265 Mass. 143 | Mass. | 1928
In the first of these actions the plaintiff seeks to recover a commission of five per cent on the purchase price for procuring the American Woolen Company as a customer to buy the South Village Mills, so called, of the defendant S. Slater & Sons, Incorporated, together with mill machinery, raw materials for manufacture, material in process of manufacture, manufactured goods and other property. The action is based upon an alleged oral contract between the plaintiff and the president of the defendant corporation, Jacob F. Brown, who is the defendant in the second action.
In the second action the plaintiff seeks to recover the same commission on the same sale, on the ground that the contract was made with Brown as an individual. Counts in tort were also added in this action, alleging that the defendant fraudu
(1) The ruling to the effect that Brown, by virtue of his office either as president or general manager, had no authority to sell the mills of to employ a person to sell them, was right! By the verdict for the defendant corporation it was settled that the corporation did not ratify the employment of the plaintiff.
The corporation ran three mills. The one in question, referred to as the South Village Mills, was a woollen and worsted mill and had a greater value than either of the other mills, its output being about one half of the total business of the corporation. It is not within the implied powers of an officer of a manufacturing corporation to make conveyance of all or a substantial part of its property. England v. Dearborn, 141 Mass. 590, 592. Selden Truck Corp. v. Selden Truck Service Co. 257 Mass. 58. G. L. c. 156, § 42. See Craig Silver Co. v. Smith, 163 Mass. 262, 268; Frederick v. Letteney, 214 Mass. 46; Sears v. Corr Manuf. Co. 242 Mass. 395. A “contract . . . made by . . . officers ... for which authority is primarily presumed . . . must be one within the power of the corporation itself to make . . . in the general course of its business.” They may not contract to sell an integral part of the assets without special authority from the stockholders. N. A. Berwin & Co. Inc. v. Hewitt Realty Co. 191 N. Y. Supp. 817, 819, affirmed by Court of Appeals, 235 N. Y. 608. “The directors, and not the president, have the powers of the corporation, and the president has no implied authority as such to act as the agent
There was nothing in the course of dealing between Brown and the directors or the stockholders of the defendant corporation to justify an inference that he had been clothed with authority to dispose of a substantial part of its assets such as the mill and all that went with it as a going concern. The by-laws gave him no such power. It did not appear that Brown had more authority to employ a broker to sell the mills than he had to sell the mills themselves. Trulock v. Kings County Iron Foundry, Inc. 216 App. Div. (N. Y.) 439, 447.
The case of Henderson v. Raymond Syndicate, 183 Mass. 443, is not in conflict with the cases cited. There the general manager was held to have authority to sell real estate which had come to the corporation as security for debt. As the property in that case had been acquired in the course of the business of the corporation and was not needed for the conduct of its business, the jury could find that the manager was authorized to make the sale and that the employment of a broker was necessary to effect the sale; this was not a sale of capital assets.
(2) The plaintiff testified, in substance, that when he told Brown on October 6, 1921, that Wood, the president of the American Woolen Company, would like some definite figures concerning the mills, Brown tore a piece from a page of a book and, after writing some further information on another slip, gave the papers to the plaintiff suggesting that he have them typewritten to submit to Wood. These papers purported to be a balance sheet showing the assets and liabilities of the defendant corporation with other information concerning it. The question — what the plaintiff, in his talks with Brown and in receiving the balance sheet, understood he was to procure a customer for, — was excluded subject to the plaintiff’s exception. The plaintiff was also asked what, according to his understanding in his talks with Brown, was included in the term “mills,” and what he under
The plaintiff also excepted to the exclusion of the question, asked by his counsel in direct examination of the treasurer of the Slater Mills, whether or not it was the treasurer’s understanding that the contract referred to in a receipt, which was before the witness, was the proposal accompanying a letter of April 11,1923, and its acceptance by the American Woolen Company. It did not appear that the treasurer knew how the contract was formed or to what the receipt related, and his understanding was not material.
(3) The judge permitted the jury to look at a page of Poor & Moody’s Manual marked for identification. It was competent for the defendant corporation to prove that the information, which the plaintiff contended was given him by Brown to show the president of the American Woolen Company in response to a request, made by Wood, for more definite figures about the mills, was taken from a printed manual available to any one, and was in fact cut out of such a manual. As the plaintiff had put in the balance sheet upon the ground that it had a tendency to prove that he
(4) The judge permitted the defendant’s counsel in cross-examining the defendant Brown, called by the plaintiff, to introduce a letter from Brown to Wood, dated April 12,1922, acknowledging the receipt from Wood’s son of a copy of a letter from Wood to one Connelly, and containing the statement, among other tlfings, that it would be a source of regret to the writer ever to do business with Wood at ‘ ‘ arms length ”; that “When it comes down to business it would be much more pleasant to get along without any intermediary. . . . If the time should come that I am convinced that the property is to be sold you may rest assured that before it is sold to any one you will have a good fair chance at it directly from me. In the meantime I think your attitude in not allowing any of these outsiders to get in an entering wedge is entirely proper.”
Connelly was apparently trying to get a buyer for the property. The copy of the letter from Wood to him had been admitted in evidence without objection. It referred to the fact that some one else had called on Wood to tell him of the Slaters’ wish to sell, and stated that Wood would deal with no one in the matter except Brown. The exception to the admission of the letter from Brown to Wood was general. It is now argued that the letter was a self-serving statement and should have been excluded on that ground. The letter was competent as an answer to a letter previously admitted in evidence. It was written before there was any suggestion of trouble or litigation and about six months after the time
(5) The plaintiff excepted to the admission, during cross-examination of Brown by counsel for the corporation, of testimony tending to prove that Brown knew of no one on the North Atlantic coast who, during the period from January 1, 1921, to 1923, bought or was buying mills except the American Woolen Company. He testified that he kept in touch with the sale of mills and he knew mills were sold during that period to that company. The plaintiff contends that the testimony was not relevant to the issues and was prejudicial on account of its tendency to lead the minds of the jury away from the real issue. The evidence was competent to aid the jury in weighing the conflicting testimony as to whether any contract of employment was made, and in passing upon the contention of the plaintiff that he brought the parties together and was the efficient cause of sale. If it could be proved that the American Woolen Company was the only possible purchaser of woollen mills like that of the defendant corporation and Brown knew that this was so, the jury could properly consider this fact with the other testimony in deciding whether the plaintiff had sustained the allegations in the declaration. The defendant corporation might be permitted to show that the situation was one in
(6) In the case against Brown the judge excluded the questions, asked of the plaintiff by his counsel, whether, when he had the talks with Brown in April and October, 1921, he believed that Brown had authority lawfully to bind S. Slater & Sons, Incorporated, to an agreement for the plaintiff’s employment as a broker, and whether he believed that Brown had authority to hire him as a broker for the Slater corporation. The witness testified that he was induced by Slater to go to see Wood to interest him in the matter. He was then asked “Now were you or were you not induced by what Mr. Brown said to you to go and see Mr. Wood?” and he replied “Yes, sir.”
The plaintiff sought to prove that his contract was with the corporation and also that it bound Brown personally. He contended that if neither was liable in contract, he could recover against Brown in tort on the ground that he purported to have authority to make a contract to bind the corporation when in fact he had no such authority. On the issues raised by the tort counts it was incumbent on the plaintiff to prove that Brown made a contract in such form that the corporation would be bound if Brown had authority to act-in the matter; that the plaintiff believed the representation implied in the transaction that Brown had authority to act for the corporation in making the contract, and that the plaintiff acted upon that belief to his damage. The questions excluded were competent as tending to prove the plaintiff’s belief; but the witness was permitted to testify to his belief in the authority of Brown to make the contract that he did make and that he believed what Brown said to him: he could not be prejudiced by the exclusion of a substantial repetition of the testimony. Moreover the testimony, if admitted, could not have affected the ruling directing a verdict for the defendant Brown.
To earn a commission under the offer made by Brown, the plaintiff was to find a customer for the property willing to pay about $8,500,000. Upon the undisputed testimony the plaintiff procured no such customer. The total sum paid for the mills was $500,000 and for the inventories and other property $1,919,925.74. A broker who does not comply with the terms of an offer cannot recover a commission. Elliott v. Kazajian, 255 Mass. 459. Walsh v. Grant, 256 Mass. 555. Pagum v. White, 259 Mass. 437. Flax v. Sovrensky, 262 Mass. 60.
The plaintiff did not introduce Wood to Brown, and brought no offer to the corporation from Wood. He knew from the outset that the men were well acquainted with each other. Upon the testimony most favorable to the plaintiff he saw Wood four times, once in April, 1921, and once in September, 1921, before the contract upon which he relies was made; again on October 17, 1921; and on October 27, 1921, when he was told by Wood that he was not interested in the Slater Mills as he was financing another matter. He did not see Wood again but tried unsuccessfully to arrange an interview between Wood and Brown. The plaintiff testified in substance that the last time he saw Brown was in June or July, 1922, except when in December, 1922, Brown
The plaintiff did not act to his prejudice upon any misrepresentation made by Brown, for the further reason that before any commission had been earned the authority to sell was revoked or the offer withdrawn by the letter of Brown dated December 13, 1922, in which he stated: “If, as you say, you have been talking with Mr. Wood for the purpose of interesting him in the purchase of the Slater Mills, you did so entirely without authority. Mr. Wood, I happen to know, has known of the Slater Mills and considered their purchase long before you ever met him. I cannot assent to the claim that your services have in any way contributed to Mr. Wood’s being interested in the property.” The negotiations between Wood and Brown which began November 16, 1922, continued until the sale in 1923. Wood had definitely rejected the plaintiff’s overtures and notified him that the subject was closed more than a year before.
The court said in Elliott v. Kazajian, supra, pages 461,462: “Until a contract comes into existence the owner can withdraw the offer; and although the broker may have incurred expense, have been put to trouble and have spent time and energy in the effort to fulfil the conditions of the offer, he has no claim for compensation. . . . The right to revoke is not dependent upon the reasons which may lead to its exercise, provided that it is exercised in good faith, which here means for any reason other than to obtain the results of the broker’s efforts without paying for them.” And again in Walsh v. Grant, supra, pages 557, 558: “The right of a broker to recover a commission depends upon whether he has done the thing which he undertook to do before his authority to do it has come to an end. . . . An owner has a
If the plaintiff had been employed as a broker, his authority was terminated by the letter dated December 13, 1922. It is unnecessary to decide whether previous to that date the offer of October 6, 1921, had expired by lapse of time. See Park v. Whitney, 148 Mass. 278; Starkweather v. Gleason, 221 Mass. 552; Chatham Manuf. Co. v. Avery Chemical Co. 235 Mass. 340, 345.
Exceptions not argued are treated as waived.
Exceptions overruled.