113 A. 891 | Md. | 1921
In 1918, the Big Spring Distilling Company of Louisville, Kentucky, was engaged in the manufacture and sale of whiskey, and to aid in selling its product it employed salesmen to solicit orders therefor. At the same time the appellants, trading as the Tidewater and Old Dominion Distributing Company, were engaged in the general wholesale liquor business in Baltimore, Maryland.
On October 18th of that year Harry Brown, a salesman employed by the appellee, undertook on behalf of his employer to sell to the appellants 1,000 cases of whiskey, which were to be ready for shipment October 24th, 1918, and at the same time he took from the appellants their check for $2,000 in part payment for this whiskey. Brown at once notified the appellee of what had been done and it immediately telegraphed him that it would not accept the order. Brown told the appellants that he had been so notified, and on October *390 21st the appellee itself returned the check for $2,000 to appellants and notified them directly that it would not accept the order for the 1,000 cases of whiskey. The appellants however insisted that the appellee had contracted through its agent, Brown, to sell them the whiskey and they demanded performance of the contract. The appellee on the other hand did not recognize Brown's authority to contract for it, and did not admit that there was any contract at all for the sale of one thousand cases of whiskey and refused to make any shipments on account thereof. After some further correspondence the appellants brought this action in the Superior Court of Baltimore City to recover for the breach of the alleged contract. The declaration, in addition to the common counts, contains a special count, setting up the supposed contract to which we have referred.
At the trial of the case, at the conclusion of the plaintiffs' testimony, the jury, at the direction of the court, found their verdict for the defendant, and it is from the judgment on that verdict that this appeal was taken.
The record contains thirty-seven exceptions, of which one, the thirty-seventh, relates to the court's ruling on the prayers, and the others to rulings on questions of evidence.
The rulings on the prayers rest upon the proposition that there is not in the case evidence legally sufficient to show that Brown was authorized to make the contract sued upon on behalf of the appellee, and whether there is in the case any such evidence is the important question presented by this appeal.
The testimony relied upon to show Brown's agency is in substance as follows:
When Brown approached the appellants in October, 1918, to sell them whiskey, they had known him for a couple of years and knew he was a salesman for the appellee, but had never before had any business relations with him. On that occasion he quoted them a price on whiskey of $16.50 per case of quarts. The appellants thereupon ordered 1,340 cases from him. These 1,340 cases were divided into two lots: one of 340 cases, and one of 1,000 cases, which were dealt with *391 separately, and were to be shipped separately. The first lot of 340 cases was paid for in full by certified check and a receipt for the payment given. This order was accepted and filled by the distilling company without change, except that the time for shipment was changed by agreement as a result of freight conditions. The second lot ordered was to contain 1,000 cases, and was to be ready for shipment on October 24th, 1918. The appellants gave Brown their check drawn to the order of the appellee for $2,000 in part payment of the purchase price of $16,500 and took from him a receipt therefor signed "Big Spring per H. Brown." Brown returned to appellants a day or two later and showed them a telegram from the appellee to Brown which contained the following statement: "We cannot accept order one thousand cases quarts at sixteen fifty. Seventeen * * *."
The appellants then received a letter from appellee, reading in part as follows: "Your order submitted through our Mr. Brown for 1,000 cases quarts bottled in bond. We are unable to accept; therefore, we return your check for $2,000 deposit." The letter also referred to the shipment of the 340 case lot, and inclosed with it was the check for $2,000. After telegraphing directions as to the shipment of this last named lot, the appellants on October 25th wrote the appellee in part as follows: "We are returning to you our original check for $2,000 on our order of one thousand cases of quarts at $16.50, and instead of compelling you to comply with the terms of the order for immediate shipment, we shall grant you three weeks' time within which to make shipment." In reply to this letter the appellee referred appellants to the letter of October 21st, and again returned the check, which appears on that occasion to have been retained. On November 16th, 1918, appellants wrote appellee demanding performance of the alleged contract for the sale of 1,000 cases of whiskey and threatening to place the matter in the hands of their attorney unless appellee shipped the order. In addition to the facts stated above, Joseph Dean, one of the plaintiffs, testified *392 that his firm had never done business with Brown before, although they had known him for a couple of years; that at the time they gave the order for the 1,000 cases of whiskey, Brown told him he represented the Big Spring Distilling Company and was a "member of the concern," and that no confirmation of orders given to him was necessary; that when Brown showed appellants the telegram from appellee refusing to accept the order for 1,000 cases of whiskey, he told them they need not bother about it, that he was a "member of the concern" and they would get their goods; and that they were induced to order this whiskey by Brown's representations that no confirmation of orders given him was necessary; that the two orders for the 340 cases and for the 1,000 cases were given at the same time, but the payments on account of them were made by two checks, only one of which, that paying for the 340 cases, was certified, that the other check was not certified on Brown's suggestion, and because a bill of lading was to be attached to the shipment of 1,000 cases which would be taken up when the goods arrived. Other witnesses, in addition to corroborating Dean's testimony as to Brown's statements, testified that they had, prior to the transaction referred to in this case, bought whiskey from the appellee through Brown; that usually there was an acceptance of the order on which the goods were shipped, but "sometimes" there was no definite acceptance.
At the close of the plaintiff's case the court, upon the appellee's motion, struck out all the testimony of the plaintiff's witnesses as to statements made by Brown as to his agency and the extent thereof, and this ruling, which is the subject of the thirty-sixth exception, we will consider in connection with the first, twenty-ninth and thirty-first exceptions, all of which relate to the exclusion of Brown's statements as to the scope and character of his agency.
Brown himself did not testify in the case. The testimony excluded was what the witnesses recalled of statements they had heard him make. Obviously no statement made by *393
Brown could bind the appellee unless Brown were its agent and the statement referred to some matter within the scope of his agency. Until, therefore, it appeared from the evidence in the case that Brown was the appellee's agent authorized expressly or by implication to bind it by a contract in its name for the sale of its product, no admission or statement made by him and referred to by the witness is material to any issue involved in this case. Agency cannot be proved by the unsworn declarations of the agent "in the absence of independent proof of facts from which the agency may be inferred." American Fidelity Company v. State,
The only facts and circumstances material to the consideration of that question, of which there is any legally sufficient evidence in this case, are these: That Brown was a travelling salesman employed by the appellee; that when he took orders at the same time for the sale of two lots of whiskey to the appellants, the appellee accepted the one but refused to accept the other; that Brown had sold whiskey for the appellee to others and there was not always a formal acceptance of the orders in such cases. These facts taken separately or collectively are not sufficient to support an inference that Brown was as the appellee's agent authorized to conclude on its behalf a contract binding it to a sale of its goods. The fact that he was a salesman employed by appellee to sell its products did not perse warrant the inference that he was by virtue of such employment authorized to make a contract of sale binding his employer without its approval or acceptance. *394 Becker v. Clardy,
The appellants however, contend that the appellee "adopted" and ratified Brown's act when it shipped the 340 cases which were ordered at the same time they ordered the 1,000 cases of whiskey, on the theory that they were both embraced in the same contract, and that by accepting part of the contract the appellee confirmed the entire transaction. Whatever force the legal proposition involved in this theory has, we are not called upon to consider, because it is a pure abstraction unconnected with any evidence in the case. The evidence shows that there were two separate orders, treated as separate orders by both parties. The whiskey was sold in separate lots, paid for separately, and the memoranda as to each of the two lots respectively placed on separate papers. Nor was there in fact any acceptance of either order as originally given. The original order for the 340 cases provided that they should be delivered to the express company "not later than October 19th, 1918." As soon as the appellee was notified of these orders, it sent a telegram dated Oct. 18th to Brown, which he delivered to the appellants, in which it said "Express Company congested accepted no shipments today will ship Tidewater Saturday if they accept We cannot accept order one thousand cases * * *," and on October 21st the appellee in a letter to appellants, after again telling them it would not accept the order for 1,000 cases, informed them that they were holding the 340 cases for them, but that the Express Company would accept no shipments of more than 1,000 pounds, and inquired whether the appellants wanted the order shipped by freight and added "if this is not satisfactory we will be compelled to return this check." In reply to this letter appellants telegraphed instructions for the shipment of the 340 cases, but did not in that telegram refer to *396 the other order. So that so far from "accepting" the original orders the appellee definitely refused to accept one, and refused to accept the other unless the time of shipment were changed, and it was only after the contract as thus changed was accepted by appellants that any whiskey was shipped on the 340 case order.
For the reasons stated we find no error in the rulings of the court involved in the first, twenty-ninth, thirty-first and thirty-sixth exceptions.
Much of what has been said in connection with the consideration of these exceptions applies also to the court's ruling in granting the prayers of the appellee, which directed a verdict for it on the theory that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to show that the appellee had contracted to sell the appellants 1,000 cases of whiskey as alleged in the declaration.
Without repeating what has been said, in our opinion Brown had no authority to make the alleged contract which is the basis of this suit, nor is there any evidence in the case legally sufficient to show that the appellee either ratified or accepted it, and in the absence of such evidence there is no proof in the case of any contract at all between the parties with reference to the sale of the lot of 1,000 cases of whiskey, and therefore the prayers to which we have referred were properly granted.
In view of the conclusion we have reached it becomes unnecessary to consider in detail the remaining exceptions, all of which but two relate to such questions of evidence as the relevancy or materiality of facts relating to the damages resulting to the appellants from a breach of the supposed contract. Since the appellants were not entitled to recover at all, this evidence was immaterial.
In the course of the trial, counsel for the appellants stated that a witness then on the stand had testified he had given one order for 1,340 cases of whiskey. The court then said it had heard no such testimony. This statement is the basis of the second exception. Assuming that this exception presents *397 a question for our consideration, we find no error in the court's action.
A witness for the appellants, who had testified that he had placed orders with the Big Spring Distilling Company through Brown, was asked "was it necessary to have those orders confirmed?" This question, which is the subject of the thirtieth exception, did not call for the witness' knowledge of any fact material to the issues in the case but for his opinion as to the scope of Brown's agency in the transactions which he had had with the witness, and we find no error in the court's ruling in refusing to allow it.
Finding no errors in the rulings presented for our consideration, the judgment appealed from will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to appellee. *398