Worth-Huskey Coal Co. v. Columbia Malting Co.

230 Ill. App. 165, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 86
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 3, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,653
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 230 Ill. App. 165 (Worth-Huskey Coal Co. v. Columbia Malting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worth-Huskey Coal Co. v. Columbia Malting Co., 230 Ill. App. 165, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 86 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Upon the breach of an instalment contract the rights of the vendor and vendee are now to be determined by the Uniform Sales Act. By section 45 of that Act [Cahill’s Ill. St. eh. 121a, [¶] 48] the following rule is announced:

“Where there is a contract to sell goods to be delivered by stated installments, which are to be separately paid for, and the seller makes defective deliveries in respect of one or more installments, or the buyer neglects or refuses to take delivery of or pay for one or more installments, it depends in each case on the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the case, whether the breach of contract is so material as to justify the injured party in refusing to proceed further and suing for damages for breach of the entire contract, or whether the breach is severable, giving rise to a claim for compensation, but not to a right to treat the whole contract as broken.”

Whether the law is now as it used to be is, therefore, unimportant. Since the passage of the aforesaid act it seems to be necessary in an equitable way to consider the substance of the alleged default, its effect, and to give a remedy according to the substance of the wrong. Helgar Corporation v. Warner’s Features, Inc., 222 N. Y. 449.

As the statute states, “it depends in each case on the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the case,” whether the breach is sufficient to justify the injured party in refusing to proceed further and sue for damages for a breach of the entire contract, or, on the other hand, “whether the breach is severable, giving rise to a claim for compensation, but not to a right to treat the whole contract as broken. ’ ’ So it would seem that what the court must do necessarily varies according to the particular facts in each instance. (Williston on Sales, p. 810.)

The first letter, urging the Malting Company to pay, was dated November 25, 1916, only a month after the contract was made; and that letter gave as a reason that it, the Coal Company, had “to advance considerable money * * * to buy outside” of their mine and was in need of funds. On January 8, 1917, the Coal Company wrote that since December 30, 1916, there had been a railroad embargo and the yards in Chicago were blocked. No other correspondence on the matter thereafter occurred until March 3, 1917, when the Malting Company wrote the Coal Company directing it to withhold shipments until further orders, and directing the Coal Company to ship nothing but from the Knox County mine. And by that letter the Malting Company then asked what shipments might be expected under those conditions.

Of course, the Malting Company could not change the written contract by merely requesting the Coal Company to ship coal only from the Coal Company mine when that contract provided that when necessary the Coal Company could purchase and ship outside coal. The letter, therefore, of March 3, 1.917, might have been considered by the Coal Company, if it had so chosen, to put an end to the contract, but on March 6, 1917, the Coal Company, in answer to the letter of the Malting Company of March 3, 1917, wrote: “These instructions will be strictly adhered to but we cannot comply with your request to advise you what shipments you may expect, because we do not know.” That letter then informs the Malting Company that there was a railroad embargo as to coal for Chicago and that the division, in which the Coal Company is, was limited to twenty-five cars per day. In that letter the Coal Company also writes: “We would very much appreciate a check for your past due account and trust you will let us have it so that it will reach us not later than the 8th.” On March 23, 1917, the Coal Company again wrote the Malting Company, calling the attention of the latter to its past due account and also to the terms of the contract providing for payment on the 15th of the month following shipment and requesting payment for January and February. In that letter the Coal Company also writes that it has shipped the Malting Company its full proportion of coal, based upon the number of tons the Coal Company was able to produce, and closes: “We must insist upon' immediate settlement of the amount due us unless you wish to consider yourself in default in carrying out your part of said contract.” In that letter there was a statement of account for $3,332.84, for coal which was due on February 15 and March 15, 1917.

The correspondence then shows, for the first time, in a letter dated March 26, 1917, by the Malting Company, some claim on the part of - the Malting Company on account of alleged inferior coal. That letter was to the effect that the Malting Company was surprised “to hear nothing from you as to what reduction you are willing to make, because of the very inferior coal you shipped us.” That letter states also that the Malting Company had complained frequently as to the quality of coal and contains the words, “We do not see why we should stand this loss when it was no fault of ours.”

Owing to the failure of the Malting Company to pay its account, matters came somewhat to a climax when on March 29, 1917, the Coal Company wrote that as the Malting Company had failed to comply with the demand for payment of the January and February invoices, amounting to $3,332.83, “we do not consider ourselves obligated to make further shipments” and shall insist that the March account be paid promptly on or before April 15 “as specified in the contract” or we shall be obliged to institute suit. At that time the evidence shows that the Malting Company had not paid its account from time to time according to the terms of the written contract. It had made some payments but the Coal Company was constantly insisting that the express terms of the contract that the account should be paid on the 15th of the succeeding month should be lived up to.

After March 29, 1917, six letters passed between the Coal Company and the attorney for the Malting Company. The attorney for the Malting Company in a letter dated April 3, 1917, sent a check for $431.32, stating that that was in full for coal that had been received that was satisfactory as to quality. That letter announced that $2,024.39, which was for outside coal “of an exceedingly inferior quality,” the company would not be responsible for. That letter also made a proposition to the effect that the Malting Company would pay the $2,024.39 provided the Coal Company would agree “to ship at contract price”— which would be $1.97 per ton — and satisfactory quality the balance of the contract requirements. That letter also stated that the Malting Company would “not only not pay you the $2,024.39 for the very inferior coal you shipped until their damages are adjusted” but if the Coal Company considered itself no longer bound by the contract then the Malting Company would go into the market and buy their requirements and sue the Coal Company for the difference between the market price and the contract price.

The two letters, one by the Coal Company on April 9, in answer to that of the attorney for the Malting Company of April 3, and the letter of April 11, by the attorney for the Malting Company, discuss further the account and the subject of inferior coal. The Coal Company in its letter of April 9 writes: “The coal so delivered and billed by us was the best obtainable and was not rejected, but was accepted and used by them, and for which they are clearly liable.

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Bluebook (online)
230 Ill. App. 165, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worth-huskey-coal-co-v-columbia-malting-co-illappct-1923.