236 F. 322 | 8th Cir. | 1916
This was a suit in equity, brought in the district court by the Lasswell Land & Lumber Company, appellant, against Lee Wilson & Co., appellee, to enjoin the prosecution of a replevin suit before then instituted by the Wilson Company against the Lumber Company to recover possession of certain lumber in the possession of the latter company, for an accounting concerning (he matters involved in the replevin suit, for a decree in its favor for the amount to be found due, and general relief.
Plaintiff, in its bill, alleged; (1) That the Wilson Company was a
Plaintiff further alleged in its bill that the Wilson Company had breached the contract by failing to take possession and ship out the lumber within six months from the date it was manufactured, as result of which the Lumber Company was required to execute its notes from time to time for the amounts of such advances and obligate itself to pay interest thereon to the Wilson Company at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from the time the advances were made until the lumber should be shipped and final settlement made, and had further breached the contract and committed fraud upon the plaintiff’s rights, in that it had made inaccurate and false inspections of the lumber when shipped out to its customers or vendees, and had rendered false reports and invoices to plaintiff as to the quantity of lumber shipped, reporting to plaintiff a less amount than was in fact shipped, and in some other respects had failed to comply with its provisions.
Plaintiff further alleged in its bill that defendant had not fully paid for the lumber replevied and was therefore not entitled to its possession, and that it had been greaty damaged by the foregoing breaches of the contract aqd frauds perpetrated by the defendant, and could not secure redress for the same in tire replevin suit.
Plaintiff prayed for an injunction restraining the prosecution of the replevin suit until this suit should be heard, for cancellation of the promissory notes executed by it to the Wilson Company for advances made, and for an accounting “between this plaintiff and the defendant of all their actions and dealings in connection with the purchase and sale of the lumber aforesaid; that such account be taken under the direction of the court and the condition thereof ascertained and stated”; and that plaintiff have judgment for such sum as may
A temporary restraining order was issued by the court, as prayed, and a receiver appointed to take possession of the lumber in question and sell the same.
Defendant, for answer to the bill, admitted that it was a foreign corporation, and had not secured a license to do business in Missouri, but denied that it was carrying on business in Missouri within the meaning of the Missouri statute, averring that the transaction out of which the suit arose was one in interstate commerce. It denied each and every wrongful act imputed to it by the plaintiff, and alleged that an accounting between the parties would show a balance due it of some $7,000, for which it prayed judgment against plaintiff. It also filed a cross-bill, asking that its answer be taken as part thereof, in which it set forth the terms and provisions of the contract of March 14, 1910, substantially as stated in the bill, and alleged that it had at all times kept and performed the stipulations obligatory upon it, and had made advances of money to the Dumber Company on estimates of lumber stacked for it in excess of the price agreed to he paid therefor, as shown by an itemized account filed with the cross-bill. This account, it was averred, shows certain lumber received from and advances made to a firm by the name of Lasswell & Crider, plaintiff’s predecessor in business, on contracts similar to that of March 14, 1910, between plaintiff and defendant; that those contracts bad been partly performed by Dasswell & Crider and partly by their successor (tlie plaintiff), the vendor’s obligation in which, it is alleged, had been assumed by the plaintiff.
Defendant further alleged that on February 24, 1911, plaintiff not then having manufactured, stacked for, and delivered to it the full amount of lumber it had agreed to do, then well knowing that the value of the lumber in the yard was not sufficient to repay the defendant the advances then before made by it, breached the contract by refusing to make further delivery of lumber to it or permit it to take possession of and ship out the lumber that was there stacked for it, and seized and converted to its own use the lumber then stacked in its yards belonging to the defendant, according to the terms of the contract, falsely pretending that the defendant had been at fault and had defrauded it in the matter of certain prior shipments and their inspection, and later notified defendant that it'renounced its obligation under the contract of March 14, 1910, and proposed to sell the lumber then stacked in its yards for the defendant to other parties. Defendant then set forth its damage for breaches o£;,the contract, alleging the same to have been $7,000, and prayed for a decree accordingly, and for general relief.
Plaintiff filed a plea to this cross-bill, again alleging that the defendant was a foreign corporation and had not complied with the laws of Missouri in the matter of domestication, and was not, for that reason, entitled to invoke the aid of the court for any purpose. The court heard this plea and overruled it. Plaintiff then filed an answer to the
The cause was then referred to Hon. Hugo Muench, as special master, to hear the proof, make findings of fact and conclusions of law for the advice of the court. The master, after a full hearing, stated an account between the parties, as prayed for by them. He disallowed to plaintiff any damages arising from the alleged failure of defendant to ship out the lumber promptly after it had remained in plaintiff’s yards six months, disallowed to the defendant any damages alleged to have accrued to it by reason of the increase in market value of lumber after plaintiff’s refusal to deliver lumber over and above the price agreed to be paid to it by defendant, then, crediting plaintiff with the purchase price of all lumber delivered to defendant in the execution of the contract so far as deliveries were made, and charging plaintiff with all moneys paid to it by defendant as advance payment for lumber afterwards to be delivered, and disposing of some minor and additional items of controversy, found a balance in favor of the defendant of $7,263.79, and, finding the other issues joined in favor of defendant, recommended a decree in its favor for the amount sa found. Exceptions filed to the master’s report were heard and overruled by the court, the report confirmed and final decree rendered dismissing plaintiff’s bill for want of equity, and rendering judgment for defendant on its cross-bill, as recommended by the master. From this decree plaintiff alone appeals.
The errors assigned are numerous, but the ones relied on in the briefs of counsel, as required by^our rule 24 (188 Fed. xvi, 109 C. C. A. xvi), and urged in argument, are comprehended within the following questions:
(1) Was the transaction between plaintiff and defendant, out of which the controversy between them arose, a transaction in interstate commerce’?
(2) If not, do the facts of the case permit the defendant to invoke the aid of the court as it did in its cross-bill?
(3) Did the conduct of the defendant in the matter of making inspections of lumber and reporting the same to the plaintiff damage the plaintiff or justify it in renouncing, the contract of March 14, 1910, before its full performance, and refusing further performance thereof ?
(4) Was it of such character as precluded the defendant from invoking the aid of a court of equity in its cross-bill for redress, because not approached with clean hands ? '•
(5) If these issues are found for the defendant, was the account, as stated by the master in his report and the judgment as rendered thereon, for the correct amount?
There are some other incidental issues affecting the accounting which will be disposed of in the course of-the opinion.
Did the transaction in question, conducted in the way, under the circumstances and for the purposes just stated, constitute interstate commerce? The majority of the court is of opinion that the transaction constituted interstate commerce, and, as such, was exempt from the operation of the Missouri statute. The minority thinks it was in no inconsiderable degree a local or intrastate transaction, constituting “doing business” in Missouri within the true meaning of its statute, and, as such, was not exempt from its requirements. But as we are of one opinion on the second question, and as this is controlling of the judgment in the case, we shall not rest our decision on any definite answer to the first question. Answers to some of the other questions, affecting the accounting, will first be disposed of.
Plaintiff claims to have sustained damage in-the sum of $300 by reason of defendant’s delay in shipping out some cottonwood lumber within the period of six months fixed in the contract for such shipment. The master found that the proof fails to sustain this claim. In this we think he was right, and the same was properly disallowed to plaintiff in the accounting.
These were the views taken by the master and the court below. They held that there was no such misconduct by defendant as justified plaintiff in rescinding the contract. They also held that any such errors made in the invoices to customers only, however fraudulent they might have been, cannot, of themselves, close the doors of a court of equity to the defendant for such redress as its case warrants. There was, in our opinion, no error in these holdings. The improper conduct, which repels a court of equity, must inhere in the transaction itself concerning which the parties are litigating, and cannot be predicated of general obliquity or misconduct or inequitable or wrongful treatment of others than the parties litigating.
In view of these last-mentioned conclusions, it is quite unimportant to decide the first-mentioned question, whether the transaction between plaintiff and defendant was one in interstate commerce or not.
The decree of the District Court is affirmed.