349 Mass. 734 | Mass. | 1965
A demurrer to this bill for declaratory relief was sustained by an interlocutory decree, and a final
The bill alleges as follows: there was a written contract between the plaintiff and the defendant with a thirty day cancellation clause and requirements that the defendant as sales agent within ten days after a cancellation notice furnish a list of outstanding estimates and that the plaintiff pay the usual commission on sales closed from that list; the plaintiff had cancelled the contract and the defendant had not furnished a list of outstanding estimates; a third party, sued by the plaintiff, had attempted to set off a claim by the defendant for $6,600 for commissions due under the contract (held by the third party under an assignment from the defendant); the plaintiff had recovered a default judgment in that action. The bill also alleges that the plaintiff contends that the defendant’s claim to commissions is barred by the defendant’s failure to present the estimate list and by the default judgment, and the defendant, disputing these assertions, contends that the notice of cancellation was a nullity, that the agency relationship has continued, that the notice of termination was a breach of contract and that it is not foreclosed by the default judgment.
We hold, contrary to an assigned ground of demurrer, that the bill shows “an actual controversy . . . specifically set forth.” G. L. c. 231A, § 1. Though a reference to the circumstances of the making of the respective contentions would have strengthened the statement, and thus overcome doubts of its adequacy, the omission does not invalidate the bill. If there is an implication in the absence of detail that the plaintiff is seeking only to bar a possible future claim by a presently quiescent defendant (see National Shawmut Bank v. Morey, 320 Mass. 492, 497; Richard Clothing Mfg. Co. v. Gutstein-Tuck, Inc. 328 Mass. 386, 391) this is met by the reference to the defendant’s purported assignment of commissions in substantial amount. The allegations state more than a mere difference of opinion, and strongly
There is nothing in the other grounds of the demurrer. The bill lies though there may be a remedy at law. Gr. L. c. 231A, § 1. There is no want of parties; the rights between the plaintiff and the third party are not in issue. A decree will determine the controversy between the plaintiff and the defendant.
Interlocutory and final decrees reversed.
An interlocutory decree is to enter in the Superior Court overruling the demurrer.