Wheeler v. New Brunswick & Canada Railroad

115 U.S. 29, 5 S. Ct. 1061, 29 L. Ed. 341, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1810
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 4, 1885
Docket279
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 115 U.S. 29 (Wheeler v. New Brunswick & Canada Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. New Brunswick & Canada Railroad, 115 U.S. 29, 5 S. Ct. 1061, 29 L. Ed. 341, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1810 (1885).

Opinions

[30]*30Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

The case was submitted to the court without a jury, add the question to be decided here is, whether on the finding of facts the judgment for plaintiff below is right.

The action was brought by the railroad company on the following agreement:

“ New Haven, Jern’y 31, 1880.
James Murchie, Esq.,
V. Pres’tN. Brunswick efe Cemada R. R.
Dear Sir: We have this day bought of you, as representative of the New Brunswick & Canada R. R. Co., one thousand tons old rails, for delivery in New York or New Haven (at our option), at $30, without duty, and delivery to be before Aug. 1st; and also two (2) to six hundred tons, for delivery in New York or New Haven, between August 1st arid October 1st, at $28, without duty. Terms in each case cash ag’st B. L. and insurance policy in satisfactory company.
Yery resp’y, E. S. Wheeler & Col”
“ New Haven, Jarüy 31, ’80. ■
S. Wheeler & Co., New Haven.
We hereby accept your order of this date, and will deliver rails at place and on terms named. Resp. ,
New Brunswick & Canada R. R. Co.,
James Murchie, V. Pres'tC

There was a tender of the rails by the railroad company, and a refusal to receive or pay for them by Wheeíer & Co.

The court finds as a matter of fact that the contract was a. valid contract, and that Murchie had authority to make it on behalf of the company. The controversy in the case grows out of the following correspondence subsequent to the making of the contract by the execution and delivery of the foregoing papers:

“ St. Stephen, Feb. 11th, 1880.
Mess. E. S. Wheeler & Co., New Haven.
Dear Sirs: I herewith enclose a copy of resolution passed at our meeting of directors yesterday.

[31]*31This confirmed the sale ‘ made by me to you ’ by the company, which was done on my arrival home.

The car-wheels and chains that we had on hand were sold before I came home. We will have a large quantity by the time we ship our rails.

Please acknowledge the above.

Yours, truly, James Murchie.

New Brunswick & Canada Railroad Company.

Minute of a resolution passed at a directors’ meeting February 16, 1880.

ResoVoed, That the following sale of old rails, made by Mr. James Murchie to Messrs. E. S. Wheeler & Co., New Haven, Conn., be confirmed: Sold Messrs. E. S. Wheeler & Co. one thousand tons of old rails, for delivery in New York or New Haven, at their option, before August the 1st next, at thirty dollars ($30) per ton of 2,000 lbs., the duty to be paid by Wheeler & Co., and also two hundred to Six hundred tons, for delivery in New York or New Haven between August 1st and October 1st, at- twenty-eight ($28) per ton of 2,000 lbs., the duty to be paid by Wheeler & Co. In each case cash against invoice bill of lading. Insurance policy in satisfactory .company.

True copy: F. H. Todd, Pres.”

“ New Haven, Feb. 28, 1880.

James Murchie, Esq., Vice Pres’t New Brunswick <&

Canada R. R. Co., St. Stephens, Canada.

Dear Sir : We received duly your favor of the 17th inst., enclosing what purports to be a certified copy of a resolution adopted by the directors of the N. B. & C. E. E. Có. in reference to the sale of old rails made by you on behalf of that company to us on the 31st ult. We assume that this resolution was passed merely as a matter of form, and a copy has been sent to us for our information solely, as no mention was made at the' time of the negotiations that you acted subject to any approval by your company. We understood then, and understand now, that the sale made at that time on behalf of your company was [32]*32an absolute and final unconditional sale. We do not understand, further, that this resolution was forwarded to us with the view of in any way modifying that sale in any of its terms.

Furthermore, we understood at the time, and now understand, that the number of pounds in each ton of this contract, there being no contrary specification when the contract was made, was not 2,000 but 2,240. Old rails, like other scrap and like pig-iron, are bought and sold by the gross ton, not only in this market but in every foreign market. The custom of the trade fixing 2,240 as the standard number of pounds in a ton of old rails is universal, and can be excluded from operating on contracts only by distinct conditions fixing-some other quantity. No such conditions were mentioned in the contract of your company with us, and we look, therefore, for the delivery of the rails within the dates named in the contract of your company, and in ‘gross’ not ‘net’ tons. We make no doubt but that your understanding of that contract is in accord with ours, and that in so far as this resolution fixes a different number of pounds for each ton, that it so fixes them by an oversight on the part of the directors. We hope to hear from you at your early convenience.

Yery truly yours, E. S: Wheeler,”

No answer was made to this.letter, nor was any further correspondence had until Juné 14, when the railroad company notified Wheeler & Co. by letter that they had the 1,000 • tons of old rails ready for delivery, and added—

“ In your letter to James Murehie, as vice-president of our company, of February 28, last, you construe the contract as meaning that the ton of rails specified in that contract is 2,240 lbs., or the gross ton; now, without waiving any cf our rights under that contract, but to avoid dispute, we tender you the delivery of the thousand tons at gross weight of 2,240 lbs. to the ton, and ask your determination whether the delivery shall be made at New Haven or New York.
New Brunswick & Canada Railroad Co.
By F. A. ■ Pike, Special Agent.”

[33]*33To which reply was made by the plaintiffs in error as follows:

New Haven, June 15, 1880.
New Brunswick & Canada Railroad Co.
Gentlemen: Your letter of yesterday, advising us that you are ready to deliver to us 1,000 tons of old rails, and asking us to designate a port of delivery, is received.
As.we do not recognize the existence of any such contract of sale as your letter contemplates, we have no instructions to offer upon the subject.
It is true that we triéd last winter to buy of you 1,000 gross tons of old rails at a price which would have netted us a large profit; but this we had to lose, as your company insisted that they were selling net tons, and no contract resulted upon which we could base our sales.
Yery truly yours, • E. S. Wheeler & Co.”

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Bluebook (online)
115 U.S. 29, 5 S. Ct. 1061, 29 L. Ed. 341, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-new-brunswick-canada-railroad-scotus-1885.