Weinstein v. Studebaker Corp.

238 F. 963, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1180
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 29, 1916
DocketNo. 3948
StatusPublished

This text of 238 F. 963 (Weinstein v. Studebaker Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weinstein v. Studebaker Corp., 238 F. 963, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1180 (E.D. Pa. 1916).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This case affords an illustration (although it is not quite a characteristic instance) of that class of contracts in which fact and substance are wholly ignored, and fiction and form are made to do duty in their stead. In fact and substance the business'proposed by the parties to be done was the manufacture of automobiles by the defendant, to be delivered to the plaintiff’s bankrupt at a price, and to be sold by the latter at another price, and to be paid for on delivery. The gross profit to the bankrupt would therefore be the difference between the prices thus fixed and its net profits this difference, less freight and the expenses of selling the automobiles to the ultimate purchasers'. To accomplish this an agreement was made in anticipation of tfie contract of sale. To secure to the manufacturer all the benefits of such a transaction, without any of its attendant risks, certain writings were made and signed. These are not with flippancy, but with earnestness, characterized by counsel for defendant, as a jumble of a contract of sale which was no sale, an agency agreement which created no agency, an order for automobiles and its acceptance, which was neither an order nor an acceptance, a contract of bailment where there was no bailment, and, to crown all, provisions were added that the agreements might be annulled, and the order, or its acceptance, canceled at will, and claims for any breaches of the contract were waived. In fact, he charges the agreements with being so one-sided, inequitable, and lacking in mutuality as to be absolutely void, and so meaningless as to be unenforceable. We may accept his characterization without the concession of the right of his client to make a hard bargain and then refuse to abide by it. Indeed, this seemingly difficult accomplishment of traveling in opposite directions at one and the same time and of attaining the unattainable was nevertheless accomplished through the simple expedient of entering into an agreement setting forth the terms and conditions upon which any orders given by the bankrupt for automobiles and accepted by the defendant were to be deemed to have been accepted. The arrangement between the parties was all embodied in writings, the only features of which now of importance to us are the following (at least, these will serve as illustrations of all which now concern us):

[965]*965There are two of these writings — the preliminary paper and the order and its acceptance already mentioned. The preliminary paper was not to take effect until and unless automobiles were ordered, and the acceptance of the order automatically incorporated the preliminary agreement as a statement of the terms and conditions of acceptance. The automobiles ordered were to be delivered f. o. b. cars at Detroit, and shipped to Philadelphia, consigned to the bankrupt, but were‘to be paid for before or at the time they were put on the cars. There was a provision that the defendant might, at its option, ship to Philadelphia with sight drafts accompanying bill of lading; the consignee paying the freight. There was also a provision that nothing done by the defendant should be construed as a waiver of any of the benefits of the contract or estop * it from thereafter insisting upon its strict fulfillment. There was the further stipulation that- the defendant should not be answerable for its default, due to strikes or casualties, and should not be responsible for any failure to ship or ship promptly, due to delays in manufacture, and that the defendant might declare the agreement off at any time, and should be under no obligation to deliver any automobiles previously ordered, but as yet undelivered. The bankrupt filed with the defendant an order for 300 automobiles, and the order was accepted subject to the terms of the preliminary agreement. The order set forth the times of delivery and the number and kind of cars to be delivered at each of the times mentioned. Some cars were, delivered, but none at the times called for in the original order. The order was in part canceled by the bankrupt, and this resulted in a cancellation of a further part of the order under the terms of its acceptance. The cars which were shipped came to Philadelphia, with sight drafts accompanying the bills of lading, and for some of them the defendant extended indulgence in the time and mode'of payment. The bankrupt further asked and was granted the privilege of accepting deliveries pf one type of car ordered and not accepting another type, the order for which was canceled. The bankrupt neither ■ paid nor offered to pay for any cars at time of shipment.

The action is by the trustee in bankruptcy, the claim being made for the lost profits on the cars not delivered, less those the order for which was canceled, and less also cars which were to have been shipped before the date when the first cars were shipped. The reason for this latter deduction will later appear. It is clear that the transaction as arranged between the parties was in substance this: .

The cars to be sold by the bankrupt to> its customers had not been manufactured. The bankrupt did not know how many it could sell, nor did the defendant know how many it would- be able to manufacture, nor how rapidly it could turn them out. Neither party was willing to bind itself by a hard and fast contract. Their agreement therefore was nothing more than a tentative estimate of what each expected, or at least hoped to be able, to do. The defendant sought to protect itself by the reservation of at least two rights. One was to withhold deliveries unless the cars were paid for before or on delivery. The other was, if the demand for cars was accompanied with the offer of payment, to terminate the contract. If it had the cars to spare, it [966]*966was in a position to let them go. If it did not have them, it could end the contract. As long as the bankrupt was content to accept such number of cars as the defendant was able to send, the dealings could drift along.

The bankrupt was not so happily circumstanced, but it was confronted with a very practical- situation. It could not expect the defendant to make an absolute agreement to deliver, unless it made an absolute agreement to pay for the cars when delivered, whether purchasers had been found or not. It therefore accepted the only agreement it could get. There was a well-founded expectation that the defendant would be as willing as itself to fill orders for all cars which could be sold. It did not attempt to force the delivery, because it knew this would result in the contract being called off. It was therefore content to- plead for the cars it wanted, instead of demanding them.

The discussion of the defense took a wide range and issues of fact were presented to the jury which had no proper place among the real issues. The trial was conducted by both counsel with signal ability and earnestness. If the trial tactics employed were open to question, it was in the bringing into the defense of some extraneous matters and an over-anxiety on the part of plaintiff to meet anticipated defenses. One of these features of defense now made the subject of complaint was the charge that the defendant had been deceived and misled into making the contract, by a false show of credit and financial strength on the part of the bankrupt. It is now asserted (and perhaps with truth) that this prejudiced the jury against the plaintiff. Obviously this had no bearing upon the issue of performance, except that so far as deception was admitted-to'have been practiced by a witness it went to his credibility.

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Bluebook (online)
238 F. 963, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinstein-v-studebaker-corp-paed-1916.