any issue of fact involved, the conclusion of the court must be taken as a finding of fact that the contract was one of sale; and it is the familiar rule that, upon a joint request for an instructed verdict, any finding of fact inherent in the result reached must be sustained if there is any evidence to support it. Letta v. Cincinnati Co. (C. C. A. 6) 285 Fed. 707, 708.
The contract was expressly separable and independent as to each monthly delivery, and there remained many questions as to the right dates for fixing the market values to be used as standards of comparison. Defendant says that the 'cancellation was made a few days after the contract, and shows that the market price was then the same as the contract price. While there was testimony as to oral communications between the parties, it is not fairly to be inferred that there was [57]*57any intention on either side to say anything inconsistent with the contemporaneous letters. The written order of the vendee, in its final form, was accepted by the vendor on October 4. On October 11, the vendee wrote that it had suffered cancellation of its selling contracts, which it had expected to fill with this iron, and hence “we would be obliged to ask you that you cancel this contract.” This letter was written to plaintiff’s brokers, who acknowledged receipt of the “request for cancellation,” and said that they had submitted it to the plaintiff. October 20 plaintiff wrote the defendant, declining to cancel, and ■“trusting that conditions may improve with your good company, and that you will have no difficulty in using the iron as contracted for.” ■On October 23 defendant replied, stating-the hardships of its situation •and saying, “We trust, therefore, that you will -reconsider your deci.sion in the matter.” Plaintiff replied that it could not consider cancellation, and insisted that it was just and right that the contract should be carried out. Then the matter was argued back and forth by continuous correspondence of the same nature, and not until the letters written in March did defendant make it clear beyond dispute that it considered the cancellation was absolute, and would not then or later accept any shipment against the order.
We do not think such correspondence should be construed as an absolute repudiation by the vendee until it takes its final form. Running through the letters was not only an effort on the part of each to persuade the other not to insist, but also an effort to' agree upon the amount of damages which defendant would pay if plaintiff would grant the requested privilege of cancellation. A purchaser who, without any legal excuse, intends definitely and finally to repudiate a contract, must make that intention clear beyond doubt or cpnfusion. We therefore must approve.the action of the trial judge in adopting March as the time of the first absolute refusal to accept.
We cannot, however, infer, as he did, that the vendee had requested the January and February deliveries to be postponed, and that therefore the breach as to the first three deliveries should be taken as of March. We think tóere was no basis for a finding of intention to ask any delayed deliveries. The negotiations were upon the subject of an •entire ¡cancellation, and, when these negotiations failed, they had no remaining effect; but the three monthly breaches existed as if there had been no delay in deciding whether to waive them and adopt a new basis. The result is that the damages for these three .months should have been computed as of each month separately, instead of figuring all as of March. This would make a difference of about $250 in the result. The parties can probably agree upon an exact- computation. _
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DENISON, Circuit Judge.
The'Sloss-Sheffield Company, as manufacturing vendor, made a contract in October, 1919, with the Vogt Company, as purchaser, for the delivery to the latter of 200 tons of pig iron in equal monthly installments during the first six months of 1920. Within a few days, and during October, the purchaser expressed a wish to withdraw, and requested cancellation. The request was refused, and much correspondence followed. During the latter part of March, the purchaser’s absolute refusal to accept the shipment, then or thereafter, was made clear. The Sloss-Sheffield Company brought this action in the court below, alleging that the contract was one of sale; that the January and February shipments had been postponed until March at the purchaser’s request; that the purchaser then definitely refused the first three monthly shipments; that during each of the next three months plaintiff offered a proper monthly shipment but defendant refused to give shipping directions; that the market price at the end of March and at the end of each of the next three months was less than the contract price, by increasing amounts; and that the total of these differences made up the damages which plaintiff was entitled to recover. Defendant answered, to the effect that the contract was not one of sale, but of manufacture, and that it had absolutely counter[56]*56manded in October, thus furnishing the date as of ' which damages should be fixed. After trial before a jury, each party requested an instructed verdict, and neither made any other request. The court then instructed a verdict, adopting the theories of contract and of damages set out in plaintiff’s petition.
The. ¡chief controversy between the parties was as to whether this was a contract of sale or of manufacture. If the former, the plaintiff was entitled to the instruction given (with minor exceptions to be noted). If the latter, plaintiff’s recovery should stand upon the basis of lost profits; and, as there was no evidence on that subject, verdict for the defendant should have been instructed.
We are strongly inclined to classify this contract, on its face, as one of sale. The nomenclature and phraseology are, in all respects save one, those of a sale contract, since the clause which designates the iron to be sold as “Grade, Sloss” and fixes the chemical analysis, serves only to identify the property sold. The single exception is the clause which says:
“The seller shall not be responsible for delays caused by strikes, differences with workmen, accidents at the works, shortage of cars, delays in transportation, or other causes beyond its control.”
This clause carries some color of manufacture, but it would not be at all inappropriate in an ordinary sales contract, where the vendor was expecting to buy its needs from manufacturers in that line. What seems to be probably the same form of contract was expressly held to be one of sale, and not of manufacture, in a careful opinion by the Circuit Court of Appeals in the Third Circuit (Kutztown Co. v. SlossSheffield Co., 279 Fed. 627, 631), and we see no satisfactory reason to doubt the same conclusion as applied to our contract.
However, if there were doubt on that subject, that doubt would send us to the evidence for. its solution. It appeared that the plaintiff was a very large manufacturer of pig iron, producing at the time the contract was made 1,500 tons per day, of various qualities and grades, and regularly producing, of the particular grade called for by this contract, some 150 tons per day. There would therefore, naturally, be no buying of materials or factory preparation and operation on account of this particular comparatively trifling contract, and the evidence is express that there was no such preparation. If there was any issue of fact involved, the conclusion of the court must be taken as a finding of fact that the contract was one of sale; and it is the familiar rule that, upon a joint request for an instructed verdict, any finding of fact inherent in the result reached must be sustained if there is any evidence to support it. Letta v. Cincinnati Co. (C. C. A. 6) 285 Fed. 707, 708.
The contract was expressly separable and independent as to each monthly delivery, and there remained many questions as to the right dates for fixing the market values to be used as standards of comparison. Defendant says that the 'cancellation was made a few days after the contract, and shows that the market price was then the same as the contract price. While there was testimony as to oral communications between the parties, it is not fairly to be inferred that there was [57]*57any intention on either side to say anything inconsistent with the contemporaneous letters. The written order of the vendee, in its final form, was accepted by the vendor on October 4. On October 11, the vendee wrote that it had suffered cancellation of its selling contracts, which it had expected to fill with this iron, and hence “we would be obliged to ask you that you cancel this contract.” This letter was written to plaintiff’s brokers, who acknowledged receipt of the “request for cancellation,” and said that they had submitted it to the plaintiff. October 20 plaintiff wrote the defendant, declining to cancel, and ■“trusting that conditions may improve with your good company, and that you will have no difficulty in using the iron as contracted for.” ■On October 23 defendant replied, stating-the hardships of its situation •and saying, “We trust, therefore, that you will -reconsider your deci.sion in the matter.” Plaintiff replied that it could not consider cancellation, and insisted that it was just and right that the contract should be carried out. Then the matter was argued back and forth by continuous correspondence of the same nature, and not until the letters written in March did defendant make it clear beyond dispute that it considered the cancellation was absolute, and would not then or later accept any shipment against the order.
We do not think such correspondence should be construed as an absolute repudiation by the vendee until it takes its final form. Running through the letters was not only an effort on the part of each to persuade the other not to insist, but also an effort to' agree upon the amount of damages which defendant would pay if plaintiff would grant the requested privilege of cancellation. A purchaser who, without any legal excuse, intends definitely and finally to repudiate a contract, must make that intention clear beyond doubt or cpnfusion. We therefore must approve.the action of the trial judge in adopting March as the time of the first absolute refusal to accept.
We cannot, however, infer, as he did, that the vendee had requested the January and February deliveries to be postponed, and that therefore the breach as to the first three deliveries should be taken as of March. We think tóere was no basis for a finding of intention to ask any delayed deliveries. The negotiations were upon the subject of an •entire ¡cancellation, and, when these negotiations failed, they had no remaining effect; but the three monthly breaches existed as if there had been no delay in deciding whether to waive them and adopt a new basis. The result is that the damages for these three .months should have been computed as of each month separately, instead of figuring all as of March. This would make a difference of about $250 in the result. The parties can probably agree upon an exact- computation. _
_ [7] When this definite renouncement was made in March, plaintiff •doubtless had the right to accept that as an anticipatory breach, and compute its damages with reference to the market prices at that time; but plaintiff was under no obligation to do so. It had the right to do as it did, refuse to accept renunciation, and insist that the contract be carried out, tender monthly delivery each month, and compute damages according to the measure of the market price at each monthlv refusal. Roehm v. Horst, 178 U. S. 1, 11, 20 Sup. Ct. 780, 44 L. Ed. 953.
[58]*58The market price at the end of each month was proved, and was used as the basis of computation for the deliveries of each month. There was no evidence as to the market price at any intermediate dates. As to the last three months, -fre think that defendant was entitled to use-the market price as of the earlier period in each month, when there was an actual tender and an actual refusal of the delivery for that month, and that, under those circumstances, the ordinary rule of adopting the-market price on the last day when the vendor was entitled to make delivery, would not apply. The evidence shows such definite tender and refusal on or about the 6th days of April, May, and June, respectively. Hence it seems that the market price at the end of the preceding month-is more likely to be the true measure than is that price at the end of the current month. Certainly the vendee, defaulting upon a steadily declining market, cannot complain if the earlier date and smaller amount are adopted, and a remitting of those damages which came from adopting the later rather than the earlier date will cure any error which resulted from not taking the intermediate and correct date. This difference seems to be about $158; here also an exact computation can probably be agreed upon.
The judgment will be affirmed, upon condition that within 30 days, or such further time as the District Court may allow, the plaintiff file a certified copy of proceedings below, showing that the judgment has been duly remitted to the extent of the two items of about $250 and $158, above mentioned; otherwise, it will be reversed. In either events the plaintiff in error will recover his costs of this court.