Chicago Ry. Equipment Co. v. Superior Charcoal Iron Co.

12 F.2d 235 | 6th Cir. | 1926

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The questions presented to this court are: Whether the seller had broken the contract by its early nondeliveries; whether, if so, the buyer had waived any *236rights thereby resulting to it; whether a valid new contract had been made for delivery after January 1st; and whether interest should be allowed. We have recently had occasion to consider in different aspects several of these installment delivery contracts, and have sufficiently discussed their characteristics and effect. Consolidation Co. v. Peninsular Co., 272 F. 625; Everett v. Emmons Co., 289 F. 686, 692; Kalamazoo Co. v. Gerber, 4 F.(2d) 235, 239, 240; Gerber v. Borderland Co., 5 F.(2d) 278.

They do not easily yield to a hard and fast classification, as being unitary or separate. They may be unitary in some respects and separable in others. Where we have, as here, a contract for a total sum within a fixed time, but deliverable in six installments, it cannot be considered as six separate unrelated contracts. There is no occasion to deny that either party might have had at the end of any month a right of action for an installment-breach, and that later shipments, applicable on later installments, might have been made or received without waiving such damages; but under the conditions here existing there could be nothing more than an optional right to insist that these fractional times were of the essence of the contract. It is difficult to recognize this right as sufficiently fixed to require any very formal waiver to get rid of it; but whether we are thinking of a definite waiver, or of that conduct of the parties which characterizes and interprets a somewhat ambiguous obligation, it seems clear that on December 10th the buyer had no right to repudiate its remaining tonnage liability upon the ground that the seller had been delinquent in former months. Whether the buyer might nevertheless have had a right to counterclaim for its damages is a question not raised. During July, an earlier unexpired contract of the same kind between the same parties was being completed. During September, at least for a part of the time, the nonshipment was at the buyer’s request, and never, from, the beginning of operations under the contract until December 31st, or, for that matter, even then, had there been a suggestion from the buyer that the seller was not carrying out its contract in accordance with the understanding of the buyer and to its complete satisfaction.

We see no escape from the conclusion that, on these undisputed facts and on the 10th day of December, the seller was obliged to deliver and the buyer was obliged to accept the remaining 435 tons on or before December 31st, unless the time should be extended. The buyer denies that the time for delivery was mutually extended, and the jury has found accordingly, pursuant to the first count of the declaration. The buyer cannot have been prejudiced at the trial by any ruling or decision with regard to the seller’s right to recover as upon an extension, upon the theory of the second count.

The verdict of the jury as finally entered was for a specific amount for damages and for a specific amount for interest; judgment was entered for the total. We see no reason why the Michigan statute (section 5996, C. L. 1915), which contemplates interest after liquidation, may not reach an antedated liquidation by the jury as well as the finding by the lumber inspector of Hettler Co. v. Olds (C. C. A. 6) 242 F. 456, 155 C. C. A. 232. Under the court’s charge and the undisputed testimony, the jury clearly assessed the damages as of December 31st. Whatever doubt there was as to the federal rule, where not controlled by the state statutes, is set at rest by Miller v. Robertson, 266 U. S. 243, 257, 258, 45 S. Ct. 73, 69 L. Ed. 265. It is true that the aetion there was in equity, and that some force was put upon the definition of “debt,” as used in the statute there involved; but, in view of the discussion of the reasons controlling the allowance of interest, these distinctions are immaterial. If the ease is one appropriate for an allowance by the jury of interest upon damages which the verdict of the jury practically liquidates as of a former date, we cannot see that it should make any controlling difference whether the damages and. interest are awarded each by its proper name and then added together, or whether the interest is first added in to make a part of the damages. Instances where it was not clear what the jury did might call for further consideration.

The, judgment is affirmed.