78 Md. 239 | Md. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The only questions involved in the two cases now before us arise on the single exception reserved to the rulings of the Superior Court of Baltimore on several prayers for instructions to the jury. There were two actions between the same parties tried at the same time in the Court below. In one, Walker and Myers, the appellees here, were plaintiffs, and the appellants were defendants; in the other Bagby and Rivers, the appellants here, were plaintiffs, and the appellees were defendants. In the first, Walker and Myers sued to recover the balance due upon the contract price of certain lumber sold and delivered by them to Bagby and Rivers; and also to recover the difference between the contract price and the market price of certain other lumber subsequently ordered, but which Bagby and Rivers refused to accept. A judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs. In the second case Bagby and Rivers sued to recover damages for a failure on the part of Walker and Myers to deliver the kind and quality of lumber stipulated for, and also for a failure to deliver within the time designated in the agreement a large part of the lumber sold by them to Bagby and Rivers. A judgment of non pros, was entered in the case.
The contract is embodied in a letter from Bagby and Rivers to Walker and Myers under date of January the twenty-ninth, 1891, and a written acceptance of the terms, by Walker and Myers on the same date. The time limited for filling the order was three months. The first delivery under this written contract, about the execution of which there is no dispute, was made in the following March, and the last on November the twenty-seventh, of the same year, long after the expiration of the three
Upon these facts the Court instructed the jury at the instance of Walker and Myers that notwithstanding the mention in the letter of January, 1891, of the period of three months as the limit within which the lumber was to be furnished, still, if the jury should find that Bagby
Mere acceptance of the lumber after the expiration of the time fixed in the agreement for its delivery was not of itself a waiver of the breach committed by the failure to deliver it according to the terms of the contract; nor did such an acceptance preclude the vendees from subsequently suing to recover the damages resulting to them by reason of the non-delivery, from the time of default up to the date of acceptance; nor from recouping, when sued by the vendors, those damages against the latter’s claim for the purchase money. Central Trust Co., &c. vs. Arctic Ice Machine Manuf. Co., 77 Md., 202. The instruction does not question these principles. It does not proceed upon the' theory that acceptance after a refusal to deliver within the stipulated time is of itself, without more, equivalent to a waiver of the time for delivery, but distinctly leaves to the jury to find from the evidence in the case, whether, as an independent fact, Bagby and Rivers waived the requirement that the lumber should
The two remaining instructions, given at the instance of Walker and Myers, relate to the lumber which Bagby and Rivers refused to receive. There were three objections suggested to the first of these two instructions, which is the third prayer of Walker and Myers, and they are first, that the instruction makes reference to the facts stated in an antecedent prayer which was rejected and which was consequently not before the jury; second, that the contract upon which it permits a recovery is void under the seventeenth section of the Statute of Frauds; and third, that no time having been named in the verbal contract for the delivery of lumber under it, a reasonable time was implied by law, and the finding of what was a reasonable time should have been left to the jury.
The first objection is not a substantial one. A reference to the facts stated in the rejected prayer was wholly superfluous. Eliminating that reference altogether in no way affected the integrity of the instruction. Its re
The Superior Court rejected the first and fourth prayers presented by Bagby and Rivers, and these prayers raise the only other questions open for review. The fourth prayer was very properly abandoned in the argument,' and we need therefore give to it no consideration.
The first prayer of Bagby and Rivers asked the Court to say to the jury that if they should find that Bagby and Rivers were induced to receive the lumber by false representations knowingly made by Walker and Myers as to its quality and condition, then Bagby and Rivers would not be bound by any inspection made by them of the lumber. We need only say, in disposing of this prayer, that there is no evidence in the record to show that Walker and Myers knowingly made any false representations as to the quality and condition of the lumber, and that therefore it would have been improper to allow the jury to speculate upon that subject, as they must have done had this prayer been granted.
It follows from the views we have expressed, that there was ,no error committed by the Court in its rulings in the case of Bagby and Rivers against Walker and Myers, and its judgment of non pros, in that case will be affirmed. It also follows that, as there was error committed in granting the third and fourth prayers presented by Walker and Myers, the judgment in the case
Judgment in No. 35 reversed, with costs above and helots, and new trial'awarded. Judgment in No. 36 affirmed, with costs above and below.