Worcester Post Co. v. W. H. Parsons & Co.

257 F. 774, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 829
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 1, 1919
DocketNos. 779, 780
StatusPublished

This text of 257 F. 774 (Worcester Post Co. v. W. H. Parsons & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worcester Post Co. v. W. H. Parsons & Co., 257 F. 774, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 829 (D. Mass. 1919).

Opinion

MlORTON, District Judge.

These are two actions at law, by separate plaintiffs against the same defendant, to recover damages in each case for failure to deliver paper which the plaintiffs claim the defendant sold to them. The basic facts were similar in the two cases, and by agreement—trial by juty having been waived—they were heard together by the court; certain facts being stipulated, and oral and written evidence being introduced.

The material facts are as follows:

The contracts of sale were in writing on printed forms, and were alike, except in details not significant in the present controversy. Both were dated November 11, 1914. The first clause, which is the important one, reads as follows:

“First. The manufacturer hereby agrees to sell and furnish to the purchaser,- and the purchaser hereby agrees to purchase and take from the manufacturer, for use in the publication of the Worcester Post, a newspaper published in the city of Worcester, Mass., 900 tons of newspaper to be taken [775]*775at approximately 45 tons per month; but the purchaser shall be required to take not less than-tons and the manufacturer agrees to furnish not more than- tons in any one month, during the period from December 1, 1911. to August 1, 1916, at the price and upon the terms hereinafter particularly stated. And this contract shall not be assignable.”

Other provisions of the contract specify certain details as to the sort of paper, obligate the purchaser to pay, provide against strikes, etc., and give the right of termination ior failure to pay. No questions arise on any of these points.

The last clause reads:

‘‘This agreement shall commence on the 1st day of December, 1914, and shall terminate on the 1st. day of August, 1916.”

The Lowell Sun contract was the same mutatis mutandis.

After the contracts took effect, each plaintiff sent, from month to mouth, delivery orders to the defendant for paper. These orders specified the sizes and details of what was wanted; and they were duly filled by the defendant. During the first 2 months of its contract the Post took only 46 tons in all, in but 3 months of the 20 covered by ihe contract did it take as much as 45 tons, and it never took more than 48.5 tons in a month. The deliveries called for under the Sun contract were very irregular, ranging from 19 tons to 63. No explanations were offered by the buyers for their failure to take the full monthly amounts, and no suggestion was made'by the seller that they were in default for not doing so. There was no reference by either party to such nondelivery until the contracts were about to expire, when the buyers made the demand hereafter referred to.

When the last month of the contracts was reached, the average monthly amount which had been called for by the Worcester Post was much less than 45 tons, and there remained a difference between what had been ordered and delivered, and the 900 tons specified in the contract, amounting to a little over 200 tons. The Post thereupon demanded delivery of this entire amount, either all at once, or in such installments running past the termination of the contract time as might be convenient to the defendants. The defendant offered to deliver the monthly amount for the last month, which was done, and refused to make any deliveries beyond that. A like situation arose on the Lowell Sun contract, and was similarly dealt with by the parties. The undelivered balance on the Post contract is about 162 tons, and on the Sun contract about 154 tons. Thereupon the present actions were brought.

The question is whether the defendant was obligated to deliver on each contract, either during the month of July or within a reasonable time after July 31st, the balances above referred to.

The plaintiffs contend that the defendant’s failure to object to deficiencies in the monthly delivery orders was a waiver of the delivery terms of the contract, as to the unordcred amounts; in other words, that from the plaintiffs’ failure to order the full contract amount in any month, and the defendant’s silence in relation thereto, there is to be found a new understanding between the parties, whereby the defendant was to deliver the uncalled-for amounts at a later dale. The [776]*776defendant contends that the silence of the parties indicates that both abandoned the contracts as to such amounts.

[1,2] In interpreting the conduct of the parties, all surrounding circumstances which throw light on the matter may be considered, including the evidence as to the preliminary negotiations which was introduced by the plaintiffs against the objection of the defendant. “The subject-matter of the contract, its purpose, and the situation of the parties are material to determine their intention and the meaning pf words used.” Purnell, J., Hull Coal & Coke Co. v. Empire Coal & Coke Co., 113 Fed. 256, at page 260, 51 C. C. A. 213, 217 (C. C. A. 4th Cir.). While the contracts are not by their terms of the kind in which the seller undertakes to supply the buyer’s needs as to. a certain article, that was what both parties understood was in effect being arranged for. There are indications of this in the contracts themselves (e. g., “the purchaser hereby agrees to purchase and take * * ' * for use in the publication pf the Worcester Post [or Lowell Sun],” etc.; monthly deliveries of a stipulated amount are provided for; the terms of the contracts are unusually long; “ * * * and this contract ■ shall not be assignable”), and the discussions , which preceded the contracts clearly show that both parties so understood them. The amounts stated, viz. 900 tons, were not the foundation of the agreements; they were reached, as all agree, by taking the buyers’ estimates of the maximum amounts which they would probably need in any month, and multiplying by the number of months which, it was finally agreed, the contracts should run. They were outside figures not expected to be actually reached. Mr. Harrington testified that he was to “have the privilege of ordering all the paper that he contracted for” if he saw fit to do so; but he also testified that, when he was asked by the defendant’s representative (during the negotiations) what the situation would be if he (Harrington) did not see fit to order it all, Harrington replied, “We may adjust it in making a new contract.” His attitude plainly was that he was not bound to take more than he saw fit to order. The same is true of the other contract. It is significant that under previous contracts, similar in character, between the plaintiffs and the predecessor of tire defendant in the business, orders and deliveries had been for actual needs, without objection on either side, even when the total called for substantially exceeded the contract amount.

The supply aspect of the contracts is important, because, if the parties had in mind, as I think they did, that the real purpose was to provide from month to month such paper as the two newspapers required, a definite waiver oU abandonment of unordered monthly amounts would be more easily inferred than if the purchasers were known to be buying for resale, or for some broader purpose. In the first month of its contract (December, 1914) only 23 tons were ordered by the Post and were delivered. For a year and a half thereafter neither party made any reference to the balance of the 45 tons which should have been ordered and delivered in that month.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 F. 774, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worcester-post-co-v-w-h-parsons-co-mad-1919.