147 N.W. 977 | S.D. | 1914
Plaintiff and appellant in this action is the Receiver of the Blue Bell Medicine Company, and the action grows out of a contract entered into between said company and one Harry Woolsey, with these respondents as guarantors for said Woolsey. By the terms of the contract, the company was to, and did, ship- to said Woolsey, to be sold at retail by him, certain stock foods and proprietary ^medicines. He agreed to sell no' other goods than those shipped .by the company, to sell said goods at retail prices fixed by the company, and to engage in no- other business or employment. By the terms of the contract, Woolsey further agreed, in payment for said goods, to remit to the company each week an amount equal to- one-half of the receipts of the business and to submit weekly reports, to the company of the 'business done. He also agreed that, upon the termination of the contract, he would settle in cash within a reasonable time for the balance -due the company on account. The -company, on its part, agreed to fill Woolsey’s reasonable orders at current wholesale prices so long as his account was in a satisfactory condition, and-to furnish him, free of charge, certain advertising matter, stationery, advice and instructions upon -the best method of selling said goods; but the contract nowhere provides for the passing of the title to said goods from the company to said Woolsey nor that ■he should be liable to the -company -beyond -one-half of the receipts - for goods sold.
No complaint is -m-ade that Woolsey did not remit the one-half of -the receipts for all goods sold by him, 'but the action is brought to recover some $2,000 for goods shipped by the company to Woolsey, but which -do not appear to- h-av-e been sold by him. Woolsey made no -defense, but the guarantors (who- are the respondents -here) answered and the case was tried to a jury; verdict and judgment were for defendants, and plaintiff appeals. Appellant assigns a hundred errors alleged -to- hav-e been committed by the. trial court, all of which are argued by him in his brief. These
It is claimed by appellant that the contract with Woolsey was •terminated by the company pursuant to a clause therein, and that, upon such termination, both 'Woolsey and respondents became liable for the value of all goods that had been shipped to Woolsey and not yet paid1 for. The clause in question will bear no such construction. It provides only that Woolsey should settle in cash for .the balance due the company on account. But the amount due, as we have seen, was to be one-half the receipts for goods actually sold, and, this having been paid, there was m> further liability on the part of the guarantors.
The Supreme Court of Minnesota, in 'construing a contract of this same company -and similar tao the one involved, in this case, held' the contract to be in the nature of an agency contract rather than one of absolute sale: Baskerville v. Bates, 143 N. W. 909. This conclusion was concurred in by this court in Baskerville v. Culver, et aL., 146 N. W. 595, and we now re-affirm the same.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.