261 F. 861 | 2d Cir. | 1919
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff in error (plaintiff below) sues to recover commissions earned for services he rendered in procuring a purchaser for 10,000 base boxes of tin plate. His commission was to be such sum of money as was received in excess of $8.50 per base box. After hearing the evidence of both plaintiff and defendant below, the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, against the objection and exception of the plaintiff. We shall refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendant, as in the court below.
The plaintiff’s contract was oral. He sought an interview with Mr. Wardell, representing the defendant, which company had a large quantity of tin plate for sale. Plaintiff testified that he was requested to secure a purchaser at $8.25 per base box, and was offered all in excess of such sum as he could obtain. Mr. Wardell wrote the quantity and price on a'piece of paper and handed it to plaintiff at the interview. Plaintiff then saw a representative of the American Trading Company, Mr. McChesney, who was in charge of the Japan exports, and offered the tin plate to him. The latter said he could use it and would cable Japan. Report of this was made to Mr. Wardell, who said that this was fortunate, because he had an export license for Japan. However, he declared, there were extra expenses in such a shipment, 'and stated the price to them must be $8.50 per box, instead of $8.25. On January 15th Mr. McChesney informed the plaintiff that he accepted the tin plate; that it could be used by the American Trading Company in Japan. A report of this was made to the defendant, and this to a Mr.
“Q. And then what did you gentlemen do? A. Why, Mr. Kelly then went down to — Mr. Kelly and 1 went down together. Well, Mr. Kelly and I went to lunch together.
“The Court: Kelly accepted that, did he?
“The Witness: Well, he thought everything was all satisfactory, and told me so at the table when we were eating dinner.
“Q. And that closed the incident? A. Absolutely.”
Later the same day Mr. McChesney telephoned the plaintiff that the tin plate had been sold. Plaintiff further testified on cross-examination :
“Q. During all these transactions, was nothing said at any time as to where the tin plate was to be delivered? A. Surely, with Kelly. After Mr. Crombie had gone in and had soon his superior, he came hack and he said, ‘We will accept your conditions and ship it abroad, and we will exchange documents on the other side.’ I was rather surprised In his change of attitude, and when I went to Mr. McChesney, and told him about it, Mr. McChesney said •Well, I am not surprised at that offer, because in Japan we have always exchanged courtesies with Jardine Matheson & Co., and our companies know one another very woli.’ And he said, ‘X am surprised that he made such exacting terms and such arbitrary terms.’ He was surprised that they demanded cash right here In New York.”
Kelly saw the export license. It appears from the testimony of the plaintiff that the essential terms of the contract were agreed upon, the goods were to be billed at $9, payment in New York, and delivery C. I. P. Japan, American Trading Company’s dock at Yokohama, with an exchange of documents on the other side. It was after this that Mr. Crombie telephoned to Mr. McChesney that the sale was off.
The reason assigned for the action of the District Judge was that Mr. Kelly had no authority to bind the American Trading Company, and that his acceptance of the terms could not be said to be an acceptance by the company. But the testimony is that Mr. Kelly did not come merely to inspect the form and words of the license, but was authorized to obtain an option on the plate and arrange terms of payment and delivery. The terms were discussed as above related, which were op
In Clews v. Jamieson, 182 U. S. 461, 21 Sup. Ct. 845, 45 L. Ed. 1183, the court said:
“A principal can adopt and ratify an unauthorized act of Ms agent, who in fact is assuming to act in his behalf, although not disclosing his agency to others, and when it is so ratified it is as if the principal had given an original authority to that effect, and the ratification relates back to the time of the act which is ratified. He must disavow the act of his agent within a reasonable time after the fact has come to his knowledge, or he will be deemed to have ratified it. Bringing a suit upon the contract of his agent, which was unauthorized at the time and in excess of the authority conferred upon the agent, is a ratification of the unauthorized act; and it is no answer to mo ratification that prior to its taking place the principal is not bound, and hence there is no right on the part of the other party to enforce as against him the unauthorized act of his agent. These principles are well known. * * * ”
Crombie was the general manager of the export department of the defendant. McChesney had authority to purchase the tin plate for the American Trading Company for export to Japan. And the authority of Kelly to inspect the license or accept terms of sale, under the proof disclosed, at least presented a question of fact for the jury.
Another question was presented upon the evidence in the record, if the jury found Kelly had no such authority, and that: Was the action of Kelly ratified by the American Trading Company under the circumstances disclosed in the record? Here, from the failure to dissent, under the circumstances, the ordinary intelligent man would be justified in inferring that the principal, the American Trading Company, assented. Where reasonable men may fairly draw from the evidence an inference that there was such assent, the question is one for the jury. It is only where reasonable men can fairly draw only one inference from the facts stated that the court may decide the question is one of law.
The purpose of seeing the license seems to have been to ascertain whether the tin might be shipped to Japan, in view of the war regulations which might forbid. It did not follow that Mr. McChesney intended that the American Trading Company would be the consignee named in the license. The cablegrams indicate this. Whether or not the defendant had such a license as was within the contemplation of the parties’ intent at the time of the contract was a jury question. The name in the license could be changed on request. Indeed, the need for the license on the part of the American Trading Company was dispensed with, for it was agreed to make actual delivery by way of the Pacific coast and then C. I. E. Japan, and exchange documents on
We are of the opinion that the evidence is sufficient to require the submission to the jury of the question whether or not both parties consider that negotiations had resulted in a definite agreement which they agreed to consummate. If the jury answered this question in the affirmative, it would follow that the plaintiff, employed by the defendant, had done all that he was requested to do, and had earned his commissions, and cannot be deprived thereof by the failure of his employer to consummate the bargain.
It was error to direct a verdict for the defendant, and for this reason the decree is reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). If one regards the complaint herein, Baldwin was not a broker, and did not sue as one, nor for a commission. He was a salesman, entitled to everything over a certain price when he sold a definitely specified lot of goods. No such sale was ever made. But, if a broker’s employment be somehow spelled out, then both the alleged vendor and vendee testified fully that their minds never met; while that no sale resulted from plaintiff’s efforts, and that such efforts in no way assisted in the final disposition of the goods, is admitted.
Plaintiff’s efforts failed, because the parties to the proposed sale could not agree about the license, so important in war time; therefore there never was a contract. This court in substance holds that there should have been a contract, and therefore gives a jury a chance of saying that there was one. I cannot agree to that, and dissent.