113 A. 348 | Md. | 1921
This is the second appeal in this case. The judgment was reversed before mainly because of erroneous rulings as to the proper measure of damages. The former appeal is reported in
According to the testimony offered in behalf of appellee, appellant, an incorporated firm of investment brokers, agreed to "undertake to make the issue of the $44,000 or $46,000 seven per cent. preferred stock of the above company (the appellee) within a reasonable time and charge us (appellee) the sum of $5,000 cash for so doing."
The above quotation is from the evidence of Jenkins, the president of appellee, as to the contents of a letter from him to appellant, written the day after the oral agreement was reached, and which Jenkins says Mr. J.W. Middendorf, the officer of the appellant company with whom the negotiations were had, admitted embodied the terms of the oral agreement. Middendorf, in addition to his charge of $5,000 for disposing of this issue of stock, required certain other things to be done. "He said he would require two directors to be placed upon the board of his nomination, that he required me to assign a large number of the patents and patent applications which I had to the reorganized corporation, that he would require me to serve the corporation for quite a period of time * * * Mr. Middendorf said that certain changes would have to be made in the by-laws and charter of the corporation, and that he would wish to approve such changes; these changes included the increased directorate and the larger *590 issue of stock for his financial purposes. * * * Mr. Middendorf said that he could sell this stock. He said that he had an opportunity just then between other operations, and he urged me to complete the change in the constitution and charter, because it was a very opportune time for it. Middendorf expressed no doubt at all about selling the stock. * * * In fact, his concluding statement after saying he would make the offer to sell it was, `Oh, I can sell this very easily.'" Witness accepted this offer first orally and then confirmed it by letter on or about May 15th, 1914. Messrs. Whitelock, Deming Kemp acted as attorneys for both parties, and all the things required by Middendorf were done, and approved by him. Afterwards, about the middle of June, witness called to see Middendorf, who told him that he had received a report from Mr. Page, the accountant employed by appellant, and that the report was unsatisfactory to him. It appears that appellee at the beginning of negotiations submitted to appellant a statement of its condition as made out by Max Teichmann Co., accountants. Jenkins testified that there was no substantial difference in the figures of the two reports, but that Page's unfavorable report was based on erroneous conclusions drawn by him not justified by the figures, and further, that certain figures used by Page in making up his report were erroneous. A number of attempts were made to induce Middendorf to investigate this matter, but he failed to meet appointments after making them. Middendorf said he was very busy on a large undertaking that had come from the south and could not be bothered with this small matter, and asked Jenkins to lay it aside for the present.
On July 15th, 1914, appellee wrote Middendorf as follows:
"Baltimore, July 15th, 1914.
"Mr. J.W. Middendorf, "Care of Messrs. Middendorf, Williams Co., "Munsey Building, City.
"Dear Sir:
"Referring to the matter of the issue of our preferred stock, I wish to thank you for the very kindly *591 interest you have taken in this matter, and also wish to assure you that I thoroughly understand the position in which you are placed at this time owing to general market conditions. It is my desire, however, to wait until you think the time is propitious to make the right effort.
"It has occurred to me that in the interim it is possible that we might be able to place a little stock through some of our friends or customers who are familiar with our apparatus and our methods of doing business. I presume that should we be able to do anything of this kind that it would not interfere with your arrangements and that you would have no objection to our so doing.
"Yours very truly,
"The Alexander Milburn Company, "A.F. Jenkins, President."
And Middendorf replied as follows on July 21st, 1914:
"July 21st, 1914.
"A.F. Jenkins, Esq., President, "The Alexander Milburn Company, "1420 W. Baltimore St., City.
"Dear Sir:
"I have before me your favor of the 15th inst., contents of which has been noted.
"Aside from the general market conditions, you remember, of course, that the report of the operations of your company as made by Mr. Howard P. Page, did not verify the statement of operations put before us at the outset, as I had hoped, which will make it necessary when business conditions improve to deal with the proposition on a different basis.
"I feel that you have a splendid opening, and that it should prove attractive to the individuals who we propose to invite to participate. Meanwhile, if you can place a little stock through some of your friends or customers, who are familiar with your apparatus *592 and mode of doing business, I would have no objection.
"Very truly yours,
"J. Wm. Middendorf."
There the matter appears to have rested until March 25, 1915, when appellee wrote appellant referring to its undertaking to sell the stock, and to the expense and trouble appellee had been at in complying with appellant's requirements; also to Page's erroneous report and requesting appellant to "give the matter of your undertaking and the correction of Mr. Page's report the serious attention which it rightly deserves and advise us what you propose to do." The letter further said:
"As the report of Mr. Page is not only incorrect but harmful, and we have sufficient reason to know both from your own statements and other causes that it has harmed us, we cannot under any circumstances allow the matter to remain unsettled."
The receipt of which letter appellant acknowledged on March 29th, 1915, and said:
"In reply I beg to state that the matter in question does not interest us at this time."
In the meantime, acting apparently in accordance with the suggestion contained in its letter of July 15th, 1914, assented to by appellant in Middendorf's letter of July 21, 1914, appellee entered upon an advertising campaign as a result of which it sold 588 shares of preferred stock par value ten dollars. In 1916 appellee went to a number of stock brokers and endeavored to make arrangements for raising the balance of the $46,000, but did not succeed in reaching a satisfactory agreement until July, 1916, when the Industrial Corporation of Baltimore undertook to sell appellee's six per cent. notes convertible into the seven per cent. preferred stock. The commission paid was six per cent., and a bonus of fifteen per cent. in preferred stock was given to subscribers and an additional one per cent. was paid for notes sold by outside *593 brokers. Besides there was an office fee of $250 paid the Industrial Corporation and there was an expense of $73.60 for cost of circulars. There were sold $40,000 of notes. So that the items in the bill of particulars for the costs of raising this $40,000 were as follows:
Bonus in 7% preferred stock ...................... $6,000.00 5% commissions, cash ............................. 2,000.00 Cost of circulars ................................ 73.60 1% commissions ................................... 75.40 Industrial Corporation fee ....................... 250.00
There were other items in the bill of particulars for expenses of selling the 588 shares of preferred stock, amounting in all to ............. 976.02 _________ $9,375.02
Other items were charged in the bill of particulars, but were eliminated by instructions of the trial court.
There was credited the amount to which appellant would have been entitled if it had performed its contract ............................ 5,000.00 _________ Leaving a balance of ............................ $4,375.02 The verdict of the jury was for this balance plus two and one-half years' interest, or $5,031.27.
There are two preliminary questions to be disposed of before taking up the bills of exception:
(1) A motion was filed to dismiss the appeal because the draft of the proposed bills of exception was not submitted by appellant or its attorneys to the appellee or its attorneys within the time required by law; and because the bills of exception were improperly signed by the court below over the protest of the attorneys for the appellee.
The motion is based on Chapter 625 of the Laws of 1916, amending Section 316 of the Revised Charter of Baltimore City, which provides: *594
"Bills of exception may be signed in any cause pending in any of said courts at any time within the period that the parties, or any of them, shall have the right to file an appeal from the rendition of the verdict by the jury on the findings of the court upon the issue of fact in said cause, and upon filing the order for such an appeal, the time for signing said bills of exceptions shall thereby be further extended until ten days before the period within which it is required that the record shall be transmitted to the Court of Appeals; provided that the party appealing, or his counsel, shall submit the bills of exceptions to the appellee, or his counsel, not less than thirty days prior to the time that the record must be filed in the Court of Appeals, for the purpose of amendments or additions to the said bills of exceptions, and the appellee, or his counsel, within fifteen days after the bills of exceptions shall have been submitted to him, shall return said bills of exceptions to the appellant or his counsel, with such amendments or additions as he may desire. And upon his failure to return said bills of exceptions within said time, the bills of exceptions shall be signed by the court, as originally prepared by the appellant, or his counsel. If the said appellee, or his counsel, shall return the said bills of exceptions to the appellant, or his counsel, with his amendments or additions, as hereinabove provided, the said bills of exceptions with such amendments or additions shall forthwith be presented to the judge before whom the said case was tried, who shall settle the same within five days thereafter."
The submission of bills of exceptions to attorneys for appellee was not within the time provided by the statute, but, nevertheless, they were signed by the court before the expiration of the time limited by the statute, and it does not appear that the appellee has suffered any injury thereby.
Under the authority of Wegefarth v. Weissner,
(2) After this case was remanded for a new trial an amended bill of particulars was filed, whereupon a plea of limitations was filed as follows:
"That the alleged cause of action set forth in the plaintiff's amended bill of particulars did not accrue within three years prior to the filing of said amended bill of particulars."
To this plea a demurrer was filed by plaintiff and sustained by the trial court. We find no error in this ruling. The action was begun July 2d 1915, and the second amended seventh count of the declaration was filed December 4th, 1916. It is conceded that at that time the plea of limitations was not available. When the amended bill of particulars was filed on January 9th, 1920, no further charge was made in the declaration. The cause of action remained the same. The bill of particulars was amended only for the purpose of permitting proof of damages of a different character but resulting from the same breach and recoverable under the same form of action. In such a case the amendment does not let in the plea, if it were not available at the time of bringing the suit. 1 Poe Pl. Pr., Sec. 619; 2 Poe Pl. Pr., Sec. 189; Zier v. Chesapeake Beach Railway Co.,
We now come to the bills of exception, of which there are twenty-eight. Of these twenty-six relate to rulings on evidence, one to the prayers, and one to an alleged remark made by counsel in argument to the jury.
And first as to the prayers, the ruling on which is the subject of the 27th bill of exception.
The Reporter will set out appellee's 2nd prayer and all of appellant's except the 1st, 2d 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th.
The 2nd prayer of appellee and the 1st, 2d 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 12th prayers of appellant were granted, and *596 appellant's 14th prayer was granted as modified, the others were refused, and the usual exceptions taken.
Plaintiff's 2nd prayer correctly states the rule as to interest, and the prayer was properly granted. Defendant's 7th prayer asks the court to strike out the several items in the bill of particulars relating to the costs incurred by appellee in disposing of 588 shares of preferred stock amounting to $976.02. It should have been granted and the refusal to grant it was prejudicial error. It is perfectly clear that these costs could not have been charged to appellant if it had performed its part of the contract; and that is the proper test, as the advertising campaign had begun and was well advanced before the abandonment of the contract by appellant by its letter of March 29th, 1915; and, according to the contention of appellee, was authorized by Middendorf's letter of July 21st, 1914.
Defendant's 8th, 9th and 10th prayers ask the court to strike out the several items relating to the costs and fees paid by appellee to the Industrial Corporation for disposing of the $40,000 of appellee's convertible notes. These prayers were properly refused.
On the former appeal (134 Md. at p. 395) this Court gave the following rule for the measure of damages: "It being shown that there was a breach of the contract by the de-defendant and the plaintiff was compelled to go elsewhere for assistance in raising the money required by it, it was its duty to make all reasonable efforts to minimize the loss it had sustained, if any, by reason of such breach and to find another who would sell the stock or raise the money on terms equally as advantageous as those contained in the alleged agreement with the defendant. If, however, after making such efforts the plaintiff was compelled to pay more for obtaining said money or selling said stock than it would have cost it had the defendant company complied with its alleged agreement, then in such case the true measure of damages would be the difference between what it actually cost it to secure the money or *597 sell the stock and what it would have cost it had the defendant performed its part of the alleged agreement."
There was evidence that appellee conferred with a number of brokers and could not make advantageous arrangements; that the Industrial Corporation is not primarily a money-making concern, but, in a measure, a civic institution. Whether appellee fully discharged its duties in making the most advantageous terms possible, and whether it waited an unreasonable time, or longer than was necessary, were questions of fact for the jury. It certainly cannot be said as a matter of law that the plan under which the financing was to be done should have been exactly the same as that which had been proposed by appellant. The important consideration was to raise the money with the least possible cost, and not the plans by which it should be done.
Appellant's 11th prayer was properly rejected, as it sought to impose upon the appellee the duty of proving what it would have cost to secure the money desired by the plaintiff corporation at the exact time of the alleged breach by the defendant. It might well be that just at that time it could not have been procured at any price. Besides, there was evidence from which the jury could have inferred that the cost was at most no greater at the time arrangements were made than they would have been just at the time of the breach.
We find no error in the rejection of appellant's 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th prayers. The 13th asserts the proposition that a party to a contract to sell stock may avoid such contract on his mere individual opinion after investigation that he could not honestly recommend said stock to his clients. Of course, the correctness of such opinion, however honest it may be, must be decided by the jury, even if it be granted, which it is not necessary here to decide, that one could refuse to carry out a contract to sell stock, not fraudulent, simply because it was not of the high character, from an investment point of view, he could recommend to the class of people who looked to him for advice. Of course, *598 as an honest man he must be guided by his own sense of right, but it does not follow that his failure to make proper investigation before entering into the contract might not require him to be honest at some personal cost.
The court's modification of the 14th prayer unquestionably corrected the error in the prayer as originally drawn of arbitrarily limiting the time during which appellant's duty continued.
We are unable to say there was no evidence tending to show that appellant could not have sold the stock at the time of the alleged breach, and, therefore, find no error in the rejection of the 15th prayer. Besides, there was nearly a year after the contract was made before the definite breach occurred.
The 16th prayer was defective in that it asserts a proposition which would deprive one of the right to exercise any choice, based upon personal confidence, in the selection of a broker. A broker might be "responsible" without being efficient, honest or loyal. Besides the proper requirement is that reasonable diligence shall be used to secure the money at the least expense and on the most advantageous terms; and not that a man must as a matter of law disclose his affairs and entrust his interests to every supposedly "responsible" broker within reach. The standard is the lowest current or prevailing price and not the lowest cut-rate price.
The 17th prayer is obviously incorrect in that it ignores the testimony of Jenkins that the agreement to give Tinsley $3,000 of common stock was by Jenkins personally and not by appellee, and that it was not a part of the consideration for the agreement of appellant.
The vice of the 18th prayer is that it places undue emphasis on the duty of appellee to procure the money if possible by the Middendorf plan and tacitly assumes that to be the cheapest plan.
There is evidence legally sufficient to establish the contract set out in the declaration, and this disposes of the 19th and last prayer. *599
We come now to exceptions to rulings on evidence.
The first five bills of exceptions relate to objections by appellant to questions asked in reference to the advertising campaign. What we have said in considering defendant's 7th prayer applies here. The objections should have been sustained. What we have said in reference to defendant's 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th prayers applies to the rulings on the 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th and 20th objections. They were properly overruled.
The 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th bills of exceptions relate to the question of the value of appellee's stock in 1916, 1917 and 1918. This stock was used in part to pay the expenses of financing, and it was, therefore, relevant to show its value, at least in 1916 and 1917; and even if irrelevant as to 1918, there was no prejudicial error in admitting it.
There was no prejudicial error in the ruling in the 21st bill of exception. The witness had already testified to substantially the same thing when giving the contents of the letter which he said embodied the oral agreement. The questions asked witness Pusey in the 22d 23d 24th and 25th bills of exceptions were properly allowed. It was relevant to prove the current rate charged by investment brokers; the weight of the testimony was for the jury.
The objection in the 26th bill of exception to the introduction of the Teichman Report No. 2 was properly overruled.
The 28th bill of exception relates to certain statements made by counsel for the plaintiff in his closing argument to the jury. He is alleged to have said "Mr. Middendorf is as much a speculator as any broker in town." There is evidence in the case as to some of the business schemes promoted by Mr. Middendorf, and it is not for the court to say how far they were of a speculative character. Besides, it is impossible for us to take the sentence quoted, separated from the rest of the argument, and say whether it was or not permissible in the wide liberty in argument necessarily allowed counsel. *600
The only remaining question to be disposed of is the effect of the erroneous rulings of the trial court on the defendant's 7th prayer and on the evidence objected to in the first five bills of exceptions.
Before the Act of 1914, Ch. 149 (Code, Art. 5, Sec. 22-A), these errors would have made necessary both a reversal and a remand for a new trial of the entire case. Frank v. Morrison,
The article referred to is as follows: "If it appears to the Court of Appeals that a reversible error affects a severable item or part only of the matters in controversy, the Court may direct final judgment as to the remaining parts or items thereof, and may direct a new trial as to the said severable part or item only." See Bucher v. Federal B.B. Club, 130 Md. at p. 644.
It would seem to be clearly within the spirit and intent of the act to reverse without a new trial as to the severable item, if in the opinion of this Court there could be no recovery on such item.
In the present case it is apparent that the verdict of the jury on which judgment was entered included the items embraced in defendant's 7th prayer with interest for two and a half years, said items with interest amounting to $1,122.40.
It is also clear, in the view we take, that there could be no recovery as to these items, and that it would be futile to send the case back for a new trial as to them.
The judgment will, therefore, be reversed as to the sum of $1,122.40 without a new trial, and as to the remaining amount of the judgment, $3,908.87, it will be affirmed and directed to be finally entered.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part, each side topay half the costs. *601