81 Pa. Super. 314 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Argued April 23, 1923. Action in assumpsit in the County Court of Allegheny County for damages from breach of contract. Trial by a judge without a jury. Finding and judgment for plaintiff. Defendants appeal from the order of the court of common pleas refusing an appeal from the county court.
The case depends on whether there was a sufficient memorandum in writing, signed by the defendants' agent, to make the contract enforceable within section 4 of the Sales Act of 1915, P.L. 543; and this, in turn, depends on whether J.T. Taylor Brokerage Company, who negotiated the sale and signed the memorandum of contract, was the defendants' agent in that behalf. The judge who heard the case found that it was; and we are not satisfied that his finding was not supported by the evidence: N.Y. Pa. Co. v. N.Y. Cent. R.R.,
The evidence would support the following findings, (using for technical trade terms, their undisputed meaning): J.T. Taylor Brokerage Company was a produce broker in the City of Pittsburgh. It was not in the regular employ of either of the parties to this action. It negotiated the sale of a carload of eggs from the plaintiff, who was in the produce business at Lebanon, Tenn., to Armour Co., at fifty-one cents per dozen, f.o.b. shipping point. With this knowledge of the market conditions, a representative of the brokerage company on February 1, 1921, approached defendants, (who were in the produce business at Pittsburgh), and inquired whether they wanted a car of eggs, at the same price, if he could get them from plaintiff. He had not been authorized or instructed by the plaintiff to offer such car *316 and there is no evidence that plaintiff had, at the time, a car of eggs for sale. Defendants told Taylor's representative that they would take a 200-case car if he could get them at the price named. The brokerage company, thereupon, telegraphed plaintiff to ship defendants a 200-case car of eggs at fifty-one cents a dozen f.o.b. shipping point; and received a telegram the same day from the plaintiff confirming the order, "to-day shipment." The brokerage company thereupon telephoned defendants that plaintiff had accepted the order, and telegraphed plaintiff confirming the sale. To fill the order, plaintiff bought the eggs from a dealer at Columbia, Tenn., and ordered them shipped to Pittsburgh; and, attaching the bill of lading to a sight draft on the defendants, forwarded both, through his bank, to Pittsburgh. He also sent defendants an invoice of the sale and notified the brokerage company to be on the lookout for the eggs, giving the number, etc., of the car in which they were shipped. The car arrived at Pittsburgh, in due course, on the evening of Sunday, February 6th, and was refused by defendants the next day, Monday, February 7th. The eggs were sold on February 10th at current prices, but at a loss.
The recital of these facts justifies, in our opinion, the finding of the trial judge that the brokerage company, in effecting the sale, acted as the agent of the defendants, and that there was a sufficient note or memorandum in writing, signed on their behalf, to make the contract enforceable within the 4th section of the Sales Act. The fact that the broker, in accordance with the custom of the trade, was paid its commission by the seller, did not, of itself, prevent its acting on behalf of the buyers and binding them by a note or memorandum signed on their behalf. Where brokers act on behalf of both buyer and seller and evidence the transaction by formal "bought and sold notes," the commission is ordinarily paid by the seller; but that does not prevent the broker from being the agent for both parties, within the meaning of the *317
Statute of Frauds and the Sales Act: Franklin Sugar Refining Co. v. Howell,
The case is easily distinguished from Dodd v. Stewart,
The telegram of defendants to plaintiff, dated February 8th, while of value in confirming the broker's testimony that he was authorized to purchase the car of eggs on behalf of defendants, was not, in itself, a sufficient note or memorandum in writing within the Sales Act, and it was not sent until after the shipment had been refused: Lippincott v. Stringer,
The case does not require further consideration. Its disposition depended on whether the J.T. Taylor Brokerage Company was acting as the agent of the defendants in making the contract of purchase and having determined the evidence sufficient to sustain the finding of the judge that it was, the order of the court of common pleas refusing an appeal must be affirmed.
Order affirmed. *318