64 F. 406 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri | 1894
This is a bill in equity filed by the complainant, an Illinois corporation, against the respondents, numbering about 45 persons. 11 is predicated of a contract for the sale and construction of a creamery, which is like that found in the case of Davis v. Shafer, 50 Fed. 765. The creamery was io he erected, as stated on the face of the contract, “at or near Jefferson City, or on Dix’s farm.” The respondents having failed to procure the lot of ground, with a supply of water, for the erection of the creamery, the complainant, pursuant to the provisions of the contract, proceeded to select the ground at or near Jefferson City, and to dig a well for water; and, as the title to this property was taken in the name of the complainant, this bill in equity is filed, alleging compliance with and performance of the contract on the part of the complainant, and asks a decree against respondents for the contract price, and for a foreclosure of the equitable right of the respondents in said land, and for the enforcement of the decree against the same, with judgment over against them for the residue. A part of the respondents answer
“The parties of the second part hereby agree to select and furnish suitable lands for said building, togéther with well, spring, or reservoir on said lot for the use of the business; and it is further understood that, in case the said second party shall fail to furnish said land and water within ten days after the execution of this contract, then the Davis and Rankin Building and Manufacturing Company, at its option, may select and furnish land and water in behalf and at the expense of the subscribers.”
As the respondents had not made the selection nor offered the ground, Woodbury informed them at that interview that as the company, under the contract, could not compel payment without performance on its part, he would proceed, under the right conferred by the contract, to select and purchase the ground and furnish the water for the plant, and complete the works. More than that, he gave them notice in writing, which recited the contract in question by reference, and the provision just above quoted, advising them that he would proceed to acquire the land, etc. He proceeded thereafter in execution of the contract, bought and paid for the land, and put up and completed the creamery. Not one of the respondents at said meeting, or in said interviews, or in response to said notice, gave Woodbury or the company a word of warning about the alleged alteration in the contract, but, placing their complaints on other grounds,, they stood by and suffered the company, in ignorance of the imputation that Blanchard' had altered the contract before he returned it to the company, to go ahead with the manufacture of the material and machinery in their house at Ohicago, and put it up on the ground at Jefferson City in view of the respondents. Shall they now be heard, in the forum of conscience, to interpose the alleged alteration against the demand of the company for its pay? It is a wholesome, because a reasonable and just, maxim of law, especially applicable in the administration of equity jurisprudence, that “he who did not speak when he should have spoken shall not-be heard now that he should be silent.” State v. Potter, 63 Mo. 226; Quinlan v. Keiser, 66 Mo. 605. This equitable rule has been succinctly stated by the supreme court of this state in Chouteau v. Goddin, 39 Mo. 229, as follows:
“When a party, by bis acts or words, causes another to believe in the existence of a certain state Of things, and induces him to act on that belief so as to alter his own previous condition, he will be concluded from averring anything to the contrary against the party so altering his condition.”
And the supreme court of the United States, in Bank v. Morgan, 117 U. S. 108, 6 Sup. Ct. 657, citing with approval the language of Folger, J., in Continental Nat. Bank v. National Bank of Com., 50 N. Y. 583, held it not to be—
“always necessary to such ah estoppel that there should be an intention, on the part of the person making a declaration or doing an act, to mislead the one who is induced to rely upon it. Indeed, it would limit the rule mueh within the reason of it if it were restricted to cases where there was an element of fraudulent purpose. In very many of the cases in which the rulé has been applied, there was no more than negligence on the part of him who was estopped.”
This case further maintains the proposition that if, in the transaction in dispute, the one party has led the other into a belief of a
“When a, party gives a reason lor his conduct and decision touching anything involved in a controversy, ho is estopped, after litigation lias begun, from diAtiging Ms ground, and putting Ms conduct upon another and different consideration.”
Applying this rule to the facts of this case, the respondents who set up this plea of non eat faction are estopped; and of consequence the second class of respondent, who ask to be discharged on the ground that those of the first chisn are released by reason of the alteration, are also estopped. Take, as an illustration, the conduct and attitude of the respondent Dix, who has been the leader in tins resistance. In his letter of April 1, 1892, written long after he had signed the contract, he notified the company that he would not be responsible for the five shares of the subscription for the erection of the creamery, “for the reason that; my name to said subscription, and amount subscribed, was obtained from me by false and fraudulent representations by the said Chas. Blanchard,'who represented that lie was the agent of the firm of Davis <fe Rankin, of Chicago.” He specified wherein the alleged misrepresentation was false, to wii, that Blanchard represented himself as the agent of Davis & Itunkih. lie does not, even in Ids answer, allege this flimsy excuse as a defense. These respondents having placed their refusal to proceed on other grounds, and standing mure as to any claimed interpolation in the contract, Uie company had, in effect, their assurance that it might proceed in construction of the plant, subject only to loss in case any of the objections then interposed by them, and afterwards pleaded, should prove to be true in fact and valid in law. This is clear equity, as it is natural justice.
It then only remains to be seen what oilier defenses any of these respondents have set up than the one just disjiosed of. Mist, it is pleaded that the complainant cannot maintain this suit because it is a foreign corporation, and had failed to comply with the act of the legislature of Missouri approved April 21,1891 (Laws Mo. T&91, p. 75). This act, in effect, requires every nonresident corporation for pecuniary profit, before it shall be authorized to transact or do any business in this state, to maintain a public office or place in the state for
“We manufacture everything that pertains to the plant, and this is done in Chicago, and by ourselves. The contract for the building is done by agents who canvass the territory for us, under blank contracts furnished them. After this contract appears to them to be satisfactory, it is forwarded to us for ratification or rejection. If accepted by us, the agents are paid for the work, and their connection with it ceases. The machinery is made here in Chicago. We sell that to the contracting parties, and to other established creameries in the country.”
Confessedly, tbe state legislature cannot deny to a nonresident citizen tbe right to send a canvassing agent bere to ? o licit, by sample or otherwise, contracts for tbe sale of goods or machinery to be manufactured without tbe state, and shipped into and delivered in tbe state by tbe merchant or manufacturer. A corporation stands upon tbe same footing in this respect as an individual. Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168. Similar statutes in other states have- been held ineffectual to prevent tbe operation, or to obstruct tbe contracts, of foreign corporations whose method is to send a solicitor into other states to pialte contracts for goods to be manfactured at tbe domicile of tbe corporation, and shipped to and delivered to tbe customer in tbe state, for tbe reason that such transactions are parts and promo-tive of interstate commerce, and not subject to state regulation. Gunn v. Machine Co. (Ark.) 20 S. W. 591; Bateman v. Milling Co.
The next defense set up in the answer is that notwithstanding the clause in the contract which declares that the company will not be responsible “for any pledges or promises made by its agents or representatives that do not appear in this contract, and made a part thereof either in print or in writing,” yet the agent, Blanchard, assured them that they would not be held on their subscription for a greater sum than the amount representing the shares subscribed for, and that the company promised in writing to make good any assurances of said Blanchard. The contract, on its face, is clear and explicit, and by its terms it is a joint and several contract, each subscriber being responsible for the whole sum of the contract price. Davis v. Shafer, supra. Waiving any discussion of the fact that the proof, even on the part of the respondents, shows that any such statement by Blanchard was made to only a few of them, it is to he kept in mind that it is not averred in the answer that this alleged statement by Blanchard was fraudulently and deceitfully made, or that respondents executed the contract in reliance upon the truth of such representations. The case presented, therefore, by the respondents, is a naked attempt to vary, change, and control the plain provisions of a written contract, by contemporaneous verbal statements and understanding. This precise question was decided adversely to this contention by this court in Davis v. Shafer, supra; and so say all the authorities. But, say respondents, the complainant afterwards promised in writing to make good any promise made by Blanchard.
“Your favor of Apr. 5th received, and contents carefully noted. We are very sorry that any misunderstanding has arisen among your peoffie, and wo assure you that we will fulfill all promises made by our agent Ohas. Blanchard; and, as he has full charge of this matter, we must refer you to him in reference to the request you make in your communication.”
As to Clark and Davis it seems that their complaints were not made in letters to the company, but that they had complained to Blanchard; and to each of them the company .wrote as follows:
“We are informed through our agent Mr. Ohas. Blanchard that there is some misunderstanding and trouble brought on by one L. V. Dix. We are sorry that any misunderstanding should arise, and we assure you that we will fulfill all promises made by Mr. Ohas. Blanchard, and will do all in our power to make your creamery a success.”
. The promise is to be understood as having been employed by the writer in its ordinary legal significance or common acceptation, which Black, in his Law Dictionary, defines to be:
“A declaration, verbal or written, made by one person to another, for a good or valuable consideration, in the nature of a covenant, by which the promisor binds himself to do or forbear some act and gives to the promisee a legal right to demand and enforce a fulfillment.” '
That is to say, if Blanchard had made such a declaration, based on a good or valuable consideration, to do for respondents some future act, the company would carry it out. ISTo reasonable conclusion can arise, from the language of these letters, that it had any possible reference to the present claim of respondents that Blanchard had made them assurances that the plain terms of their written pfomise to pay should not be complied with, but rather, that if Blanchard had made them some independent promise respecting something to be done by him for them outside of the terms of the written compact, based, of course, upon a consideration, the company would keep and perform it. But even a written promise made by the company, after the execution and delivery of the contract, without some new consideration therefor, would be a mere nudum pactum; and especially so where, as in this casé, the respondents had thereafter done no act in reliance thereon, so as to alter their previous condition. Davis v. Shafer, 50 Fed. 772.
The only other defense interposed by the answer is that no deed