278 Pa. 321 | Pa. | 1924
Opinion by
Plaintiff was a miner of coal, defendant a jobber buying coal from operators and selling to consumers. The former brought this action to recover the price of coal sold and delivered. The case was tried by the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment for plaintiff, from which defendant appeals.
In our opinion one question compasses the controversy: Was there an oral contract between the parties, under which defendant agreed to take the entire output of plaintiff’s mine and to pay therefor at an agreed price or at the highest market price each day for shipments made? The trial judge found as a fact there was such a contract; the record discloses evidence to warrant this finding. In a case tried before the court without a jury, the facts found by the court upon sufficient evidence must be accepted as true by an appellate court: Gillespie v. Hunt, 276 Pa. 119.
Appellant received the entire output of appellee’s mine. It contends that most of the coal was shipped to be handled on commission, that owing to inferior quality it could not be advantageously sold, ultimately having to be disposed of at a loss because of demurrage and other charges, and sets up this loss as a counterclaim. While defendant produced evidence to sustain its position, the court credited that of plaintiff and held there was no agency relation. The trial judge’s opportunity to weigh the testimony was far better than ours. Defendant also endeavored to establish that the coal was shipped on written orders, subject to classification on delivery in “pools” at the Tidewater Coal Exchange, which classification fixed the price; this drops out of the case in view of the court’s determination as to what the contract was.
The following finding of the trial judge, amply sustained by evidence, is determinative before us of the
Judgment affirmed.