The defendants appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff.
The complaint sets forth a cause of action for the recovery of commissions alleged to he due from the defendants to the plaintiff for services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendants as traveling salesman, under a written contract between the parties. The defendants are partners doing business under the name of Schloss Bros. & Co. By the terms of the contract the plaintiff was employed to solicit orders for the defendant at prices and terms to be stated by them and in so doing to travel for such time and cover such territory as defendants should direct. Plaintiff was to receive seven per cent on the net amount of the sales, being the difference between the gross amount of the accepted sales and certain deductions which the contract provided should be made therefrom. The contract was originally made on September 18, 1913', and covered the period from May 1, 1913 to April 30, 1914. It provided that it s was renewable on like terms and conditions for periods of one year, provided both parties so desired and gave notice thirty days before the expiration of such year. It was so renewed for the years including 1914 and 1915, and ending April 30, 1916. The original complaint, filed June 2, 1917, alleged that $10,903.51 was due to the plaintiff from the. defendants on account of commissions earned under said contract.- The first amended complaint, filed February 21, 1918, alleged the balance due plaintiff to be $14,510.16.
In addition to denials of the allegations as to the money due and services performed, the defendants pleaded that the action was barred by a contractual limitation contained in the contract of employment. This clause of the contract was as follows:
“The place of this contract is expressly agreed to be the executive offices of said Schloss Bros. & Co., at Baltimore, Md., and whenever said Schloss Bros. & Co. shall render the said salesman a statement of his account, the said statement shall be deemed to have been correct in all particulars, , and so accepted as final and binding on said salesman, his heirs and assigns, unless written objections thereto be filed within ten days after the rendering of said statement, and the said Schloss Bros. & Co. shall not be liable, nor shall any *621 suit or proceedings of any kind be brought against Schloss Bros. & Co. after the lapse of six months from the rendering of any of said statements.”
■The answer alleged that on May 25, 1916, defendants delivered to plaintiff a full, true and complete statement of all sales, commissions, drawings, and charges, and the amount owing to or payable by said plaintiff prior to said date and for the spring season of 1916; that said statement covered all credits and commissions to plaintiff and all charges against plaintiff under the contract prior thereto, and that no suit or proceedings of any kind was brought against the defendants on any claim of the plaintiff for commissions earned during the time covered by said statements within the period of six months from the receipt thereof by the plaintiff.
The court made findings to the effect that the defendants on May 25, 1916, delivered to plaintiff a' statement of his account as alleged in the answer, and that no suit or proceeding of any kind was brought against the defendants for his said claim within the period of six months from the receipt by him of said statement. The conclusion of law was that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for the full amount of his claim and judgment was entered accordingly. This conclusion and judgment were evidently based on finding V, to the effect that the six months’ limitation fixed by the contract was unreasonable.
The defendants contend that the conclusion or finding that six months is an unreasonable time within which to begin the action is without support in the evidence.
We are satisfied that the motion for nonsuit should have been granted.
It is claimed that the circumstances shown by the evidence render the time unreasonable. We will state them as briefly as possible. The defendants notified plain!!if in January, 1916, that the contract would be terminated on March 14, 1916. On January 12, 1916, they rendered him a statement of his account up to that date which he immediately challenged as incorrect. On May 25, 1916, they rendered another statement also showing nothing due to him. This he also objected to. It was admitted that the only difference between them related to commissions due on large sales of clothing made by the defendants to Foreman & Clark, a firm of clothiers doing a large business, with stores in Los Angeles, Chicago and several other cities, whose trade had been secured to them by the plaintiff. Some of these sales were negotiated by the plaintiff at their respective stores and others at Baltimore, Maryland, by some representative of Foreman & Clark. The contract provided that, unless it was specially so agreed in writing, the plaintiff should not be entitled to commissions on sales known as “jobs” or on goods sold at less than “regular selling prices.” The defendants claimed that almost all the goods sold to that firm came within one or the other of these classes and made out their statements accordingly. The plaintiff was employed by that firm as manager of its Chicago house from and after April 1, 1916, and at that date he left his former residence in Los Angeles and thereafter resided in Chicago. On March 1, 1916, he made out a statement of his accounts, which he left with his attorney there during that month, directing him to bring suit on it against defendants and attach the account of Foreman & Clark with defendants when advised that their account with defendants was large enough to satisfy his *625 claim. This did not occur until some time in May, 1917, and this action was not begun till June 2, 1917. Said statement of March 1, 1916, was for a balance due him of $10,903.51, and was the one set forth in the first complaint herein. The account sued on contained as credits to defendant a note of $3,495, which he owed them, and $18 for an overcoat, both of which were in some manner satisfied before the first amended complaint was filed and they were not mentioned therein. Without these credits the balance due plaintiff by the original complaint would have been $14,416.51, only $93.65 less than shown in the first amended complaint. The second amended complaint, filed on June 4, 1918, the day before the trial begun, showed a balance of only $12,894.82, which was $1,485.69 less than in the original complaint. The charge on account of sales of the spring and summer season of 1916 was $2,273.46 more, and for the fall and winter of 1915, $3,866.25 less in the original complaint than in the last one. Plaintiff testified that it took him “several months” to get the data to show how much had been sold by defendants to Foreman & Clark through his .instrumentality. He began this work in Chicago “immediately” upon arriving there. During April and May, 1916, the parties were endeavoring to settle the differences by arbitration. This plan was abandoned some time in June or July of 1916. During all the period from April 1, 1916, to May, 1917, he was also trying to ascertain whether or not Foreman & Clark owed enough to defendants to justify an attachment. In March, 1916, he advised with his attorney about bringing suit in Maryland. About June 1, 1918, he obtained the further information on which his last amended complaint was made. These are the facts as shown by the entire record.
The plaintiff further claims that the defendants’ statements of account were false and that they concealed from the plaintiff the facts constituting his claim against them, which were known to them but unknown to him. They contend, first, that the contract by its terms requires that statements furnished by defendants as therein specified shall be correct in fact in order to set the limitation in motion;
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second, that by the rendition of a false statement they are estopped from setting up the claim that the six months’ period began to run at that time.
The conclusion that the action was barred by the contractual limitation renders it unnecessary to consider other errors assigned by appellants.
The judgment is reversed.
Lawlor, J., and Olney, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
All the Justices concurred.
