Where there was a company incorporated for the purpose of making
screws, and they were sued by certain persons with whom they had
been in the habit of dealing for not supplying a sufficient
quantity of the manufactured article, according to orders which had
been given and received, the defense was that the supply
manufactured was not equal to the demand, and that the plaintiffs
knew that the articles were furnished to customers in regular
order, according to date.
Such custom was not a sufficient defense unless it was known to
the other contracting party and formed a part of the contract.
Parol evidence of usage is generally admissible to enable the
court to arrive at the real meaning of the parties, who are
naturally presumed to have contracted in conformity with the known
and established usage.
But parol evidence of custom and usage is not admitted to
contradict or vary express stipulations or provisions restricting
or enlarging the exercise and enjoyment of the customary right.
Page 64 U. S. 421
The evidence in this case proved that the plaintiffs knew of the
usage of the defendants to supply orders as fast as the articles
could be made, and according to a list kept in a book.
It was correct in the court to construe this evidence, and to
instruct the jury that if they believed the evidence, it showed
that the plaintiffs were chargeable with notice of the defendants'
custom to fill their contracts only in the order in which they were
accepted and in proportion with each other, and not in full,
according to the strict terms thereof.
Bliven was of Westchester County, and Mead of Brooklyn, in the
State of New York, and the New England Screw Company was a
corporation created by Rhode Island. The suit was brought by Bliven
& Mead in the supreme court of the State of New York, and
removed by the defendants into the circuit court of the United
States. The Screw Company brought an action against Bliven &
Mead in the circuit court, which will be the subject of the case
next reported. The suit by Bliven & Mead was against the
company for not furnishing them with screws enough, and the suit by
the company against Bliven & Mead was to make them pay for what
had been furnished. Both suits grew out of the same series of
transactions, which are fully stated in the opinion of the Court.
The judgment of the court below in both cases was against Bliven
& Mead, and hence both were brought up to this Court.
Page 64 U. S. 424
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 64 U. S. 425
According to the transcript, the suit was originally instituted
in the supreme court of the State of New York by the present
plaintiffs, who were citizens of that state, but was afterwards
regularly removed, under the twelfth section of the Judiciary Act,
into the circuit court of the United States, because the
corporation defendants were citizens of the State of Rhode
Island.
It was an action of assumpsit, brought to recover damages for
the supposed breach of six separate and distinct contracts in which
the defendants, as was alleged in the declaration, stipulated to
deliver to the plaintiffs, pursuant to their written orders given
at sundry times, certain quantities of screws, usually denominated
wood screws, of various sizes and descriptions, as were therein
specified. Readiness to perform on the part of the plaintiffs, and
neglect and refusal on the part of the defendants to deliver the
goods, after seasonable demand, constituted the foundation of the
respective claims for damages, as alleged in the declaration. Those
claims are set forth in eighteen special counts, to which are also
added the common counts, as in actions of
indebitatus
assumpsit. Of the several contracts, the first is alleged to
have been made on the seventh day of October, 1852, and the last on
the nineteenth day of April, 1853.
At the May term, 1855, the parties went to trial upon the
general issue. To prove the several agreements, the plaintiffs
relied on certain correspondence which had taken place between the
parties upon this subject, consisting of letters written by the
plaintiffs to the defendants, in the nature of orders or requests
for the goods, and the replies thereto written by the
defendants.
As appeared by the proofs, the plaintiffs were merchants,
engaged in buying and selling hardware, and the defendants were
engaged in manufacturing the description of goods specified in the
declaration. They were in point of fact the sole manufacturers of
the article in the United States, and were constantly receiving
orders for the article from their customers
Page 64 U. S. 426
faster than they could fill them and for larger quantities than
they were able to produce.
Orders had been given for this article by the plaintiffs prior
to the date of this controversy, but the evidence in the case does
not show when their dealings commenced. Six orders of like import
were given by the plaintiffs, during the fall of 1852 and the early
part of the year 1853, for large quantities of the article, of
various sizes and description. This suit was brought to recover
damages for not filling those orders, which, it is insisted by the
plaintiffs, had been accepted without any reservation. Some of them
had been filled in part only and others had not been filled for any
amount when the suit was commenced.
It was denied by the defendants that the orders had been
accepted without condition. On the contrary, they insisted that the
plaintiffs well knew that the supply was greatly less than the
demand, and that the orders were only accepted to be filled in
their turn, as the defendants were able to produce the article.
To support the first three counts of the declaration, the
plaintiffs, among other things not necessary to be noticed,
introduced three letters -- two from themselves to the defendants,
and the reply of the defendants to the same. Reference will only be
made to such brief portions of the correspondence as appear to be
essential to a proper understanding of the legal questions
presented in the bill of exceptions.
Dissatisfaction was first expressed by the plaintiffs in their
letter dated on the 30th day of September, 1852. In that
communication they simply refer to the long delay that has occurred
in filling their orders, and furnish a memorandum of the amount and
sizes of the article claimed by them to be due and not delivered,
under their order of the 29th of June of the same year. They state
that after three months' delay, only about one and one-fourth
percent of the same has been filled, and that they have not a gross
of screws under an inch in their stock. Request was also made in
the same communication that the plaintiffs would send at once all
they could of the article, and the balance of the same as soon
thereafter as
Page 64 U. S. 427
it was possible. That request was, in effect, repeated in
another letter, written on the 5th day of October, 1852, and on the
17th day of the same month, the defendants replied, saying that the
order referred to would be taken up at the earliest possible
day.
No further correspondence applicable to the first three counts
was introduced by the plaintiffs in the opening of the case.
They then gave evidence to prove the second agreement, as
alleged in the fourth, fifth, and sixth counts of the declaration.
For that purpose, they introduced two letters -- one from
themselves to the defendants dated on the 15th day of October,
1852, and the other from the defendants to them in reply dated on
the following day. Their letter to the defendants contained an
order for three thousand seven hundred and fifty gross of screws,
half to be delivered by the 15th day of March then next and the
other half a month later, subject to the regular discount at the
time of delivery. That order was given thus early, as the
plaintiffs stated, with a view to avoid thereafter the
inconvenience they had suffered from not having their orders
filled, and because they anticipated a short supply of the article
the next season. In the same letter, they informed the defendants
that it was given as an additional order, and requested that those
previously sent might be filled without further delay.
To that communication the defendants replied, acknowledging its
receipt and saying that the order had been entered in their books,
to be executed at the times named. They also referred to the
previous orders, saying they would do what they could to fill them
before navigation closed on the canals, but added that they could
only take them up in course, as they had a great many orders from
other parties in the same condition.
Evidence was then offered by the plaintiffs to prove the third
agreement, as alleged in the seventh, eighth, and ninth counts of
the declaration. To support those counts, two letters were
introduced -- one from the plaintiffs to the defendants, dated the
4th day of November, 1852, and the reply of
Page 64 U. S. 428
the defendants to the same, which was dated on the sixth day of
the same month. By the letter first named, the defendants were
furnished with another order of the plaintiffs for an additional
quantity of screws, and were requested to place the order in their
books, to be filled as fast as possible, at a given rate. Previous
orders were also referred to in the same letter, and the plaintiffs
complain that they have not been filled in their turn, adding that
they have not a gross of gimlet-point screws in their store, and
earnestly requested the defendants to send them a lot by steamboat
on the following day. Two days afterwards, the defendants
acknowledged the receipt of the order, and informed the plaintiffs
that it had been entered in their books, to be taken up in
course.
Those letters constitute the only evidence offered by the
plaintiffs in the opening to prove the third agreement.
They then gave in evidence another order from themselves to the
defendants to prove the fourth agreement, as alleged in the tenth,
eleventh, and twelfth counts of the declaration. It was dated on
the 7th day of November, 1852. In the same communication they
stated that they were in great want of a certain description of
screws, and expressed the hope that the plaintiffs would send what
they could of the article by steamboat without delay, adding: "We
have always said, send what you can of our orders as fast as you
get a case or two ready, or to that effect." To that letter the
defendants replied under date of the 19th of the same month, saying
that the best they could do was to enter the order, to be taken up
in course, intimating that perhaps it might be accomplished in
about two months.
Similar evidence was given to prove both the fifth and the sixth
agreements, as alleged in the six remaining counts of the
declaration. Two orders given by the plaintiffs were introduced for
that purpose. One was dated on the 10th day of February, 1853, and
the other on the 19th day of April, of the same year. They were
each for twenty thousand gross of screws, and the defendants were
requested to enter the orders in their books, to be filled as soon
as possible after they should have completed those previously
given. Separate
Page 64 U. S. 429
answers were given by the defendants to each of these orders, to
the effect that they would be entered in the books of the
defendants, to be taken up in course or in their turn, and be
filled when they reached them, as far as they should be able to do
so, consistently with their obligations to other customers.
No part of the two orders last named had been filled when this
suit was commenced. Demand was made of the defendants on the 30th
day of September, 1853, for the delivery of such proportions of the
several orders as had not been previously filled. At the same time,
the plaintiffs rendered their account, and tendered to the
defendants their promissory notes for the respective sums which
would become due to the defendants on making such delivery.
Such was the substance and effect of the evidence introduced by
the plaintiffs in the opening so far as it is necessary to consider
it at the present time. Many other matters were stated in the
correspondence, but as they are not material to this investigation,
they are omitted.
To maintain the issue on their part, the defendants, among other
things, introduced a letter from the plaintiffs, addressed to them,
dated on the 3d day of September, 1852, in which inquiry was made
of the defendants why they did not fill the orders given by the
plaintiffs. They also stated in the same letter that not a week
passed without their hearing of the defendants taking and executing
orders from other customers, but admitted in effect that they had
long since been given to understand the rule of business adopted by
the defendants in that behalf, and only complained that precedence
was given to the first orders from other customers.
Testimony was also introduced by the defendants that they had
some five hundred customers, and that the orders of the plaintiffs
had been taken up and filled in proportion to the orders given by
other customers, as the defendants manufactured the article and
were able to deliver the goods. To that testimony the plaintiffs
objected, but the court overruled the objection and it was
admitted, and the plaintiffs excepted.
All of the orders given by the plaintiffs, except the two last
named, were filled in part, and, as the defendants proved, in
Page 64 U. S. 430
due proportions to the orders of other customers as the article
was produced. They also proved, that when orders were given and
accepted without the price of the article being agreed, it was
their custom, and according to the usage of their business, to
charge at the rates ruling at the time of the delivery, and if
during the interval the discount from fixed rates had increased,
the purchaser had the benefit of the allowance; but if prices had
risen, and the discount was less, then the purchaser paid according
to the increased price. To this testimony as to the usage of the
defendants' business the plaintiffs objected, but the court
overruled the objection and, the testimony having been admitted,
the plaintiffs excepted. That practice, however, was not applicable
to customers who were not duly notified of the usage, but all such
had their orders filled at former rates. Orders from other
customers were received by the defendants throughout the period of
these transactions, but they refused to accept orders from new
parties.
Proof was also offered by the defendants tending to show that
the profit to the manufacturer was less upon the small sizes of the
article than upon the large, and it was admitted by their counsel
that the market price of the goods advanced after the orders of the
plaintiffs were given. Much additional testimony was introduced on
the one side and the other, to which it is not necessary to refer
for the reason that it presents no question for the decision of
this Court. On this state of facts, the presiding justice
instructed the jury to the effect that the several contracts for
the sale of the goods by the defendants to the plaintiffs were
subject to the custom of the defendants to fill the same in part
only, and that the plaintiffs, from having been dealers with the
defendants and from the correspondence between them, were
chargeable with notice of the defendants' custom to fill their
contracts only in the order they were accepted, and in proportion
with each other, and not in full, according to the strict terms
thereof. Under the rulings and instructions of the court, the jury
returned their verdict for the defendants, and the plaintiffs
excepted to the instructions. Exception was taken to two of the
rulings of
Page 64 U. S. 431
the court and to each of the instructions to the jury, but they
present only one question for decision, and therefore may well be
considered together. No evidence of general usage or custom in the
ordinary sense of those terms was offered in this case, and no
question touching the general rules of law upon that subject is
presented for the decision of this Court. It may also be safely
admitted that the custom of a party to deliver a part of a quantity
of goods contracted to be delivered, though invariable, cannot
excuse such party from a full compliance with his contract unless
such custom is known to the other contracting party and actually
enters into and forms a part of the contract. Mere knowledge of
such a usage would not be sufficient, but it must appear that the
custom actually constituted a part of the contract. But when it
appears that such custom was well known to the other contracting
party as necessarily incident to the business, and actually formed
a part of the contract, then it may furnish a legal excuse for the
nondelivery of such a proportion of the goods as the general course
of the business and the usage of the seller authorize, for the
reason that such general usage, being a part of the contract, has
the effect to limit and qualify its terms.
Linsley v.
Lovely, 26 Vt. 137. Customary rights and incidents,
universally attaching to the subject matter of the contract in the
place where it was made, are impliedly annexed to the language and
terms of the contract unless the custom is particularly and
expressly excluded. Parol evidence of custom, consequently, is
generally admissible to enable the court to arrive at the real
meaning of the parties, who are naturally presumed to have
contracted in conformity with the known and established usage. But
parol evidence of custom and usage is not admitted to contradict or
vary express stipulations or provisions restricting or enlarging
the exercise and enjoyment of the customary right. Omissions may be
supplied in some cases by the introduction of the custom, but the
custom cannot prevail over or nullify the express provisions and
stipulations of the contract. 2 Add. on Con. 970. Proof of usage,
says Mr. Greenleaf is admitted either to interpret the meaning of
the language of the contract or to ascertain the
Page 64 U. S. 432
nature and extent of the contract, in the absence of express
stipulations, and where the meaning is equivocal or obscure. 1
Greenl.Ev., sec. 292. Its true and appropriate office is to
interpret the otherwise indeterminate intention of the parties and
to ascertain the nature and extent of their contracts, arising not
from express stipulations, but from mere implications and
presumptions, and acts of a doubtful or equivocal character.
The Reeside, 2 Sum. 564. Nothing can be plainer than the
proposition that the evidence in the case proved that the supply
with the defendants was much less than the demand of their
customers. To avoid dissatisfaction, therefore, they were obliged
to devise some system which would enable them to do equal justice
among those who were properly competing for the article.
Accordingly, they adopted a rule to accept all such requests and to
enter the list in a book kept for the purpose, and to fill them as
far as possible in the order they were received. They had been in
business for some time, and that rule had become the custom of
their trade, and, as such, was well known to the plaintiffs during
all the time of these transactions. Many of their orders thus given
at short intervals had been expressly accepted to be filled in turn
or in course, and the correspondence plainly showed that the
plaintiffs well knew what was meant by those terms. Evidence to
prove that the orders had been taken up in turn, and filled in
proportion to the orders given by other customers, was therefore
admissible in order to show that the defendants had fulfilled their
contract and done no injustice to the plaintiffs, and it is equally
clear that evidence to show what had been the usage of the
defendants' business was also admissible, because that usage
constituted an essential part of the several contracts which were
the subjects in controversy.
Renner v. Bank of
Columbia, 9 Wheat. 588. After what has been
remarked, one or two additional observations respecting the
instructions given to the jury will be sufficient. Written
evidence, as a general rule, must be construed by the court, and
the first instruction was confined to that purpose. It gives the
true exposition of the correspondence, and therefore is not the
subject of error. It is insisted by the counsel of the
plaintiffs
Page 64 U. S. 433
that the second instruction withdrew the evidence of notice from
the consideration of the jury.
We think not, and for two reasons. In the first place, it was
the proper duty of the court to construe the correspondence, and
that of itself was sufficient to justify the charge. But the charge
must receive a reasonable interpretation. In effect, the jury were
told that the evidence, if true, showed that the plaintiffs had
notice of the custom of the defendants in regard to the filling of
the orders. It did not withdraw the question as to the credibility
of the witnesses from the consideration of the jury, and that was
all that could properly be submitted to their determination. In
view of all the circumstances, we think the exceptions must be
overruled. The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed, with costs.