78 Mo. App. 622 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
The plaintiff owns and operates a granite quarry near Graniteville, Missouri. The defendant is the owner of mills in the city of St. Louis for making crushed granite. On September 19, 1891, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the defendant, in which it agreed to sell and ship to defendant ten thousand tons of “merchantable red granite spalls, suitable for making crushed granite,” at times and in quantities ordered, not exceeding three cars per day. The contract was to continue for four years, if ten thousand tons were not shipped sooner, and during the contract the defendant was not to buy spalls elsewhere. It was provided that if plaintiff should fail from any cause not occurring through its default or within its control, to ship granite as agreed, then defendant should have no claim for loss or damage on that account, but might buy elsewhere. Settlements were to be monthly, and plaintiff was
As to the counterclaims the evidence is conflicting. There was evidence as to the trade meaning of the words “merchantable” as applicable to granite spalls. The evidence of the defendant was to the effect that persons in the trade understood the word to mean “one-man spalls,” that is a spall that could be handled by one man. The evidence of the plaintiff tended to prove that the word had no trade meaning. The defendant’s evidence also tended to prove' that it operated two crushers of different sizes, one was large enough to receive “one-man spalls,” and the. other had double that capacity; that the plaintiff knew of this when the contract was entered into, and contracted with reference to it, and
At the request of the plaintiff the court instructed the jury as follows:
■No. 6. “With respect to defendant’s various counterclaims, the court instructs you that the plaintiff was only bound to ship spalls in quantities not exceeding three car loads each working day, when ordered by defendant, and when orders theretofore had been filed, plaintiff had the right to use cars for other purposes and was not bound to retain the same for defendant’s sole use; and the court further instructs you that even if you believe that plaintiff did, at times mentioned in the counterclaim fail to make any shipment as required, yet, if you find that such delay was due to the failure of plaintiff to secure cars for the shipment of spalls, after all proper efforts on its part to secure same, or that such delay was due to any other cause not within plaintiff’s control, or occurring through its fault, then the defendant can make no claim against plaintiff for any damages so sustained or claimed by reason of such delay, and you must find against the defendant upon such items of its counterclaim.
“Begarding the items of overcharges in freight rates claimed by defendant, the court instructs you that you can only allow defendant for such actual excess charges as were actually paid by defendant to the carrier when cars were loaded with more than maximum weights.
“And regarding the items wherein defendant claims damages for the alleged reason that plaintiff shipped spalls of larger size than what is known as merchantable granite spalls,
''And if you find that the word 'merchantable’ is not so used in the trade to designate spalls of particular sizes, then the plaintiff was at liberty under such contract to ship any spalls which could be made adaptable for crushed granite purposes, and plaintiff is not responsible for any such loss or increased cost to defendant, and you must find against defendant upon such items of its counterclaim.” The instruction is subject to several objections, which were more or less prejudicial to the defendant. (1) As to the kind of spalls contemplated by the contract the instruction is not predicated on the evidence. It says that plaintiff was required to ship spalls of the size or sizes ordinarily termed and known as “merchantable by the people in such business,” whereas the plaintiff agreed to sell “merchantable and red granite spalls, suitable for making crushed granite.” It will be thus seen that the instruction altogether ignores the latter clause quoted and makes the case turn on the question whether the plaintiff delivered merchantable spalls as understood by people in that business, regardless of whether they were suitable for making crushed granite or not. The omitted clause is the important one. It points out the purpose for which the spalls were to be used and requires them to be suitable for that purpose. Thus it seems to us that the instruction is erroneous and misleading. (2) The contract leaves the question in doubt as to the size of the spalls contemplated by
In an instruction asked by the defendant, and which the court refused, there was a full statement of all items composing the various counterclaims, and also other matters of account, which can scarcely be understood. This instruction was properly refused. In view of a retrial, however, we would suggest that on account of the numerous counterclaims it might be well to embody in an instruction a statement of the total amounts claimed by defendant under each counterclaim. It would be impossible for the jurors without some such aid to carry in their minds the twelve counterclaims set up in the answer.
Eor the errors pointed out in plaintiff’s instruction, the judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded.