267 F. 676 | 4th Cir. | 1920
The case in outline is this: On October 25, 1916, the appellant Euckenbach Steamship Company, a Delaware corporation, entered into a written contract with the appellee, W. R. Grace & Co., a Connecticut corporation, whereby the former agreed to provide freight room and carry for the latter, between December 1, 1916, and July 31, 1917, 75,000 tons, 10 per cent., more or less, at the option of the steamship company, of nitrate and/or ores from designated ports in Chile to a port of the EMitcd States Savannah-Boston range; the appellee agreeing to pay therefor $15.50, United States gold, per ton of 2,240 pounds, delivered. Under this contract the steamship company carried one cargo, of 5,998 tons, delivered at the port of New York about the 1st of May, 1917, and no more. In a letter to that company under date of April 21, 1917, the appellee asked to be advised of the position of certain steamers named, and when they would he ready to load with nitrate, and on the 23d, two days later, this reply was sent:
“Your letter of the 21st in reference to freight contract nitrate of soda received and contents noted. In answering the same, beg to inform you that we cannot carry out this freight room contract, which was supplemented by the usual form of nitrate charter party adopted and used by your company, and which usual form of nitrate charter party was made a part of the freight room contract, for the reason that a state of war exists Between this government and the government of Germany, and we are released under article 13 of this nitrate charter party reading: ‘The * * ’* enemies, pirates, * * * arrest and restraint of princes, rulers, and people, political disturbance or impediments * * * always mutually excepted.’ ”
Not long afterwards, on June 7, 1917, the appellee filed the libel and complaint herein, to recover damages for breach of contract, against ^ the Euckenbach Steamship Company and the Euckenbach Company," charging the latter with liability because the two companies were “maintained and managed as one corporation,” and alleging certain facts in that regard which presently will be stated. Accompanying the libel were a number of interrogatories, addressed to the respondents severally, which they were called upon to answer under oath. A monition was issued, as prayed for in the libel, and the marshal attached the steamer Florence Euckenbach, owned by the Euckenbach Company, and leased to the Euckenbach Steamship Company, which was then discharging cargo in the harbor of Norfolk, Va. A few days later the respondents entered a general appearance and filed
To these answers the appellee filed exceptions, on the ground that the facts therein stated did not constitute a defense to the cause of action alleged in the libel, and on that ground the exceptions were sustained, as appears from the opinion of the learned District Judge filed in March, 1918. 248 Fed. 953. The order thereupon entered, however, granted the respondents 15 days in which “to answer over, or make such valid defense, if any they have, as they may be advised.” On their failure to answer further within the time allowed, an interlocutory decree was entered, adjudging the respondents and each of them liable for the damages suffered hy the appellee, and appointing a commissioner to ascertain the amount thereof, with directions to return “a report of his findings and conclusions, together with the evidence and exhibits upon which they are based.”
In November, 1918, the commissioner submitted an elaborate report, in which he reviews the evidence at some length and fully explains his reasons for fixing the damages, as he does, at $1,311,059.16, with interest from November 1, 1917. Exceptions were filed by both parties, but all of them were overruled, and confirmation of the report ordered in a brief opinion, which quotes the report in full, filed in May, 1919. 258 Fed. 49. Final decree was entered accordingly, on June 26, 1919, from which the respondents bring this appeal.
With this recital of the proceedings in the court below, we pass to such discussion as seems to be appropriate of the various grounds on which the appellants ask reversal of the decree.
The contention that it is not rests on this clause in one of the articles :
“All quantities and deliveries to be mutually arranged between tbe party o£ the first part and the party of the second part, to suit the steamers of the party of the first part.”
And the argument is that thereby the contract was rendered so imperfect and incomplete as not to.be enforceable, under the rule that a contract which leaves something for future agreement, though otherwise definite and certain, is not binding on the parties. It would be enough to say in reply that the steamship company makes no such claim in the letter of April, 1917, refusing performance, or in its previous correspondence with the appellee. On the contrary, it assumes in that letter, as it had before, that the contract was in all respects complete and valid, and would have to be carried out, except for the reason therein stated.
But the further and equally conclusive answer'is found in the settled rule of law that one who breaches his contract for reasons specified at the time will not be permitted afterwards, when sued for damages, to set up other and different defenses. This rule has been long established and frequently applied. Thus, in the leading case of Railway Co. v. McCarthy, 96 U. S. 258, often quoted and followed, the Supreme Court says, at page 267 (24 L. Ed. 693):
“Where a party gives a reason for his conduct and decision touching anything involved in a controversy, he cannot, after litigation has begun, change his ground, and put his conduct upon another and a different consideration. He is not permitted thus to mend his hold. He is estopped from doing it by a settled principle of law. Gold v. Banks, 8 Wend. (N. Y.) 562; Holbrook v. White, 24 Wend. (N. Y.) 169; Everett v. Saltus, 15 Wend. (N. Y.) 474; Wright v. Reed, 3 Durnf. & E. 554; Duffy v. O’Donovan, 46 N. Y. 223; Winter v. Goit, 7 N. Y. 288.”
Other illustrative cases, among many, are Oakland Sugar Mill Co. v. Fred W. Wolf Co., 118 Fed. 239, 55 C. C. A. 93, Goodman v. Purnell, 187 Fed. 90, 109 C. C. A. 408, Polson Logging Co. v. Neumeyer, 229 Fed. 705, 144 C. C. A. 115, and Wall Grocer Co. v. Jobbers’ Overall Co. (decided by this court January 12, 1920) 264 Fed. 71.
In its letter of April 23, 1917, above quoted, the steamship company placed its refusal to perform the contract distinctly and solely on the ground of “restraint of princes,” and it cannot now be heard to say that it had some other excuse. The contention here considered is clearly untenable.
We are of opinion that this question should be answered in the negative. The contract is between domestic corporations, one of Delaware and the other of Connecticut, and covers the transportation of, nitrate from a neutral country to a port in the United States. The outbreak of war with Germany did not make this contract illegal as matter of law, or impossible of performance as matter of fact. The carriage of contraband is not per se unlawful, nor is it rendered unlawful by the circumstance that it may be attended with risk. As the Supreme Court says in Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. American Trading Co., 195 U. S. 439, 465, 25 Sup. Ct. 84, 92 (49 L. Ed. 269):
“The contract was not unlawful when made. It may be assumed that the load was contraband of war, but that fact did not render the contract of transportation illegal nor absolve the carrier from fulfilling it.”
“Please state in what manner you claim that the existence of a state of war between the United States government and the government of Germany operated to affect your contract of October 26,1916, with the libelant.”
Omitting immaterial parts, the answer is as follows:
“After the existence of the war between the United States and Germany, American steamships, and particularly those carrying Chilean nitrate and other contraband of war from South American ports to United States ports, were liable to capture or destruction by German warships, both under the established rules of international law and under the rules and instructions of the German government. The presence of German submarines in, or in the neighborhood of, trade routes between South America and the United States, was rumored and suspected at various times subsequent to the entry of the United States into the war against Germany, and this respondent reasonably feared that its vessels carrying Chilean nitrate to the United States would be liable to capture or destruction by German war vessels.”
It seems clear to us that this general allegation, which recites no facts and rests its conclusion upon nothing but rumor, comes far short, under all the authorities, of stating a case-of “restraint of princes,” or otherwise setting up a defense to the action. And the specious character of the plea, if not its insincerity, is made manifest by the fact, admitted by the steamship company, that on the 28th of April, five days after breaking its contract with appellee, it chartered a vessel to another party, to carry a cargo of nitrate from Chilean ports to the United States, at $29 per ton, and less than a month later chartered two more vessels to different parties, also to carry nitrate from Chilean ports to the United States, in one instance at $33 and in the other at $34 per ton! In view of these and other admissions in its answers to the libel and interrogatories, we need not argue further that the steamship company fails to show any valicl excuse for refusing to perform its contract.
From the statements and admissions in their respective answers these facts appear: The Luckenbach Steamship Company has a capital of only $10,000. The Luckenbach Company, also a Delaware corporation, is capitalized at $800,000. They have the same directors and the same officers, and Edgar F. Luckenbach, who was president of and personally managed both companies, ownl 94 per cent, of the stock of the Luckenbach Steamship Company, and almost 90 per cent, of the stock of the Luckenbach Company. The latter company owns all or most of the steamers referred to in the record, some eight or nine in number. By contracts of May 1, July 1, and October 1, 1915, copies of which are annexed to the libel, these steamers were leased to the steamship company for terms running into the year 1926, and upon terms which, though something more than nominal, are obviously far below their rental value.
Putting aside any inquiry into the motive for this arrangement, we think it too plain for serious question that the facts here considered show such identity of the two corporations, or at least give rise to such a strong presumption of their identity, as warrants the conclusion that the Luckenbach Company is equally responsible with tiie steamship company for the breach by the latter of its contract witli the appellee. For all practical purposes the two concerns are one, and it would be unconscionable to allow the owner of this fleet of steamers, worth millions of dollars, to escape liability because it had turned them over a year before to a $10,000 corporation, which is simply itself in another form. We have only to add that on this issue the case is covered, by our recent decision in The Willem Vap Driel, Sr., 252 Fed. 35, 39, 164 C. C. A. 147, 151, wherein it is said:
“The elevators were constructed and operated merely as a facility to tile business of tbe railroad company. Applying the language of Judge Wallace in Lehigh Valley Railroad Co. v. Du Pont, 128 Fed. 840, 64 C. C. A. 478, the potential and ultimate control of all its property and business affairs of the elevator company was lodged in the railroad company, and this control was exercised as completely and as directly g.s the machinery of corporate organisms would permit. Such complete dominance and control by the railroad company made the elevator company its mere puppet. United States v. Del. Lack. & West. R. R., 288 U. S. 516, 35 Sup. Ct. 873, 59 L. Ed. 1438.”
4. To what damages is the appellee entitled?
We reply to this question by adopting the commissioner’s report, which was approved and confirmed by the court below; and as it is quoted at length in the opinion of Judge Waddill, in 258 Fed. 49, it need not here be reproduced. This report, in our judgment, states fully and fairly, and answers convincingly, the several contentions of appellants respecting the measure of damages, and we find no occasion to add anything to what is therein so clearly and ably said. It is enough to repeat the paragraph with which the report closes:
“The answers to the interrogatories filed as a part of the record in the case fully sustain the foregoing conclusions, and except for the fact that the respondent declined to offer any evidence, it is not too much to say that the record doubtless would have shown that even the large amount of damages*682 here állowed were but little, if any, larger than the additional profits received by 'the respondent in the breach of the contract and the chartering of the ships to others. By such act on its part it has received and has in pocket large gains, while, on the other hand, the libelant, without fault on its part, has been compelled to complete the defaulted contract with funds of its own, for which it has received neither principal nor interest.”
The commissioner was aliowed a fee of $5,000, and appellants allege that this “is not reasonable — it is exorbitant — for the services rendered.” But the case involves an unusually large amount, besides questions of some difficulty, and the report shows that it received the most thorough and painstaking examination. Talcing all the circumstances into account, we are not prepared to say that the compensation awarded is in any sense excessive, and the contention to the contrary must he held without merit.
The decree appealed from is right, and will be affirmed.