29 Pa. Super. 19 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1905
Opinion by
This action of assumpsit was brought to recover a com mission of twenty per cent upon $5,200, the price re ceived by the defendant for supplying ventilators to the New York Produce Exchange and installing the same in its building. The plaintiff claims this commission under the written contract to which we shall presently refer. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant requested the court to give binding instructions in its favor. This was refused. The defendant also requested the court to charge that under the terms of the agreement the commission was not earned by merely bringing the defendant and the authorities of the Produce Exchange together. This point was affirmed but the court added: “ If Brodhead brought them together, and the sale was subsequently consummated, and the ventilators were placed in the Produce Exchange by reason of the fact that he brought them together, he would be entitled to his commissions.” The refusal to give binding instructions and the foregoing answer to the defendant’s sixth point (third assignment) are the principal matters assigned for error. The questions thus raised will be considered together.
By written agreement made in February, 1902, the plaintiff became the special agent of the defendant with headquarters in New York state; he agreeing to solicit orders for the company’s ventilators, and generally to render such services as would further the company’s interests by “exploiting said Pullman ventilator” in New York and the territory in proximity thereto, to exert himself to the utmost in furthering the business of the company, to exercise full and proper diligence in carrying out the details of said business, and to render an account regularly and as often as demanded of all work done and results accomplished by him. For his services he was to receive a compensation, we quote from the agreement, “ equal to 20$ of the
The plaintiff testified, that in the latter part of April, 1902, he learned from a friend, who was a member of the New York Produce Exchange, that the exchange proposed to install a system of ventilation in its rooms; that he received from this friend a copy of a circular letter which the secretary of the exchange had sent to the several members calling upon them to vote aye or nay upon a ventilation proposition therein set forth ; that acting upon the information thus received the plaintiff called upon the secretary of the exchange, who referred him to the chairman of the committee having the matter in charge; that he then went to Mr. Knee-land, the chairman of the committee and after some preliminary conversation obtained from him a promise to consider a proposition from the defendant company; that immediately after these negotiations he wrote to the vice-president of the company at its general office in Washington, D. 0., calling the attention of the company to the importance of the business, and to its magnitude, and requesting, as it was somewhat out of its line of business in New York, that he be given instructions as to the details of the proposition to be made. He inclosed in his letter the circular letter above referred to. This letter, which was the first information the company had of the intention of the Produce Exchange to install a system of ventilation, was referred to the directors of the company, and on the same day Mr. Hauk, the vice-president of the company, wrote to Mr. Kneeland as follows: “Dear Sir: — We are in receipt of a letter to-day from our representative in New York, Mr. Richard Brodhead, calling attention to the subject now before you (the ventilation of the main room of the Exchange). Mr. Brodhead requests us to send you the approximate cost of equipping the main room, and other data in connection therewith. Permit me to say that the writer expects to be in New York on Wednesday or Thursday of this week, and while there hopes to have the pleasure of calling upon you, and will then
It is claimed by the defendant that the plaintiff was not diligent; but we fail to see wherein he was not. He acted promptly in opening negotiations with the proper 'officers of the exchange as soon as he had received the information from his friend, and he was prompt in communicating the result of his negotiations to the company and in 'furnishing the information necessary for the latter’s guidance. The fact that he did nothing further in the few days that intervened before the making of the contract is amply explained upon other grounds than lack of diligence by the two letters above quoted. Under the circumstances he was justified in waiting until the vice-president or some other representative of the company came on, or the instructions he requested were forwarded to him.
The cases cited by the defendant’s counsel do not sustain their contention that binding instructions ought to have been given. The point decided in Earp v. Cummins, 54 Pa. 394, and
In the determination of the question whether upon the evidence heretofore recited the plaintiff was entitled to have his-case submitted to the jury it is to be observed that he had
But it is insisted that the matter of the Produce Exchange ventilation was brought to J acobson’s attention by one Tracy Rodgers, a friend, not by the plaintiff, nor by any one connected with "the company, and that the contract was obtained entirely through his, Jacobson’s, efforts. We shall not stop to analyse his testimony. We may assume for present purposes that it was sufficient to sustain the conclusion above stated and yet it would not necessarily follow that the case was one for binding instructions in favor of the defendant.
A written agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant on August 9, 1902, contains a recital of the fact that on that day the defendant gave to the plaintiff $100 “ in part payment of the' claim of one hundred and sixty-two dollars and fifty cents ” of the plaintiff, “ for commissions and salary due ” him “ up to June 30, 1902, while in the employ of the ” defendant. It is argued that the plaintiff was therefore estopped to set up the present claim of $1,040. But the two claims are not identical and there is nothing in the recital from which it can be implied that the claim of $162.50 covered the plaintiff’s compensation for his entire services rendered prior to June 30. The correspondence which preceded the agreement and the testimony which is quoted in the second assignment of error show quite clearly that it did not. “ But evidence to explain the subject matter of an agreement, is essentially different from that which varies the terms in which the contract is conceived: ” Barnhart v. Riddle, 29 Pa. 92. But we do'not rest our decision on anything outside the paper itself. The claim therein referred to was for a certain sum which was due the plaintiff on or prior to June 30. The claim in suit is for an entirely different sum and there is no evidence that it was due under the terms of the agreement of February, 1902, when the agreement of August, 1902, was entered into. Even though there had been no explanatory evidence identifying the subject-matter of the recital, the court would not have been warranted in holding that it barred recovery of the claim in suit. It follows that the admission of such explanatory evidence did the defendant no harm; but we are not to be understood as holding that the admission of such evidence was erroneous.
The counsel for the appellant correctly say that the question at issue was whether the plaintiff had performed the work
All the assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.