91 A. 581 | Md. | 1914
On May 25th, 1910, R.F. Parks Son of Chestertown wrote a letter to Griffith Boyd Company of Baltimore, as follows: "We are enclosing order for phosphate. Please ship promptly. Must have fall prices at once. A party in our employ wants to start at once. Advise." The receipt of the letter by the addressee was acknowledged, with the assurance that the order should have attention and then, "We note that you desire prices at once for the fall season, but owing to the unsettled condition of the chemical market we are not quite in a position to quote prices, but we will do our very best to do so within a short time. Just as soon as we can do so we will have our Mr. Noble call to see you."
On the 17th June Mr. Noble called on Parks Son in Chestertown, and then and there presented a list of 20 fertilizers, offering to sell them at various prices ranging from $10.50 to $28 per ton. There appears to have been considerable discussion in regard to the prices, growing out of the *239
question as to the prices for which the same or equivalent goods could be purchased from Martin White Co. But either on that same day or upon the morning following an acceptance of the proposition was signed by R.F. Parks Son. Contemporaneously with this, or probably preceding the signing of the contract, a letter was written to Messrs. Parks Son by Mr. Noble, which concludes as follows: "On alkaline and acid goods we will meet Martin White Co. prices." These various papers will be found fully set out on the first appeal in this case,
Three days later than this interview between Mr. Noble and Mr. Claude Parks, the acting member of R.F. Parks Son, the following letter was written to the Griffith Boyd Co. by Claude Parks: "We are enclosing herewith order which we desire to have shipped on next steamer. Please prepay freight. We also want this order to go on fall contract. Kindly see that the goods are in a good mechanical condition. You will get a big tonnage from us this fall if you will do as we were assured you would do — to impress this on your mind we are sending you our very first order. Please forward us at once 3 sets samples memorandum book, etc. Tell Mr. Noble that Fields has not shown up yet." Accompanying this letter was an order for the shipment of 2 1/2 tons of fertilizer, and on June 24th there was a second order for an additional ton to be shipped to another person than the one to whom the shipment contained in the order of June 20th was to be made. Beyond these two orders aggregating 3 1/2 tons no further shipments of fertilizer were ordered by Parks Son from the Griffith Boyd Co. Accordingly on the 12th December, 1910, the Griffith Boyd Co. instituted a suit against Rufus F. and Claude F. Parks to recover for the goods sold and for the alleged violation of the contract. That suit was before this Court at the October Term, 1911, but the record contained none of the testimony nor the prayers, which had been offered during the trial of *240 the case, and the case was decided solely upon a question of pleading, the sufficiency of the declaration, and will be found reported in 117 Md., beginning at page 494.
The declaration as then filed contained the six common counts, and a seventh or special count under which it was sought to recover for the breach of the alleged contract, and a demurrer having been filed to one of the pleas, mounted up to the first error in pleading, which as was pointed out in that decision, was in the seventh or special count of the declaration, it being held that the allegation of the contract therein contained did not show a valid enforceable contract, and that if the contract was invalid it necessarily followed that there could be no breach of it for which damages were recoverable. The verdict in that case having been for $1,861.79, the judgment was reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
After the case had been so remanded the plaintiff filed an amended declaration which contained, as did the original declaration, the six common counts and two special counts, numbered as 7 and 8. Thereupon the defendant, Parks Son, filed the general issue plea and a demurrer to the seventh and eighth counts of the amended narr. These demurrers were severally sustained, whereupon the plaintiff filed a 9th count to the amended declaration, which was in like manner demurred to and the demurrer sustained. In each of these three counts, the seventh, eighth and ninth, the theory of the plaintiff was that the defendants had sold in the neighborhood of 1600 tons of fertilizer during that season, and that it was entitled to recover the difference between the cost of manufacturing such fertilizer and the contract price for 1600 tons, under the clause "You agree to handle our goods exclusively." In response to a demand for a bill of particulars an account was filed for the 3 1/2 tons sold, which was said to be filed to each count in the declaration. After the sustaining of the demurrer to the ninth count, an amended ninth count was filed, in which the plaintiff sets forth in full the *241 alleged contract between the parties, consisting of the offer made on the 17th June, the acceptance of it, the accompanying letter of the same date allowing certain abatements in price on all ammoniated goods except bone meal, soft ground bone and dissolved animal bone, and a lesser discount on dissolved animal bone, together with the statement that on alkaline and acid goods the plaintiff would meet Martin White Co. prices; also the letter of June 20th, already quoted and the accompanying order. The amended ninth count then goes on and alleges the additional order of June 24th, the refusal of the defendant to order or accept more than 3 1/2 tons of fertilizer, the readiness and willingness of the plaintiff to carry out his contract, that the defendant sold more than 1600 tons not made by the plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff had suffered great damages. A demurrer was also filed to this amended count, but the demurrer was overruled. This presents the case as made out by the declaration.
The contract sought to be set up by the pleadings thus far was vague and uncertain in two respects, viz., on the acid and alkaline goods, upon which the plaintiff agreed in the letter of June 17th to meet the Martin White Co. prices, there is no allegation that these ever had been met, and the vagueness as to the amounts of fertilizer, of the different kinds to be purchased, remained as it was under the original seventh count, and so the rulings of the trial Court in sustaining the demurrers to the seventh and eighth counts of the amended declaration filed after the remand and to the ninth count as originally filed, were correct for the reasons set out by JUDGE PATTISON in the former opinion and Wheeling Steele Co. v. Evans,
With regard to the amended ninth count the situation is somewhat different. The same elements of vagueness and uncertainty remain, but there is the added element of an allegation of the sale of three and one-half tons of fertilizer under the alleged contract, and that these have not been paid for. With respect to this joinder of two matters, the appellants Parks Son, contend that this count was thereby rendered bad upon the principle announced by JUDGE BURKE in White AutomobileCo. v. Dorsey,
To the amended ninth count the defendant filed two pleas, the first admitting a promise as to the sum due the plaintiff for the three and one-half tons, $70.25, and the tender to the plaintiff of $81.42; while in the second plea they endeavored to set up a usage by which under similar contracts it had been made a practice only to order and pay for such and so much goods as they might see fit. These pleas were in like manner demurred to, and the demurrer to the first plea was overruled, and that to the second sustained. The case then proceeded to trial, and at the conclusion of the evidence the plaintiff offered six prayers and the defendant three, the rulings of the Court on which constitute the first bill of exceptions.
Other exceptions were taken upon questions of evidence during the progress of the trial, but by a curious and unusual method of arrangement, these all appear at the end of the Record, and are arranged numerically to follow the action of the Court on the prayers. In order to see the applicability of the prayers it is necessary to understand something of the course of the evidence, and the exceptions relating to evidence will be considered at the points where they were severally raised in the progress of the case. *244
After testifying to the circumstances under which the offer of June 17th, and the letter of that date were prepared and signed, the introduction of the letter of June 20th in evidence was objected to by the defendant, and its admission is the basis of the second bill of exceptions. This letter had been included in the declaration and was a part of the plaintiff's case, certainly to the extent of showing that the goods which were ordered upon that date were ordered upon the basis of the supposed contract, and at the prices contained in the offer of June 17th. It was material, 1st, as establishing the price to be charged for the goods which had been shipped, and also upon which to make a claim of ratification of the contract by part performance. The objection to it was general, and if it was admissible for any purpose at all under such an objection, the Court was clearly right in admitting it; this is so familiar a rule of evidence that a citation of authorities in support of it is needless.
The third exception was taken to a question put to Mr. Griffith, the president of the plaintiff, whether Griffith Boyd Co. approved the contract, to which he replied: "We did." Exactly why this question should have been objected to when it was; it is difficult to understand, as the same question had been substantially asked and answered without objection only a few moments before. The evidence was already in the case without objection, which the question sought to elicit and did elicit, and certainly under such circumstances no prejudicial error can be predicated upon this ruling of the Court.
The fourth bill of exceptions was taken to the action of the Court in permitting the same witness, Griffith, to answer the question, "Tell what orders you filled under it?" The declaration had set out the orders of June 20th and 24th, and the rules applicable alike to the sufficiency of the declaration and of this question have been considered in discussing the demurrer, and from what was then said it will be apparent that there was no error committed by the Court in its ruling upon this. *245
The fifth and sixth bills of exception both involve the same question, namely, whether it was competent for the defendant to prove upon cross-examination of the plaintiff's president a usage or custom of the business, in accordance with which, under contracts similar to that in this case, the purchaser is only expected to buy what he sees fit. Evidence of usage may be and frequently is a pertinent element in cases arising on implied contracts. Where, however, the terms of an express contract are clear and specific, parol evidence can never be admitted to contradict or vary those terms, and the only possible effect that the evidence here sought to be introduced could have had, would have been to vary the express terms of the instrument or paper supposed to constitute a contract which had been offered in evidence. These exceptions cannot be sustained.
On June 24th or 27th Mr. Noble returned to Chestertown for the purpose of ascertaining what the Martin White Co. prices were, but was unable to obtain from the Parks the desired information, so that he might conform to the undertaking in the letter of June 17th to meet those prices. Not getting the information on this visit he returned a third time to Chestertown, between the 24th and 27th July. On the occasion of this visit he saw a Martin White Co. contract in the hands of Claude F. Parks, and the latter occupied in erasing and altering some of the figures contained in that contract. Why Mr. Parks did this it is difficult to understand, that he did do it is not denied, but whatever the reason may have been, Mr. Noble declined to accept the altered figures of Parks. He did, however, obtain the prices in the contract from Mr. Barton, the salesman for the Martin White Co. On July 30th the Griffith Boyd Co. wrote to Parks Son, as follows: "We hereby accept contract made with you for the fall season by our Mr. Noble, dated June 17th, 1910, and will allow you the following rebates on alkaline and acid goods to conform with the Martin White Co. prices as per agreement." Then follows a list of rebates on eight different *246 brands of fertilizers, rebates ranging from 60c. to $1.55 per ton; thus for the first time making certain the prices upon all of the goods mentioned in the offer of June 17th. The receipt of this letter was first denied by Mr. Parks, Sr., but admitted upon being confronted with the letter.
No evidence, however, was offered to show that at any time was there any attempt to designate the number of tons of each or any of the brands named in the offer of June 17th, other than in the case of the three and one-half tons ordered upon June 20th and 24th.
In considering the prayers no better or clearer guide can be followed than the rules laid down by JUDGE SANBORN in the case of the Cold Blast Trans. Co. v. Kansas Bolt Nut Co., supra, and which are the same rules that were applied by JUDGE McSHERRY in the case of the Wheeling Steel Co. v. Evans, supra: "A contract for the future delivery of personal property is void, for want of consideration and mutuality, if the quantity to be delivered is conditioned by the will, wish or want of one of the parties; but it may be sustained if the quantity is ascertainable otherwise with reasonable certainty. An accepted offer to furnish or deliver such articles of personal property as shall be needed, required or consumed by the established business of the acceptor during a limited time is binding, and may be enforced, because it contains the implied agreement of the acceptor to purchase all the articles that shall be required in conducting his business during this time from the party who makes the offer * * *. But an accepted offer to sell or deliver articles at specified prices during a limited time in such amounts or quantities as the acceptor may want or desire in his business, or without any statement of the amount or quantity, is without consideration and void, because the acceptor is not bound to want, desire, or take any of the articles mentioned."
The first prayer of the plaintiff, which was granted by the Court had relation only to the three and one-half tons which *247 had been delivered, and from what has been said already, the granting of this prayer was entirely proper.
The second and third prayers, as they appear in the Record, are in inverted order. The third prayer is in these words: "If the jury shall find from the evidence that the defendants entered into the contract with the plaintiff that is recited at length in the plaintiff's declaration for the delivery of certain fertilizers manufactured by the plaintiff; and if the jury shall further believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was ready and willing to comply with the terms and conditions of the said contract of sale upon its part to be performed, and if the jury shall further believe from the evidence that the defendants upon their part ordered and received part of said fertilizers mentioned in said contract and failed, neglected and refused to order and receive part of said fertilizers mentioned in said contract of sale offered in evidence and set forth in the declaration, then their verdict should be for the plaintiff." This was granted. It assumes the sufficiency of the papers set out in the pleadings and evidence as constituting a valid contract, if their genuineness was found by the jury. For the reasons stated this was erroneous, and the prayer should have been rejected. The plaintiff's second prayer was upon the measure of damages, and these were upon the theory contained in the plaintiff's third prayer. Since it was error to have granted that, it was likewise error to have granted the second prayer.
The plaintiff's fourth prayer was on the question of discounts and was correct. The plaintiff's fifth and sixth prayers were both based upon the theory of the validity of the contract, and were properly rejected.
By the defendant's first prayer, the right of recovery by the plaintiffs was conceded to the amount of $70.25, with interest in the "discretion of the jury from December 1st, 1910, to May 18th, 1912." This excluded the element of damages for a breach of the so-called contract from the consideration of the jury, and was correct in principle and should *248 not have been wholly rejected. Just why the jury should have been limited on the matter of interest to May 18th, 1912, is not clear, but the error was one which could have been readily corrected by the Court.
The second and third prayers of the defendants were both based upon the same line of defense, namely, the theory of a refusal of Griffith, Boyd Co. to meet the prices of the Martin White Co. Mr. Claude F. Parks did testify to such a refusal, notwithstanding the letter of the plaintiff of July 30th; and as the first prayer of the defendants had at that time been rejected by the trial Court, they were entitled to have the verdict of the jury upon this defense. Of the two prayers the second was less open to criticism than the third, and no reversible error can be ascribed to the Court for its ruling on these two prayers.
What has been said sufficiently disposes of both the appeals contained in this record, and the judgment appealed from will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, or such further proceedings as may be appropriate.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, the costs in bothappeals to be paid by the Griffith Boyd Co. *249