Richmond Light & R. v. Blau
Opinion of the Court
Adolph Blau, the plaintiff, brought suit against the Richmond Right & Railroad Company on the following contract :
S. F. Hazelrigg,
Tice Prest. & Geni. Manager,
Richmond Light & Railroad Co.,
New Brighton, New York City.
July 26th, 1905.
For and in consideration of the sum of two thousand ($2000) dollars on account, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, the Richmond Light & -Rail-
A. Blau
road Company agrees to sell to Jacob SmithAthe rails and scrap iron at Brook St. Car Barn and Concord Car Bam — with the exception of what we may wish to retain for our own use — at the rate of $17.25 per gross ton for the rail and $16.00 per gross ton for the scrap, balance of purchase price, according to weight, to he paid August 9th, 1905, and rails and scrap iron to be removed at that time. None to be removed until full amount is paid.
Richmond Light & Railroad. Company,
T. J. Mullen, Superintendent.
Signed — Jacob Smith.
It was proved at the trial that the name of Blau was inserted in the contract before it was signed because Smith, was only acting in his behalf, and the iron was to be paid for with his money. Any objection that Blau was not the proper party plaintiff was waived because not taken either by demurrer or answer (Code of Civil Procedure 499) and the assignment of error on this point was abandoned at the argument.
There were no means of weighing the iron where it lay, and. if there had been, it could not have been weighed, removed, and paid for on one day as the contract required. Accordingly the parties modified the terms by estimating the value of the iron as it lay at the contract rates as $12,000, which sum Blau paid into the company’s hands before any iron was removed. Blau’s version of this was that it was a mere deposit to secure the company, and that when the iron was actually weighed, if its price at the contract rates exceeded the estimate of $12,000, he was to pay the company the excess, while if it was less, the company was to return to him the difference. On the other hand, the company contended that the written contract was abandoned; that Blau bought the iron as it lay for $12,000, with the proviso that if when weighed it proved at the contract rates to be worth more, he was to pay the excess in addition. The plaintiff’s account was much the more reasonable, and has been established by the verdict of the jury.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- RICHMOND LIGHT & R. CO. v. BLAU
- Status
- Published