129 A. 839 | Md. | 1925
The Reardon-Smith Line, Ltd., a corporation under the laws of Great Britain, has for a number of years been engaged in the business of transporting freight for hire on ocean going vessels from ports on the Atlantic seaboard of the United States to ports in other countries. Its freight service appears to have been divided into two classes, one a "berth" or "general cargo" business, and the other a "tramp" or "full cargo service." In the general cargo business, a certain regularity and uniformity as to the time and place of service is maintained, while in the "full cargo" or "tramp" service there is no such uniformity or regularity, but the vessels are chartered under a single charter party, and whether they arrive at or depart from a given port depends upon no regular schedule or sailing list, but upon the needs and convenience of the charterer. In connection with its business as an ocean carrier, the Reardon-Smith Line, Ltd., hereinafter referred to as the Reardon-Smith Line, owned and operated a number of freight carrying ships, some of which were allocated to the general cargo business and others to the full cargo or "tramp" service. In the course of its general cargo business, it attempted to establish *549 freight carrying lines between different ports in the United States and ports in Great Britain and Germany, carrying accumulated cargoes and operating on a definite schedule, and in connection with that general purpose, on or about December, 1922, it established an ocean carrying freight line between Baltimore and London, Liverpool, and Hamburg. It was, as we have said, a British corporation, and it transacted its business in this country by agents, who appear to have been W.G. Liley of New York, its resident director and American representative, and the United States Navigation Company.
When the line from Baltimore was established, the United States Navigation Company, hereinafter called the Navigation Company, claiming to be the general agent of the Reardon-Smith Line for its general cargo or berth service in this country, entered into a contract with Maurice B. Carlin, a ship broker of Baltimore, whereby Carlin was appointed the agent of the Reardon-Smith Line for its Baltimore general cargo service from December 11th, 1922, to January 1st, 1924, and at the same time he was selected by Mr. Liley as the agent for such of the company's "full cargo" steamers as came to Baltimore.
The "general cargo" or berth service from Baltimore was discontinued in 1923, and Carlin's employment as the company's agent at Baltimore for matters connected with that service was, the company contends, cancelled as of December 31st, 1923.
On or about March 22d 1923, while the relation of principal and agent still existed between Carlin and the company, Edward M. Langley Company, Cincinnati, Ohio, shipped one hundred and fifty barrels of rye whiskey on a "uniform through bill of lading over the lines of the Reardon-Smith Line, and the Baltimore Ohio Railroad Company from Lynchburg, Ohio, to Cecil William Plumb at London. Several co-partners, trading as "Carters," bankers of London, financed the purchase, and as security took an assignment of the bill of lading. The shipment was delivered *550 to the City of Quebec, one of the Reardon-Smith Line's vessels, by the Canton Railroad Company, a connecting carrier, and ultimately delivered in London, where it was found to be thirty-five barrels short. "Carters" thereupon demanded that the carriers make good that shortage, and upon their refusal this suit was instituted against the two railroad companies and the Reardon-Smith Line.
The action was begun on January 24th, 1924, and on March 20th, 1924, the Reardon-Smith Line was summoned by service on Maurice B. Carlin, as its agent. The Reardon-Smith Line moved to quash the writ of summons on the ground that when it was served Carlin was no longer its agent, and the court, after hearing testimony upon that question, sustained the motion and quashed the writ, and from that order this appeal was taken.
The record contains eight exceptions, of which seven relate to rulings on questions of evidence and one to the order quashing the writ of summons.
The first exception deals with the action of the court in admitting in evidence the contract between Carlin and the United States Navigation Company, under which Carlin was employed as the appellee's agent, and the second to its action in allowing the appellee to offer in evidence a letter dated November 26th, 1923, cancelling that employment as of December 31st, 1923. John W. Praesent, secretary of the United States Navigation Company, was asked what were the relations between that company and the Reardon-Smith Line and he answered that it was the general agent of that company to represent general cargo boats, and the appellants objected to that question and answer. The court then asked "How were you appointed?" and the witness replied, "By correspondence; and our vice-president went over to Cardiff, Wales, and made the connection." Objection was also made to this question and answer, which was overruled, and the witness answered: "We only represented the Reardon-Smith steamers accumulating cargoes for certain ports like Hamburg and Liverpool where we had regular service according *551 to our schedule, not on full cargoes." The appellants then excepted to the "ruling of the court in permitting the witness to answer said question," and that is the third exception.
If the United States Navigation Company was the general agent of the Reardon-Smith Line, then in view of all the testimony in the case there was no reversible error in admitting the contract of agency and the cancellation thereof, because later in the case the signatures of the officers of the Navigation Company to that contract and the letter of cancellation were regularly proved, and the whole question turns therefore on whether the evidence did show that the Navigation Company was authorized to employ Carlin as the agent of the Reardon-Smith Line. The witness, in giving the testimony involved in the third exception was obviously not attempting to construe the correspondence to which he referred, but was describing a status which resulted from the course of business between the Reardon-Smith Line and the Navigation Company, and while the witness should not have been permitted to state the legal effect of documents not proved in the case, his statement could not have injured the appellants, in view of the fact that there was in the case evidence sufficient to have warranted the court in concluding that the Navigation Company was authorized on behalf of the Reardon-Smith Line to employ Carlin as the latter's agent. It is uncontradicted that before that contract Carlin met W.G. Liley, resident director in the United States of the Reardon-Smith Line, and its American representative, at his office in New York at the request of Mr. Oelsner, president of the Navigation Company, and at that interview, at which Mr. Oelsner was present, he, Liley, approved the arrangement of establishing a line in Baltimore, and that thenceforth Liley considered Carlin Company as his Baltimore agents; that after the contract Sir William Reardon Smith, chairman of the board of directors of Sir William Reardon Smith Sons, and Liley, visited Carlin in Baltimore and told him that he, Smith, was *552 "quite pleased" with the way things were going; that the Navigation Company advertised itself in the trade journals as the general agents of the Reardon-Smith Lines; that it represented that company in accumulating cargo at certain ports where that company operated a regular schedule; and that for about a year Carlin acted as agent in Baltimore for the Reardon-Smith Company's "berth" or "full cargo" business, and that the only authority he had to act as such agent was derived from the contract with the Navigation Company. This evidence was, we think, sufficient to warrant the inference that the Navigation Company was authorized to employ Carlin and to make a contract of agency with him, and also to cancel it, and we find therefore no reversible error in the rulings involved in the first three exceptions.
The fourth exception relates to the action of the court in permitting the appellee to prove that the Baltimore venture turned out unprofitably. That evidence reflected upon the good faith of the appellee in terminating the agency, and was in our opinion properly admitted.
The court, over appellants' objection, permitted the appellee to offer in evidence clippings of advertisements of sailings of the appellee's ships engaged in the general cargo business from issues of the New York Commercial and the Journal of Commerce of August 9th and August 11th, 1923, and a sailing list, in all of which the Navigation Company described itself as the "General Agents" of the Reardon-Smith Line, and those rulings are the subject of the fifth exception. This evidence tended to prove that the appellee permitted the Navigation Company to hold itself out as its agent. For while it does not appear directly that it saw the advertisements or the sailing list, it may reasonably be inferred that it did, when the nature of its business, and the fact that its American representative was directing the business of the company in the very city where these papers were circulated among persons interested in that trade, are considered, and we find no error in this ruling.
In the course of the examination of Carlin, he was asked *553 this question: "In connection with the city directory and the telephone book and the window sign and the door sign, would it not be proper to say that the cause for their existence beyond the cancellation of that contract of December 11th was either inadvertence on your part or unwillingness to go to the expense of making the correction, but that you did not understand that you had any authority?" To which the appellants objected. The objection was overruled and that ruling is the subject of the sixth exception. The form of the question is undoubtedly bad, but as no objection appears to have been made to it on that ground in the trial court, we cannot consider that objection here. But it was also objectionable because it had no possible relevancy to any issue in the case, since Carlin's motives, whatever they may have been, could hardly have affected the rights of third persons to whom they had never been communicated, but in the view we take of this case the appellant was not injured by the error.
At the close of the appellee's testimony the appellants offered to prove by competent evidence the circumstances under which the whiskey was bought and shipped, and the purchase financed, but the offer was overruled, and that ruling is the subject of the seventh exception. We find no error in that ruling. The only issue before the court was whether the appellee was bound by service of the writ of summons on Carlin as its agent, and the evidence referred to in this exception was neither relevant nor material to that issue.
The eighth exception relates to the court's action in quashing the writ of summons and presents a mixed question of law and fact. That ruling necessarily assumed that the evidence adduced in support of the motion was sufficient to establish the fact that when the writ was served Carlin was not the agent or the servant of the appellee within the meaning of the statutes relating to the service of process upon foreign corporations, and a consideration of it requires us to refer in some detail to the evidence bearing upon that issue. *554
Maurice B. Carlin testified that the agency contract between him and the Navigation Company was executed on December the 11th, 1922; that on November 26th, 1923, he received a letter from that company cancelling the contract, the cancellation to take effect December 31st, 1923, and offering to renew the contract on the same terms except that the new contract would be between Carlin and the Navigation Company as principal; that he wrote that company on November 28th expressing his willingness to renew the contract with it as principal, but that in fact it never was renewed, and that after it was cancelled he had no further relations with the appellee; that the last ship of the Reardon-Smith Company which was subject to the agency contract with the Navigation Company was the Bradburn, which left the port of Baltimore on August 8th, 1923, and that "we have not acted since the Bradburn; we have had absolutely no relations with them at all"; that in addition to representing the appellee in its general cargo business he "handled several steamers apart from that agency under employment by W.G. Liley, resident director of the Reardon-Smith Lines in the United States. He was resident director or the American representative of Sir William Reardon Smith Sons. These steamers in every instance were under full cargo charter"; that between July 1st, 1922, and May 5th, 1923, he handled six Reardon-Smith full cargo ships, none of which came under his contract with the Navigation Company; that his stationery, and the lettering on his office door, and the entries in the telephone and general city directories, carried his name as agent for the appellee after the termination of the agency; that prior to the termination of the agency he informed counsel for the appellants that he was the agent for the appellee and that process against it could be properly served on him (which was true at that time); that from time to time during his agency he corresponded with the Navigation Company concerning the appellants' claim; and that on January 24th he wrote to that company inclosing a letter in reference thereto from the appellants' attorneys, and notifying *555 it that the sheriff had attempted to summon him as the agent of the appellee, and he also testified: "The general nature of the defendant's business is that of ocean carriage. They had what is known as berth service, a regular line in operation from the various Atlantic ports, arranged with regular sailing schedule, which are advertised. Apart from this berth service or regular line service, there were probably thirty steamers that kept moving around all parts of the world ready for charter parties wherever they may be chartered, generally referred to as tramp steamers." And in conclusion he gave this testimony: "Q. Is it not common practice in the case of tramp steamers to appoint the agent at the time the ship calls at the receiving port? A. No, it certainly is not; if an owner had been doing business with a man at any one particular port, naturally he is going to send all his ships to him, and if he has not had any before, he is going to look around and get himself an agent. Q. He would be likely to have the same man? A. Certainly, unless that man displeased him in some way or other. Q. He would not enter into any continuing contract, but he would take it up every time a ship came in? A. Yes; he would. Q. As a matter of fact that is the kind of full cargo relations you had with the Reardon-Smith Line, Ltd., in the boats you handled? A. Each ship was a separate transaction; yes, sir." The testimony of the other witnesses in the case add nothing material to these facts and need not be referred to in detail.
It appears from this testimony that during the year 1923 Carlin acted as the agent of the appellee in respect to its "berth" or "general cargo" service under a continuing contract of agency, that after 1923 that employment was terminated, and he was no longer the appellee's agent in respect to that service, and that the service itself was discontinued. It also appears that prior to and during 1923 he acted as the appellee's agent in isolated instances in respect to several of its "full cargo" or "tramp" steamers, but that he was employed separately as to each of those vessels. It further appears, *556 from the declaration, that the bill of lading which is the basis of the suit was executed, dated, and delivered at Cincinnati, Ohio, and it nowhere appears that any liability in respect to its non-performance was incurred in Maryland, and finally it appears that the plaintiffs and the appellee are non-residents of Maryland, having no office or any "resident agent" within the meaning of article 23, section 118, Bagby's Code of 1924, nor any officer in this State.
The question presented by the eighth exception is whether upon those facts Carlin can be regarded as the appellee's agent in Maryland for the service of process. That he cannot be regarded as such an agent at common law is in our opinion clear, and if such agency exists at all it can exist only by force and virtue of the statute relating to the service of process upon foreign corporations, for the testimony that Carlin's agency in respect to the appellee's "general cargo" or "berth" business in Baltimore was terminated prior to the service of the writ of summons in this case is clear and uncontradicted. Nor do we think that a continuance of the agency can be inferred from the fact that, after it was revoked, Carlin's name was posted in the directories as the appellee's agent, that he still kept its name on his office door, or that he corresponded with his former principal in reference to appellants' claims. The appellee had done all that it could to revoke his agency, there is nothing to indicate that it in any way assented to or even knew of his use of its name after the revocation, and the fact that he informed his former principal of claims and demands made upon him in connection with a transaction in which he had during the agency acted for the appellee certainly did not revive the cancelled contract. Nor can it be said that because Carlin acted as the appellee's agent in isolated and distinct instances in dealing with some of its "full cargo" or "tramp" steamers, that he became its agent for all such vessels which touched at the port of Baltimore. If one employs an attorney, a broker, a factor, or an agent to represent him in a particular matter, it cannot be said that by reason of that fact alone *557 he employs him generally to represent him in all matters. It frequently happens that persons will deal with a particular merchant or consult some one lawyer or physician, or transact their business and commercial affairs through a single factor or broker exclusively, but no presumption necessarily arises from that conduct that they are obliged to continue it, or that the persons employed by them represent them or are their agents except as to the particular matter in which they are employed. In this case the uncontradicted evidence is that Carlin was employed separately whenever he represented the appellee in dealing with one of its full cargo steamers, and we do not think that, in view of that evidence, there was any general or continuing agency in respect to such ships.
The final inquiry therefore is whether he was the appellee's agent within the meaning of the statute referred to above. That statute in part provides: "Any person or corporation, whether a resident or a non-resident of this State, may sue any foreign corporation regularly doing business or regularly exercising any of its franchises herein for any cause of action. Such suit may be brought in any county or in the city of Baltimore, as the case may be, where its principal office in this State, named in the certificate provided for by the next succeeding section of this article, is located or where it regularly transacts business or exercises its franchises * * *. If the corporation has no resident agent so authorized and prepared, process may be served (subject to the special provision for insurance companies and fraternal beneficiary societies, orders or associations hereinafter mentioned) upon any president, manager, director, ticket agent or officer of the corporation, or upon any agent or other person in its service. * * * If any foreign corporation shall, after incurring liability in this State or after making any contract with a resident thereof, cease to do business or to have such resident agent or a president, director, manager, or other officer herein, then and in such case suit may be brought in the county or city in which the plaintiff resides *558 and process may be served upon any person in this State who was last a resident agent, president, director, manager, or other officer of such corporation in this State."
That statute is not applicable to this case unless the appellee was "regularly doing business" or "regularly exercising any of its franchises" within this State at the time of suit except as stated below.
The first question therefore is whether the appellee was at the time of this suit "regularly doing business" or regularly exercising any of its corporate franchises" within this State. It is not denied that during the continuance of its "general cargo" or "berth" service in 1923 in Baltimore it was "regularly" doing business within the state, but it is contended that after the cessation of that service in August, 1923, it neither did business nor exercised its corporate franchises "regularly" therein, and whether it did or not depends upon the legal significance to be attached to the occasional use of the port by its "tramp" steamers.
The word "regularly" ordinarily implies uniformity, continuity, consistency, and method, and excludes the idea of an occasional, accidental, incidental or casual use, and it must have been intended that it should have that meaning in the statute, because its obvious purpose is to qualify, narrow and limit the meaning of the phrase "doing business," and it could not have that effect unless it were given its ordinary and accustomed meaning. Thus construed, the irregular, occasional, or accidental use of the port of Baltimore by "tramp" steamers would not constitute "regularly doing business" or "regularly exercising" corporate franchises within the state. In 1922 five "tramp" steamers owned by the appellee arrived and departed from Baltimore at intervals of from two days to several months; in 1923 three arrived and departed, and in 1924 two arrived and departed. These "tramps" operated on no regular schedule, but sailed hither and thither over all seas and to all ports as the needs of the business of those who chartered them required, and whether they called at Baltimore or Hamburg or London or *559
elsewhere was wholly uncertain and depended wholly upon the terms of each patricular charter party. The owner of these ships could no more be said to be "regularly doing" business in any one of these ports because these "tramps" called there, than would the owner of a garage be said to be doing business in a distant town or city because one who hired an automobile of him drove it there. The case of Central of Georgia R. Co. v. Eichberg,
In our opinion, therefore, at the time this suit was brought, the appellee was not "regularly doing business" or "regularly exercising" its corporate franchises within this state.
But assuming that the appellee did not regularly do business in this State when this suit was brought, nevertheless, the appellants contend, since it had done business therein under the provision of the statute referred to above, it may still be sued here with respect to any liability incurred in the state or any contract made with any resident thereof. But the provision of the statute upon which that contention rests only authorizes the suit contemplated by it to be brought "in the county or city in which the plaintiff resides," and is not applicable to such a case as this, where the plaintiff does not reside in the state at all.
It follows from what has been said that in our opinion the appellee was not regularly doing business or regularly exercising its franchises in the State of Maryland when this suit *560 was brought, and that Carlin was not at that time its agent, either at common law or under the statute. The order appealed from will therefore be affirmed.
Order affirmed, with costs.