Wilson & Co. v. Curlett

117 A. 6, 140 Md. 147, 1922 Md. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 A. 6 (Wilson & Co. v. Curlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson & Co. v. Curlett, 117 A. 6, 140 Md. 147, 1922 Md. LEXIS 19 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Thisi appeal is from a judgment of the Baltimore City Court recovered in the short note case against the appellant in an attachment proceeding.

In 191Y the appellee, John Curlett, was engaged in the canning business in Morattico, Virginia, and on the 5th of January of that year he entered into a contract, through his brokers or agents, W. E. Robinson & Co., of Belair, Maryland, with the appellant, to sell the appellant three thousand cases of “No. 3 hand packed tomatoes” at $1.05 per dozen,\ f. o. b. Morattico', Virginia, to be delivered when packed / during the season of 191Y. Among the provisions of the' contract were the following:

*149 “Destruction of Factory, etc. — Seller not responsible for full delivery if prevented from making same by destruction of factory, or other providential hindrauces beyond his control.
“Disputes — All disputes under this contract shall be arbitrated in the usual manner, and the decision of the arbitrators shall be final, each arbitrator to be paid $5.00 and necessary expenses, cost of arbitration to be paid by the loser.”

Including the contract with the appellant, the appellee had contracted to pack and sell during that season in all 8500 cases of tomatoes. In addition to those planted on his own land, he had contracted with farmers, in the neighborhood of his factory for one hundred and seventy-five acres of tomatoes, and had made all other necessary arrangements, including the purchase of cans, for packing 15,000 cases. Beginning in July, 1917, and continuing through a period of forty days, there were frequent and very heavy rains, which resulted in reducing the tomato crop to the extent of one-third, and about the 18th of September there was a very early frost, which destroyed the tomatoes and put an end to canning for that season. Notwithstanding the damage to the crop by the heavy rains, the appellee confidently expected to have more than enough to meet all his contracts, but in consequence of the frost, which does not usually occur in that section of Virginia, until about the last of October, the appellee canned only about 5,000 cases. Prior to the frost the appellee shipped about 3,000 cases to parties with whom he had contracted, including 600 eases shipped to the appellant, hut after the frost, when the appellee realized that he would not he able to supply the full amounts called for in his contracts, he shipped the balance of his pack, consisting of about 2,000 eases,, to the “Terminal Warehouse” in 'Baltimore- City for storage in his own name, for the purpose of meeting a demand made upon him by the Government, and pro-rating: the balance among those with whom he had contracted. In -Time, 1917, the “Committee on Canned Foods,” *150 said to be acting “with the Council of National Defense and the various Departments of the Government/’ notified all eanners that they were required to reserve eighteen per cent, of their pack of tomatoes, subject to the order of the Government, for the use of the Army and Navy. The appellee received a copy of this order or notice, and the Government also sent inspectors to his factory to warn him that he was required to reserve eighteen pea* cent, of his pack for the use of the Government. Of the 2,000 cases which the appellee shipped to the warehouse for storage, the Government took 1,100 eases, for which the appellee received $1.70 per dozen, or $3.40 per case, and 685 cases were shipped to the order of the appellant. The appellant paid for the . 600 cases shipped by the appellee in September, but refused to pay the contract price of the 685 cases, claiming that it was entitled to damages from the appellee by reason of his failure to ship^ the 3,000 oases contracted for.

This suit was brought to recover the contract price of the 685 cases', and interest thereon, and during the trial, which resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $1,518.44, the defendant reserved forty exceptions, all of which relate to rulings on the evidence, except the last, which, was to the granting of plaintiff’s two prayers and the rejection of defendant’s first, second, third and fifth prayers.

The contentions of the appellant are, as stated in their brief:

“1. That the clause of the contract between the parties excusing the appellee from making full delivery in the event of ‘destruction of factory or other providential hindrances beyond his control’ did not excuse him from making full delivery by reason of crop failure due to a heavy rainfall followed by an early frost, under the circumstances found in this case.
“2. That the appellee had no right to proceed into court with his case without first offering to comply with the arbitration provision of his contract, which *151 reads: ‘All disputes under this contract shall he arbitrated in the usual manner, and the decision of the arbitrators shall be final.
“3. That there was no warrant in law for the action of the appellee in delivering tomatoes to the Government at the expense of those persons, including the appellant, who held contracts with him for his 1917 pack.”

In support of the first contention, counsel for the appellant argpe that, under the familiar rule ajusdem generis, the words “other providential hindrances” cannot be held to include “hindrances” due to heavy rainfalls or early frost mentioned in the evidence, and they say: “If his factory were destroyed, his facilities for canning tomatoes would vanish, and it is apparent that he could not possibly fulfill his contract. In like manner, if there were ’an actual commandeer by the Government as a war measure of the tomato crop in the entire United States sufficiently close to his cannery not to permit him to purchase fruit on the open market and transport it to his cannery without, rotting, he might he reliever!, although of course, it would not he a ‘providential hindrance.’ So, a total failure of the tomato crop throughout the eastern section of the United States might relieve him of responsibility.” In the plaintiff’s first prayer the court instructed the jury that the words, “providential hindrances beyond his control,” used in the contract mean “such acts only as, may he attributed to the act of God, and uot to mere unavoidable causes, such as accident resulting from and attributable to human conduct”; and counsel for the appellant say in their brief that the prayer contains the proper definition of the terms of the contract. But they insist that the act of God relied on must he such as “prevented” the fulfillment of the contract, or rendered fulfillment impossible. Even if we were fi> accept this view as being strictly correct, when we turn to the evidence we find that the appellee testified in chief that after the frost in September “it was impossible to get any tomatoes, * * * *152 That he tried to get tomatoes sufficient in amount to enable him to pack but was unable to do so,” and on cross-examination he said that there w'as not a single acre of tomatoes in '“my whole section of the- country that was not contracted for in 1917,” and that he tried to find some tomatoes that were not contracted for and 'failed.

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Bluebook (online)
117 A. 6, 140 Md. 147, 1922 Md. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-co-v-curlett-md-1922.