Lipshitz Cohen v. United States/Opinion of the Court

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872534Lipshitz Cohen v. United States — Opinion of the CourtJames Clark McReynolds

United States Supreme Court

269 U.S. 90

Lipshitz Cohen  v.  United States

 Argued: Oct. 21, 1925. --- Decided: Nov 16, 1925


Plaintiffs in error seek to recover profits which, it is alleged, would have been realized if the United States had complied with their agreement to deliver approximately 1,530,600 pounds of obsolete material. The cause was heard by the District Judge without a jury. He found the facts and upon them held that the contract had not been broken.

An agent of the United States put out a schedule which stated that certain obsolete material, classed as cast iron, cast and forged steel, armor steel, brass, bronz and lead, was held for sale at six specified forts. It set out the weights of each class at each place, and was headed:

'List of Junk for Sale and Location of Same. The weights as shown below are approximate and must be accepted as correct by the bidder.'

Plaintiffs in error made a written offer at the foot of the schedule sheet to pay $1,055, 'for all the above described material, as is where is, for which we are enclosing you cashier's check for 20% of the amount-$211-with our option to remove material within six months from acceptance of this bid. * * *' This was accepted May 24, 1922. 'At the time the offer was made and accepted the plaintiff did not inspect the material for sale at any of the fortifications, and had no knowledge of such material other than that given by the contract. It was later found in junk piles at the various forts.'

In the following July the purchasers began to remove the material and found nearly all items short. Aggregated these shortages amounted to approximately one-half of the total weight stated in the original schedule, but there is nothing to indicate bad faith. They complained, but made no effort to repudiate or annul the contract.

Supporting his judgment in favor of the United States the District Judge said:

'Since the government is not in the business of buying and selling, and its agents are authorized only to offer for sale such material as has been condemned as obsolete or useless, taking the language of this offer and acceptance, I am of opinion that the contract must be construed as one offering to sell an approximate quantity of such cast iron, brass (cast and forged steel, bronz, armor steel) or lead, and as one offering to sell all of the materials of these descriptions which were on hand at the various points named, the intention being not to make a sale by the pound or ton, but to make an entire sale of specific lots of obsolete material, whether more or less than the weight, and to include all thereof. * * * I am satisfied that they (plaintiffs) cannot claim that this contract, worded as it was, has been broken because it turned out that there was less, even greatly less, of some of the materials described as on hand than the description would have led the purchaser to suppose. It is not made to appear that the United States failed or refused to deliver any of the material that was actually at the forts named at the time the contract was made.'

We approve this construction of the agreement. Applicable principles of law were announced by Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking for the court in Brawley v. United States, 96 U.S. 168, 171, 24 L. Ed. 622. The negotiations had reference to specific lots. The naming of quantities cannot be regarded as in the nature of a warranty, but merely as an estimate of the probable amounts in reference to which good faith only could be required of the party making it.

It is not necessary for us to consider whether the contract is sufficiently formal to comply with the requirements of R. S. § 3744 (Comp. St. § 6895).

Affirmed.

Notes[edit]

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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