244 F. 31 | 2d Cir. | 1917
(after stating the facts as above). This suit is brought to obtain from the defendant the complainant’s proportion'of the profits realized from an order, alleged to have been obtained through Col. Mackie, for shrapnel fuses. The claim arises under the written memorandum signed on Eebruary 20, 1916, and which is hereinbefore set forth. The parties who signed the writing do not agree as to what it means. The defendant insists that the District Court has misinterpreted, misconstrued, and misapplied it; and we are now asked to review the whole of the interlocutory decree, not merely the part granting the injunction, and, if such review warrant, to direct that the bill be dismissed.
To understand this contract, it is necessary to consider the negotia-tioms which led up to it. In January, 1915, the defendant solicited the aid of complainant in financing his Ohio Company. At that time the complainant suggested to defendant the possibility of procuring for that company contracts or orders for the manufacture of munitions of war, or parts thereof, directly or indirectly for the governments at war in Europe, and the complainant agreed to bring the defendant into touch with parties having such contracts to let. The written memorandum was drawn, which provides that, “if any order is received from Col. Mackie,” the profits shall be divided in the manner specified. Col. Mackie is a reserve officer of the Canadian Ariny. He was in Russia in October, 1914, where he met the artillery boafd, and after weeks of negotiations he and three other officers associated with him obtained a contract with that board to supply it with 2,000,000 shrapnel shells complete, with a right in the board to increase the number of shells to 5,000,000. Mackie then returned to England in January, 1915, where he met Senator Curry, the president of the Canadian Car & Foundry Company, and offered him the contract. The latter was not certain whether he could meet the Russian requirements, and the matter was left opeiv to be decided after Curry’s return to- Canada.
One of the difficulties in the way of the acceptance of the contract by the Canadian Company was to find some one who could supply, the necessary time fuses. Mackie promised Curry to aid him in bringing in real contractors who could furnish the component parts needed by the Canadian Company to fill, the contract, and Curry asked Mackie to join his organization, which the latter did, taking a seat in his office. Mackie, in his search for a proper party to manufacture the time fuses, came to New York and was introduced to the complainant, Ryan, who told him that he had a party who could furnish the fuses. Later Mackie introduced Ryan to Curry. Then, Mackie testifies, “some days after, Mr. Ryan and I met again, and I asked him to produce his man; if he was not an actual manufacturer, not to bring him.” The result was that complainant caused defendant' and Mackie to meet. “Mr. Ohmer,” Mackie testifies, “came to my room and presented one or two
“What we want to know is whether you were representing the Canadian Car & Foundry Company at the time of your conversation with Mr. OhmorV”
To which the witness replied:
“A11 of the time in America, excepting a pause of about two days, when it looked as if Senator Curry could not arrange tinances, each and every person whom I approached or who approached me on boxes, shells, powder, etc., each and every man knew and was given to understand that I was for the Canadian Car; that I was not tooting any hom.”
He was then asked:
“What were your duties with the Canadian Car & Foundry Company at that time? What was the nature of the services that you were rendering?”
This was answered as follows:
“Weeding out the chaff iron? the thousands of men who were calling at the hotel and at the offices or elsewhere, making the selection of Mr. Ohmer in preference to ton other men who said they could make time fuses.”
Then followed questions and answers which are reproduced in order:
“You were making the selection of Mr. Ohmer for the Canadian Oar & Foundry Company?”
“Yes.”
“In making this selection, as you stated, you had no power to make a contract with Mr. Ohiner?”
“None whatever. I should say I was to make the selection of the good from the bad to present to Senator Curry.”
“When you interviewed Mr. Ohmer, pursuant to the introduction of Mr. jRyan, you did so in the interest of the Canadian Car & Foundry Company, for them, and not for yourself?”
“For them.”
“Not for yourself?”
“No, sir; not whatsoever.”
“At the time you could not have executed a contract with Mr. Ohmter for the manufacture of fuses, could you?”
“No.”
Iti the same connection the testimony of the counsel of the Canadian Company, who was also chairman of the executive committee of that company, Mr. Cahan, throws light on the matter under consideration. The witness details a conversation which occurred between himself, Senator Curry, and Col. Mackie, in which the importance of finding a
“Col. Mackie spoke up and reviewed tlie conversation lie liad liad with a man named Tilomas Ryan. He reported to Senator Curry and to me the purport of a conversation that had been dribbling down for two or three days that Ryan said he had a factory available, and a man available, who could make time fuses. Up to that timie I had never heard of Will I. Ohmer. Senator Curry was hurrying away, and I went to my room and drew up a letter to Mint, which meant the exclusion of Flint and the prospective keeping in of Kirby and Bird, and he then turned to Mackie and me, and he said, ‘Mackie, this time fuse situation is very difficult and delicate, and I want you to get after Ryan and find out who it is that can manufacture time fuses,’ and he turned to m'e and he said, ‘I want to see that everything possible is done to find out about these time fuses, to find out from Bird what Yale and Towne can do, and. find out whether Flint controls themand as a, result of it he left. Mackie came to my room, and I impressed upon him the necessity, and stated how important it was that he should get after this m'an Ryan and get after him immediately. I told him that I was convinced that, if we turned Flint out, Flint would close up this Yale & Towne opening which) had been discussed so much. The next morning I delivered the letter to Bird, and had a row with Flint, and informed Mackie, I think by telephone, that Flint was out, and how was he getting on in finding out about these time fuses. My m'emory is that I came back to the Hotel Manhattan, being rather anxious about it, and Mackie said, T have found out from Ryan that the man who was available was Ohmer.’ ”
The defendant admits that complainant introduced him to Mackie, and that at that time he had no contract with the Canadian Company. Mackie testifies that he told the defendant that Curry, the president of the Canadian Company, had close relations with one Kirby of Dayton, Ohio, and that he suggested to defendant that he have Kirby substantiate any statements the defendant made about his ability to manufacture time fuses, and that on that day the defendant wired Kirby, who came pn to NeAV York, Curry being in New York. The defendant admits that on the day he talked with Mackie he wired for Kirby to come to New York; but he denies that Mackie advised him to wire Kirby, or that he advised him to have Kirby substantiate his statements. We can see no reason why Mackie should have testified falsely, or what interest he could possibly have had to misrepresent what occurred. Mackie is not in any way identified with Ryan, and testified at the trial that he had not seen Ryan since the negotiations, but that he thought he would know him if he met him. “That is my total connection with him.” It is very evident from testimony that Senator Ctirry reposed confidence in Kirby, who had been president of the National Association of Manufacturers and was well qualified to give him information, especially as respects the defendant and his plant, and that Kirby recommended the Ohio corporation and advised Curry to enter into negotiations with defendant.
The complainant testified concerning a conversation with the defendant at the time the memorandum of February 20, 1915, was drawn as follows:
“I said to Mr. Obmer that, this is the first contract that we have, and I am going to be liberal with you. I am going to make a suggestion that you have 60 per cent, and I should have 40 per cent. The percentage was not put in the original memorandum, and I think Mr. Ohmer said, T do not own all*37 tlio stock of the Recording & Computing Machines Company, and if yon should have 40 per cent, of this contract yon would have more really than I would,’ so he asked me to specify that as to his personal relation as to the stock.”
When the defendant was on the stand, he was asked by the court as to the words “from Col. Mackie,” inserted in the written memorandum of February 20, 1915.
“Do I understand by that interlineation that you accepted anything that came through Col. Mackie?”
And he replied:
“If it came from Col. Mackie.”
Then followed:
“That contract was to be accepted from your dealings with Mr. Ryan?”
“If anything came from Col. Mackie.”
“What?”
“In the way of orders.”
“As I understand you — I did not catch the other day the full significance of those interlineations — after it was written out you then insisted upon that insertion, the interlineation there, and the purpose of that insertion was that for all orders that had come through Mackie the profits wore not to he divided with Ryan?”
“No; any order that Mackie could place the profits arising, any commissions from that order, would be divided. At that time, you seo, I had a number of people like Canadian Car & Foundry Company and the Wesiinghouse and the National City Rank and the New York Air Brake Company all working on the same Russian order. Now here comes another. Mr. Ryan said Ool. Mackie was the man who could give a real contract, and I made him' si,ate in there that it was to be Col. Mackie and no one else, because some one else might have come in here and been some of the same people I was figuring with —from Col. Mackie and no other.”
Senator Curry testified that he thought Kirby introduced “Ohrner to him. In this respect his testimony did not agree with that given by Col. Mackie to which reference has already been made.
The court does not in this opinion pass upon any of the questions raised by the defendant as to the scope and form of the interlocutory decree, and this opinion is without prejudice to the right of the defendant to raise all such questions as he may be advised upon appeal from the final decree.
Decree affirmed.