Peninsula Produce Exchange of Maryland v. Scott
Peninsula Produce Exchange of Maryland v. Scott
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The defendant gave an order by telephone to plaintiff for a carload of strawberries for delivery in the Philadelphia market in time for sale at 2 A. m. the following morning. The carload was shipped in response to the order but, as frankly stated by appellant, “through some delay attributable solely to the railroad company, it was not delivered in Philadelphia until after the market had closed for the day.”
The testimony of the defendant was that the carload of berries was purchased conditioned upon its delivery in time for the next morning’s market, and he contended that the loss resulting from the sale of the berries on a falling market <was due entirely to the negligence and dilatory conduct on the part of the plaintiff in not speeding the delivery of the car, and rearranging for the sale of the berries as urged by him. The plaintiff as earnestly contended that he never had guaranteed
The controversy resolved itself into a single question of fact. Did the plaintiff guarantee delivery of the strawberries at 2 a. m. on Friday, May 20, 1910? With regard to this the testimony was for the consideration of the jury and they have resolved it in favor of the plaintiff.
The attempt to divert the shipment to another point, and the effort to dispose of the fruit in time for the Saturday morning market, as well as the items of damage urged by the defendant were fully and adequately presented to the jury. With the finding by the jury against the defendant on the pivotal question of guaranteed delivery, the other features of the case became of minor consideration.
The argument of appellant is persuasive, and doubtless a similar one had its effect before the jury, but the controversy is purely one of fact and not of law, • and we see no good reason for another trial of the case when there is every likelihood of another jury coming to the same conclusion in regard to the facts.
The twelfth assignment is an excerpt from the charge of the court which should be read in connection with the analysis of the claims and amounts that were not in dispute. The original bill, the freight and commission charges, the cartage and icing of the fruit and the amount realized from its sale were not in controversy. The court distinctly stated, “It was the plaintiff’s duty to dispose of the berries and sell them at the earliest possible moment, and if the plaintiff failed in any respect in that
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.