55 Md. 51 | Md. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case an action was brought by the appellee, a corporation incorporated under the General Incorporation Law of the State, to recover damages from the appellant in consequence of his failure and refusal to comply with the terms of the following contract:
“Taneytown, Md., May 15th, 1819.
“We have this day contracted with Mr. T. H. Eckenrode of this place for the manufacture of two hundred tons of phosphate by bis formula and to be branded with his brand. The goods to he manufactured between July 15th
“ Chemical Oo. of Canton,
“ Per W. C. Matheson, Agt.
“ I accept the goods on above terms and conditions.
“T. H. Eckenrode.”
This contract though evidently the work of an unskilful hand, is yet so plain as not to leave its construction in any manner of doubt. It imposes upon the company the obligation and duty to manufacture the specified tons of phosphate between the named days, according to Eckenrode’s formula, and under his superintendence, to brand them with his brand, and to deliver, or tender delivery of them to him when so manufactured. Upon Eckenrode it imposes the obligation and duty to furnish his formula, to attend or proffer himself ready to attend and supervise the work of manufacture between the days specified, to receive the two hundred tons when so made, and to pay for them the price of twenty-five dollars per ton, by giving his notes therefor payable at the specified dates; with interest from the times stated.
The suit was brought on the 9th of August, 1879, and the declaration after setting out the contract, avers that the plaintiff was ready and willing and prepared in all respects to manufacture the two hundred tons of phosphate according to the agreement, and also the additional one hundred tons, at and between the time and times, and according to the terms and conditions of the agreement,
In the case of Coit vs. Ambergate, &c., Railway Co., 17 Adol. & Ellis, N. S., 117, it was decided by the Court of Queen’s Bench that where there is an executory contract for the manufacturing and supply of goods from time to time, to he paid for after delivery, if the purchaser having paid for and accepted a portion of the goods contracted for, gives notice to the vendor not to manufacture any more, as he has no occasion for them, and will not accept or pay for them, the vendor having been desirous and able to complete the contract, he may, without manufacturing and tendering the rest of the goods, maintain an action against the purchaser for a breach of the contract; and that he is entitled to a verdict on pleas traversing allegations that he was ready and willing-to perform the contract, that the defendant refused to accept the residue of the goods, and that he prevented and discharged the plaintiff from manufacturing and delivering them. Such notice by the defendant the Court held was a legal prevention, though there was no other act of obstruction.
The question next presented is: Was there any evidence in the cause legally sufficient to authorize the jury to find such refusal and notice by the defendant ? In our opinion there is in the record an abundance of such evidence. The defendant himself testifies to the effect that on the 1st of July, 1879, he was in Baltimore, and went with the company’s secretary to their manufactory, where a dispute arose as to how the phosphate should be made, he insisting that what is termed the dry process should be followed, and they that the wet process was as good, and it was finally proposed and agreed that a ton should be made by, the latter process so that he could examine it as a sample; that on the afternoon of the same day he went to the company’s office, where Mr. Baker their president was also present, and the sample was shown to him, and he said he would not have an article of that kind, and would not accept such an article if it was made by the plaintiff, “and that he countermanded his order for making said
The plaintiff’s first prayer also states the measure of damages to be “ the difference between the actual cost to
What we have thus said covers and sustains the rulings of the Court below, in granting the plaintiff’s two prayers, and in rejecting all those of the defendant except the thirteenth which will be noticed hereafter. This brings us to the exceptions taken by the defendant to the rulings upon questions of evidence. These are ten in number, but as to many of them very little was said in argument. They are, however, in the record, and it is our duty to dispose of them. In doing so, we shall say but very little as to those, in which we regard the rulings as clearly correct. The evidence offered by the plaintiff and admitted by the Court in the third and sixth exceptions, as to what the defendant said to the plaintiff’s secretary on the morning of the 1st July, when he first went to the company’s office, seems to us to be clearly admissible, as tending to show that the defendant was then unwilling to comply with his engagements to the plaintiff, and to explain the reason of that unwillingness, and his subsequent countermanding of the order and repudiation of the contract. It was also clearly competent for the plaintiff to prove, as the Court allowed to be done in the fourth
In the eighth exception the defendant’s counsel, on cross-examination of a witness for the plaintiff, asked him, “what was the lowest price at which plaintiff sold any ton of phosphate manufactured by plaintiff during the month of July, 1819;” and the ■ Court, upon objection made, refused to permit this question to be asked or answered. We cannot perceive the relevancy to the issue in this case of any answer the witness could have made to this question. The company were entitled to the benefit of their contract with the defendant whether more or less could be made out of it, provided they were ready and willing to perform it, and it was wholly immaterial
In the ninth exception the defendant offered to prove a number of facts by the witness Rittler, and there was a general objection to the whole offer which the Court sustained. Undoubtedly the rule of practice in this State is well settled, that where an offer is made generally of a mass of testimony complex in its character, and the whole of it is objected to, it is error to exclude the whole, if any part of it is admissible.- Carroll’s Lessee vs. Granite Manufacturing Company, 11 Md., 399; Curtis vs. Moore, 20 Md., 93. But to justify the application of this rule it must appear that some part of the rejected testimony was
The first and second exceptions present the same question. The plaintiff offered in evidence the contract sued on, having first proved the signatures of the defendant
Judgment affirmed.