Erie City Iron Works v. Cushnoc Paper Co.

Cornish, J.

The plaintiff, a corporation doing business at Erie, Pennsylvania, on August 24, 1912, through its New England A gent, C. H. Bradley, Jr., of Boston, Massachusetts, entered into a written contract with the defendant through its President and General Manager, Mr. Lyman, for the construction and delivery of one five hundred horse power vertical water tubé boiler for the sum of thirty-one hundred dollars f. o. b. cars at Erie, freight allowed to Augusta, Maine, payment to be made, one-half on arrival at Augusta and the balance ninety days thereafter. The contract contains detailed specifications of the work. Delivery was to be made “three weeks from August 26,” which was September 16, 1912. It was not in fact delivered until October 11, 1912. On its arrival in Augusta the boiler was accepted and set up by the defendant, and so far as the evidence shows was entirely satisfactory. On November 7, 1912, payment ivas made of one-half the purchase price. No further payments being made the plaintiff brought this action of assumpsit for the balance due and the defendant claims to recoup for damages sustained, in three particulars:

First, for extra cost of fire brick used in setting the boiler; second, for extra cost of tile in same; and third, for cost of brick boiler house in excess of estimated cost of cement house, the change being caused, as alleged, by the delay in delivery.

The claims for extra cost of fire brick and tile in setting the boiler may be considered together. The contract contains this paragraph:

“Brick required for standard setting, 35000 red brick, 4400 No. 1 fire brick, 5000 No. 2 fire brick, 1300 wedge brick, 360 tile 12 x 12 x 2, 18 tile 12 x 24 x 2|.” The quantity of fire brick actually used in the construction was 14,290 and of tile 460. For the cost of this excess *224the defendant claims to recover on the ground that the plaintiff had represented or warranted the amount required, and was legally liable for the falsity of the representation.

We are unable to so construe the contract. This statement as to quantity of brick was not a representation of a material existing fact but merely an estimate on the plaintiff’s part of what it would cost under standard setting to set the boiler which it had agreed to furnish. It formed no material part of the contract itself, but was one of the collateral matters connected with it, on which it gave its judgment. It is difficult to believe that the defendant relied on this estimate as the representation of a material fact, in making his contract, and was led to enter into the agreement because of this representation, a necessary element on which to base a claim for false representation. Patten v. Field, 108 Maine, 299; Hotchkiss v. Coal & Iron Co., 108 Maine, 34. The record is barren of any evidence to support such a contention.

It further appears that the standard setting, suggested in the contract, requiring a four and one-half inch fire brick lining, was not followed, but a nine inch lining was substituted, which required, as the defendant admits, twice as much material. It is true that this change was suggested by the plaintiff’s agent, Mr. Bradley, but it was made on November 21, long after the contract itself was made and the boiler furnished, and was simply one of many friendly suggestions made in the course of the erection, and was entirely independent of the contract itself. This claim cannot prevail.

The defendant’s remaining contention is that by reason of the delay in delivery and the consequent lateness of the season it was forced to build a brick instead of a cement building, and thereby to incur an additional expense of six hundred dollars. This contention fails for two reasons. In the first place the evidence negatives a breach of the contract because of delayed delivery. The time specified was three weeks from August 26, but this must be construed in connection with another clause in the contract, which provides as follows: ‘ ‘Time of delivery to date from the receipt of full details of order, contingent upon delay caused by fire, strike, accident, late mill deliveries or other hindrance beyond our control.” The plaintiff’s evidence shows that the delay was caused by the Otis Steel Company’s delayed delivery of the necessary boiler plate to the plaintiff, for which the plaintiff was in no way responsible. The *225treasurer of the plaintiff company testified that the delays were all absolutely beyond the control of his company and this evidence stands uncontradicted.

In the second place, the contract itself is silent as to the kind of boiler house to be erected. That matter was not in the contemplation of the parties. The contract was for a boiler, not a boiler house. Mr. Lyman admits that he originally contemplated building a brick building, but that Mr. Bradley suggested a cement building as cheaper and sent plans therefor, all of which was independent of the contract, and was simply a personal matter between Mr. Bradley and himself in which Mr. Bradley was offering his friendly advice. This evidence annihilates the claim.

As the defendant’s grounds for recoupment cannot be sustained the entry must be,

Judgment for plaintiff for $1890 with interest from date of the writ.