313 Mass. 498 | Mass. | 1943
On December 10, 1927, American Nokol Company entered into a contract with Buckley and Scott, Inc., by which the Nokol company granted to Buckley and Scott, Inc. the exclusive right until December 31, 1937, to sell the “NoKol” automatic oil burner in parts of Massachusetts, including Boston and its vicinity, and in parts of New
The bill alleges unfair competition and misappropriation by the defendant of the plaintiff's business, but inasmuch as the plaintiff's rights spring from the franchise, and as the plaintiff now seeks only to recover damages, the suit bears also some of the aspects of an action of contract for breach of the exclusive franchise. No objection has been made to jurisdiction in equity.
During the times here material the defendant was the only manufacturer which sold oil burners nationally through dealer organizations and which also engaged in selling oil. There is an important relation between the sale of oil burners and the sale of the fuel oil burned in them. Prospective purchasers of burners require assurance of a supply of fuel oil. Where the same person handles both branches, sales of burners ordinarily result in contracts for the supply of the oil. The Nokol burners had come early upon the market and were readily salable. The defendant's purpose in acquiring the Nokol was “particularly because it expected and desired to obtain thereby the opportunity to sell fuel oil in connection with the sale and installation of such burners.” It expected that the plaintiff would be willing to sell oil for it on commission, and shortly after it acquired the- Nokol, for the sale of which the plaintiff then held the exclusive franchise in the Boston district, it proposed to the plaintiff that the plaintiff sell oil for the defendant on commission.
The master properly finds as a conclusion from his other findings that the defendant undertook to appropriate to itself the plaintiff’s business of selling burners under the Nokol franchise “and the incidental business in the sale of fuel oil which naturally and normally flowed from the sale of burners ”; that the several acts of the defendant herein-before narrated were means to that end; that the defendant did thereby appropriate to itself business in burners and oil which otherwise the plaintiff would have received; and that the plaintiff’s efficient sales organization was very nearly destroyed, its good will greatly impaired, and its rights under the Nokol franchise rendered practically valueless.
The defendant’s conduct was in violation of its obligations to the plaintiff under the Nokol franchise. The franchise and a “memorandum” which became part of it con
The defendant also became liable to the plaintiff for the damage it caused to the plaintiff’s business of selling oil in so far as that damage resulted from wrongful interference with the plaintiff’s business of selling burners. The defendant argues that the franchise did not relate to oil and left the defendant free to establish a competing oil business; that incidental damage to the plaintiff’s oil business was not within the contemplation of the original parties to the franchise as a probable result of a breach of its terms; and that the plaintiff cannot recover for this damage on any theory of contract. John Hetherington & Sons, Ltd. v. William Firth Co. 210 Mass. 8, 21. Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Contracts, § 330. We are not yet prepared to concede that the plaintiff’s rights in this matter are limited to such as it could enforce in an action of contract. If the plaintiff had acquired its franchise to sell oil burners from a stranger instead of from the defendant’s predecessor, and if the defendant, for the purpose of getting for itself the plaintiff’s oil business, had intentionally persuaded that stranger to break its contract, the defendant would have committed a tort and would have been liable for all damage proximately resulting from its tortious act. Lumley v. Gye, 2 El. & Bl. 216. Beekman v. Marsters, 195 Mass. 205. Anderson v. Moskovitz, 260 Mass. 523, 526. Comerford v. Meier, 302 Mass. 398, 404. Sullivan v. Barrows, 303 Mass. 197, 203. Tompkins v. Sullivan, 309 Mass. 496. Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Torts, §§ 766, 767. Can the defendant’s liability be less extensive with respect to the oil business where the loss is caused, not by persuading a third party to break a contract, but by itself deliberately breaking its own contract with respect to, the burner business? Can the right
The defendant contends that the plaintiff does not come into court with clean hands because after its difficulties with the defendant arose it engaged in the work of installing the “Marr” burner, which the master found “could reasonably be considered competitive with the burners constituting the Nokol heating business,” and because of interests which the individuals who in reality owned the plaintiff acquired in the corporations which manufactured and distributed the Marr. The short answer to this contention, even if the plaintiff be held chargeable with the conduct of its officers and stockholders as individuals or in connection with other affiliated corporations, is that all that was done in connection with the Marr burner was done after the defendant had given the plaintiff the “ultimatum” of March 8, 1932, and had threatened to open its own factory branch in Boston. The preparations of the defendant to open its
No error appears in the master’s finding that but for the defendant’s acts the plaintiff would have sold at retail at least seven hundred ninety-four burners and boiler units for at least as much money as the defendant received for the same number sold by it. We do not know what the evidence was. The master finds that the plaintiff, with the sales organization, good will, and selling momentum which it possessed prior to the opening of the defendant’s factory branch, was capable of distributing burners in the Boston territory much more effectively and at much less expense than that at which they could be distributed by the defendant. The finding as to the number the plaintiff could have sold does not appear to have been based entirely upon the number the defendant actually sold, but, under the circumstances found, that number may well have been taken into account in determining the loss of sales by the plaintiff. Williston on Contracts (Rev. ed.) § 1406.
There was no error in the denial of the defendant’s motion to recommit. The only matters argued by the defendant in connection with this motion are the questions arising out of paragraphs in each of which recommittal is requested in order that the master may append brief, accurate and fair summaries of evidence. The only source of any right of a litigant in the Superior Court to a report by a master of summaries of evidence is found in the second paragraph of Rule 90 of the Superior Court (1932). The provisions of that paragraph relate to questions of law arising at the hearing before the master and determined by him in the course of his duty of hearing the case as master. Such questions are proper subjects of objections and exceptions
The defendant’s exception to the master’s report founded on its objection to the exclusion of a letter from “counsel” to the two individuals who controlled the corporation that owned all the stock of the plaintiff cannot be sustained.
We think there was no error in the manner in which the interest was calculated in making up the final decree. It seems plain that the master did not include any interest on the round sum of $75,000 which he found represented the plaintiff's damages before deducting the sum of $14,158.80 for profit realized by the plaintiff on the oil business which it acquired from the sale of Marr burners. It was therefore within the power of the judge to add interest from the filing of the bill. Young v. Winkley, 191 Mass. 570, 575. Royal Paper Box Co. v. Munro & Church Co. 284 Mass. 446, 452. Interest is commonly allowed from the date of the writ in actions of contract on unliquidated claims. Graustein v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc. 293 Mass. 207, 222. Fuller v. Lovell, 304 Mass. 542, 548-549. And interest may be allowed in actions of tort in order that full compensation may be awarded. Young v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 273 Mass. 567, 571, 572. Royal Paper Box Co. v. Munro & Church Co. 284 Mass. 446, 452. It was proper to’ allow interest in this suit. We are also of opinion that the added item of interest was rightly compounded, together with the sum found by the master, as of the date of the filing of the master’s report. It is provided by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 235, § 8, among other things, that when judgment is made up upon the report of a master interest shall be computed upon the “amount of the award . . . from the time when made to the time of making up the judgment,” thus compounding any interest included in the master’s report as of the date of the filing of the report. The statute announces a general principle applicable also to judgments made up upon an award of county commissioners, a committee or referees, the report of an auditor, the verdict of a jury, or the finding of a judge. See Hawkes v. Lackey, 207
The result is that the interlocutory decrees appealed from are affirmed, and that the final decree, modified as hereinbefore set forth and by bringing the interest down to date, is affirmed with costs.
Ordered accordingly.
The following appeared in the master’s report: “The defendant offered a letter from counsel to . . . [such individuals, written in 1932]. It was excluded. The defendant offered to show ‘that advice of counsel . . . was taken by . . . [them] with regard to relations between what they proposed to do . . . [respecting the Marr burner] with the existing Nokol franchise; that they were told in substance that what they were going to do was or might be found to be in violation of the Nokol franchise, and that before undertaking that matter they should terminate the Nokol franchise in Boston; that