280
FEDERAL REPORTER,
vol. 61.
Oamp. 326; Mitchellv. 56 Am. Dec. 421; Billing V. Pilcher, 46 Am. Dec. 523; Ounningham v. Irwin, 10 Am. Dec. 458, and cases referred to in notes to those cases. If this is so in ordinary cases, how much more strongly does the reason of the law apply to the case of the unfortunate wife who is rendered by in· sanity not only incapable of providing for herself, but incapable of making any sort of a request, or any sort of a contract. The charitable iJ!,stitution that gave shelter and protection to the abandoned wife of the defendant, and ministered to her needs, knew that it could not, look to her for compensation, and knew that she was legally incompetent to make any contract of any nature. Necessarily, it looked, and had the legal right to look, to the person who was legally responsible for the furnished her, namely, her husband. . The facts which render him liable are alleged in the complaiht,' and were found to be true by the court below. It is a matter regret to us, as it· doubtless was to the learned judge who decided the case below, that the defendant's plea of the statute of limitations enabled him to escape responsibility for the care and maintenance of his wife except for .the two years immediately preceding the commencement of the action. ' Judgment affirmed. EMPIRE STATE PHOSPHATE'· CO. v. HELLER et at (Circuit Court ot Appeals, Second Circuit. April 19, 1894.) No. 79.
1.
BALE-INTERPRETATION OJ!' CONTRACT-DESCRIPTION OJ!' GOODS.
A contract for sale of "high grade kiln-dried" phosphate rock of a quallty particularly described, prOVided that, whenever the seller should accumulate a certain quantity thereof, "of the proper quality to dellver under this contract," the same should be taken by the buyer within a speci1ied time after notice. Held, that a tender of such rock not kiln-dried, with an offer to have it kiln-dried before removal, was not a tender of a proper dellvery under the contract. A written contract for of kiln-dried phosphate rock provided that, Whenever ·the seller should accumulate a certain quantity thereof of the proper quality to deliver. the same should be taken by the buyer within 30 days after notice of the seller's readiness to make delivery. Held, that prior conversations between the parties were not admissible to show that the rock might be kiln-driedafter notice of readiness to deliver, or that the buyer was not to have full 30 days to take kiln-dried rock.
2. PAROL EVIDENCE-'-CONVERSATIONSPRIOR TO CONTRAOT.
In Error to the Oircuit Oourt of the United States for the Southern District of New York. This was. an action by the Empire State Phosphate Oompany against James E. Heller and Adolph Hirsh for damages for breach of contract A verdict was directed for defendants, and judgment was entered thereon. Plaintiff brought error. Henry B. Olosson and Edward M. Shepard, for plaintiff in error. John S. Davenport (Felix Jellenik, on the brief), for defendants in error. Before LAOOMBE and SHIPMAN, Oircuit Judges. ,
EMPIRE STATE PHOSPi'r:A'rE CO. t1. HELLER.
281
LACOMBE, Circuit Judge. This is an action brought by the plaintiff corporation to recover damages sustained by reason of an alleged breach by the defendants of a contract for the purchase from the plaintiff of a quantity of phosphate rock. The contract was in writing, and bears date March 26, 1891. By it the plaintiff sells to the defendants exclusively"The entire output of the phosphate mine owned by it, situated in Citrus county, Florida, for the term of one year beginning thirty days after the completion ef the S. S. O. & G. R. R. to the Florida Rock Phosphate Co.'s mines, aggregating not to exceed 25,000 tons of their high-grade, kiln-dried land phosphate, at the price of 17lh cents per unit of bone phosphate of lime, on dry basis per ton of 2,240 lbs., f. o. b. cars at mines."
The contract next provides that the rock is to contain 75 per cent. bone phosphate of lime, with elaborate provisions as to testing, analysis, amount of oxides it may contain, etc.,-clauses which it is not material to recite here. Then follows: "Delivery. Whenever party of the first part has accumulated not less than 1,500 tons of phosphate of the proper quality to deliver under this contract, the same shall be taken by the party of the second part, at the stated price, f. o. b. the cars at seller's mines, Within 30 days after party of the first part has notified party of the second part of its readiness to make delivery."
Further provisions cover the contingency of the party of the second part being "unable to remove such lot of tons within said 30 days;" but, as the evidence does not show the happening of that contingency, they need not he quoted. The railroad having been completed, the plaintiff proceeded to mine the phosphate, and, having accumulated a sufficient quantity, notified defendants by letter dated May 29, 1891, that they were prepared to make deliverJ of $1,500 tons under the contract on June 1st. This tender was re newed by letter on July 28, and again on August 11, 1891. In thi., last-mentioned letter, which is the first one referred to in appellant'l'l brief as a tender of the phosphate, plaintiff says that it had mined in pursuance of the contract....:.. "Upwards of 1,500 tons of phosphate rock, the same conforming in all re spects to the provisions of the said contract; that the said phosphate rock is now ready for delivery, pursuant to the terms of said contract; that the same will be delivered to you, pursuant to such terms, on the 17th instant, and that you are requested, prior to the said 17th instant, to begin removal of said rock phosphate."
This letter concludes as follows: "The rock phosphate will, as provided by the contract, be kiln-dried, and, as you have requested, and unless you otherwise request, such kiln-drying will freshly take place immediately prior to each removal of the phosphate, so as to prevent, to the utmost, as you have requested, the absorption of moisture from the atmosphere and the consequent damage. If you desire any other course followed, please advise us at once."
Defendants objected to taking the rock by letters dated July 11th and July 30th, questioning whether it had all been mined subsequent to 30 days after the completion of the railroad, and asking for a statement of the daily output of plaintiff's mine since such
282 theyrene:wed in a letterot ;August 12th, in answer to plalnWf's letter last' above quoted,addmg the following: ' "We do 'not agree with you' on the other polntyou that we
had madEl' a, l'6qlJ!!stof YOU all011t:dl!ying, such ,as you state. The ,nearest approach to It was a mere suggestion from us to the effect that you ought to have the rock under cover after it has been klln-dried, so that it should not be exposed,to rain. You thereupon ,l:Jlformed us that you had covers, provided for every plleito protect it against:rain."
Furtb.er which it is not, to quote, defendants declining to accept, ;.and quesno:ping whether the rock tendered was of the quality required; plaintiff insisting upon itlil, acceptance, and threatening sale on, buyers' account., During all this time, His conceded that the rock mined, accumulated, and tendeJ;'ed was not kijn-dded. Finally, on November 18th, plaintiff notified defendants thatthe;y would adjourn the auction sale to 3d, and "renewed the tender of the 1,500 tons of phosphaterock last tendered ;You, and notify you that we shall begin to the terms of the contract on delivery of the the 23dinst. * * * The rock will be kiln-dried." On November 23d all the rock had been kiln-dried, and defendants were so notified, and requested tobeginrem,ovlill at once; and on December 2d plaintiff notifi,ed defendants that the sale of the rock on buyers' account, for failure to accept under the contract, was adjourned until December 10th. By that day defendants had not removed it, and plaintiff sold the ,same at a considerable)oss, and brought this action, averring, that by reason of defendants' breach of contract it lost the sale of i:ts output for the year, which it alleges would. have amounted to 10,500 tons, and claiming damages for upwards of $90" 000. ' From the above statement of the facts it will be noted that plaintiff tendered no kiln-dried phosphate to defendants until November 23, 1891, and that, SO far from giving the defendants 30 days to remove the kiln-dried rock then tendered, it disposed of it by sale at auction 17 days after its tender. For these reasons defendants insisted upon the trial that breach of contract on their part had not been shown, and the circuit judge, being of that opinion directed a verdict in favor of defendants. Error is assigned to the refusal of the circuit judge to admit certain proof offered by the plaintiff, which, it is claimed, would have tended to ,show that it ",as' "a bad thing to have phosphate, afte,r it is kiln-drie<l, remain, in the open air." Also to the refusal to admit proof that at an iJ,lterviewbetw.een one of the defendants and a representative of the plaintiff,had prior to the signing of the contract, defendant requested the plaintiff to kiln-dry the phosphate as nearly as was possible simultaneously with the removal of the phosphate by rule is well settled that negotiations, suggestions, and discussions between the parties antecedent to the execution of a written contract are merged in the contract, and that eviden,ce is inadmissible to vary the terms which,after
OBPENHEIMER V. UNITED STATES.
283
negotiation, the parties have settled upon and adopted as expressing final agreement. Undoubtedly there are exceptions to this rule where the language of the contract is ambiguous or susceptible of more than one interpretation, or where extrinsic evidence is necessary to enable the court to properly define ,some particular word or phrase, or where it shows some independent agreement, not covered by the written contract, nor inconsistent with it. In the case at bar, however, the written contract is wholly free from any ambiguity as to the quality of phosphate to be delivered. It must be "high grade, kiln·dried land phosphate" of the character more particularly described therein. That is the quality of phosphate which was sold and bought, and with which alone the contract is concerned. No phosphate which was not kiln-dried would be a proper delivery under the contract. No tender of phosphate not kiln-dried would be a tender of "phosphate of the proper quality to deliver under the contract." Any evidence of prior conversations which would tend to show that the phosphate might be delivered without kiln-drying would contradict the express terms of an unam,biguous subsequent written contract. The plaintiff relies upon defendants' alleged failure to take under the delivery clause above quoted, but that clause expressly gave the buyers 30 days to take "phosphate of the proper quality to deliver under the contract." If the evidence of prior conversations tended to show that defendants were not to have full 30 days to take such phosphate, it would contradict another express and unambiguous provision of the subsequent written contract. In either event, it was properly excluded, and, if it did not go to the extent of contradicting the written contract in one or other of those particulars, it was immaterial and inadmissible, the vital points in issue being whether plaintiff had tendered the phosphate it had agreed to deliver, and had given defendants the time stipulated in the contract for its removal. There was no error in the direction of a verdict for defendant, as the undisputed proof shows that no phosphate was kiln-dried until November 23d, and that it was sold by plaintiff before the 30 days had elapsed to which, under the contract, the defendants were entitled for its removal. Judgment affirmed. et al. v. UNI'.rED STATES. (Circuit Court, S. D. New York. April 26, 1894.) CUSTOMS DUTIES-CLASSIFICATION-SILK VEILS IN THE PIECE.
Silk veils or veilings in the piece, with borders upon them, and a distinctly marked line between the borders, designating where Ithey were to be cut off, held. to be dutiable at 60 per centum ad valorem, as "wearing apparel," under paragraph 413 of the tariff act of October 1, 1890, and not at 50 per centum ad valorem, as "manufactures of silk not specially provided for," under paragraph 414 of said act.
Application by Oppenheimer & Levy, importers, for review of a decision of the board of United States general appraisers concern-