36 F. 217 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina | 1888
The questions in this case yet to he decided are: Is the defendant entitled to compensation at the hands of the complainants? If so, what should be the amount of such compensation? The complainants, bankers in London, of established reputation and credit, owned certain bonds of the Willimans Island Phosphate Company, secured by a first mortgage on Willimans island, in this state. Peeling some apprehension with regard to this investment, and as to the solvency of the company, to which they had made advances, they sought a representative in South Carolina, who could ascertain and look after their interests. To that end they consulted Brown Bros. & Co., the well-known bankers, and on their recommendation they sought the services of David Roberts, the defendant. Mr. Roberts consented to act for them, provided that this met the approval of, and did not conflict with the interests of, Wylie Teacher & .Co., for whom Mr. Roberts was manager and agent in this country. The result was the engagement of Mr. Roberts, and his acceptance of the agency. The whole matter was arranged by letter. Mr. Roberts began at once to realize tt¡e interest of Martin & Co. in their bonds. He caused a suit for foreclosure to be entered by able counsel. The suit, after some necessary delay, was carried to a successful issue. The mortgage was foreclosed, a sale had, and Willimans island and the -property thereon were purchased by Roberts, in the name of and for Martin & Co. Thenceforward he took charge of the property for them, and continued in charge until he was relieved by Capt. Gardyne, who had been sent out from England by complainants to examine the property, and who was subsequently constituted by them its sole manager. Roberts’ period of service was from December, 1875, to September, 1888. The property thus secured to Martin & Co. by Roberts consisted of Willimans island, and certain valuable machinery thereon, adapted to the manipulation of phosphate rock, with' some other articles of less value. The island proper is an undeveloped territory, containing, or supposed to contain, phosphate rock. To the island is appurtenant the bed of a navigable stream (Bull river) to low-water mark, which had been mined to a considerable extent before Martin & Co. purchased. On the island was a small forest, of pine and .palmetto trees, principally. The agency of defendant was for the most part as custodian of this property, protecting the phosphate territory from intrusion, taking care of the machinery, and keeping it in order. ■ To these ends he employed a watchman, and occasionally, at rare internals, visited the island, which was at a remote.distance from his home . in Charleston. The expenses attending this were paid principally by wood cut from the island under instructions of the defendant, and sold by him. Besides these duties, the defendant looked after a claim of Mar- ' tin & Co. -against Spofford & Tileston, of New York, in which — through no fault of his, however — he was not successful. During his agency he 'carried on a correspondence with complainants, frequent in its earlier stages, containing all the information he had with regard to the origin, progress, and result of the foreclosure suit in South Carolina, and the steps taken by him in New York. It its later stages it was less frequent, relating to the condition of the property, its possible value, containing
“The act of assembly of 1745, allowing commissions to executors, administrators, guardians, trustees, etc., embraces only that species of agents or trustees therein specifically mentioned, or such as are under the authority of the law and the control of the courts. Factors, commission merchants, commercial agents, and assignees are entitled to commissions from the usage of trade. But the private agent or assignee of an individual is not entitled to any such clai m unless he makes it a part of his contract. ” Muckenfuss v. Heath, 1 Hill, Eq. 183.
The doctrine here stated, taken broadly, does not commend itself. It certainly cannot apply to every private agent, in the sense that he can get no compensation, if it be not expressed in his contract, for in Scott v. Baldwicke, 2 Const. (S. C.) 410, an overseer recovered on an entire contract the
What that compensation would be, is the next and most difficult question. There can be no doubt that, when the coi’respondence between Martin & Co. and Roberts began, and during its progress, the latter counted upon great ulterior results apart from and outside of his present service, to be derived by him from his confidential connection with a banking-house of repute. In his letter, 3d May, 1880, Roberts says to Martin & Co.: “As yet I have been little more than a custodian of your property, and you have had no opportunity of judging me in any other capacity.” This suit has defeated this expectation, and for this disappointment there can be no compensation. The reward of his care and services, however, was to come also in part from the management of the property for them, or from its sale, or from some disposition of it. Certainly not from its bare custody; else the consent of Wylie Teacher & Co. was not needed, and'would not have been asked. This precludes