268 Mass. 321 | Mass. | 1929
This is an action of contract brought originally in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston. It was thereafter removed to the Superior Court, and after a trial to a jury comes before this court on the exceptions of the plaintiff. The plaintiff declared on a written contract, a copy of which is annexed to the declaration. The defendant filed a general denial and an amended answer which reads: “And further answering the defendant says that if it shall be proved that the said Max Finn, mentioned in the plaintiff’s declaration, was acting for and in behalf of his principal, The said Capitol Amusement Company, and that there is no variance between the contract sued upon and the declaration in said action (on the theory that the plaintiff is entitled to recover as an undisclosed principal), then the defendant says that The Capitol Amusement Company had been involved in labor-disputes and such fact was material to the defendant; that-the plaintiff, knowing the materiality of this fact, fraudulently concealed the name of the plaintiff, The Capitol Amusement Company, from the defendant; that as a result thereof the defendant entered into the contract declared on by the plaintiff.”
An inspection of the written contract, which was admitted in evidence at the trial, discloses that the “agreement” purports to have been made on January 20, 1928, by and between one Max Finn, called the “manager,” and Jimmie
(Artist sign here (Signed) Jimmie Gallagher (l.s.) giving address.)
By Mr. Max Finn, Gen. Mgr.
The agreement contains no recital that it is sealed by, or bears the seal of,- the persons signing the same, or is given under the hand and seal of the persons signing the same, or that it is intended to take effect as a sealed instrument. It has no seal of wax or other adhesive substance impressed or affixed upon or to it. As the contract declared on was not an instrument under seal, United States Drainage & Irrigation Co. v. Medford, 225 Mass. 467, 470; (see relative to seals and sealed instruments, St. 1929, c. 377, § 2,) the plaintiff, not named in the agreement, can enforce it if in fact the plaintiff was the undisclosed principal.
The evidence at the trial would have warranted the jury in finding that the defendant, without legal justification, failed to appear at the Capitol Theatre on February 19,1928, at the time and in the manner provided in his agreement, and that the plaintiff suffered damages as a result of the defendant’s failure and refusal to appear. On the evidence the jury would be warranted in finding that Max Finn, at the time of the execution of the agreement, was employed as general manager by The Capitol Amusement Company; that
The direction of the verdict for the defendant “because it. doesn’t appear that The Capitol Amusement Company as such ever entered into an agreement with the defendant in this case” was error, and the exceptions of the plaintiff are sustained.
Exceptions sustained.