267 Mass. 450 | Mass. | 1929
The plaintiff is a custom house broker and freight forwarder doing business in the city of New York. By this action of contract he seeks to recover for services rendered and disbursements made on account of the defendant. The defendant imported numerous lots of skins which came to the port of New York through ocean transportation. There was evidence tending to show that the defendant had done business with the plaintiff in connection with importations for a considerable period of time, that communications
Plainly a verdict could not have been directed for the defendant. The evidence was competent as to labor conditions in New York during the period covered by the plaintiff’s charges. It is not necessary to discuss in detail the exceptions to evidence. They relate mainly to testimony concerning importations of the defendant on the wharves where they were left and their carriage to the railroad station for transportation to the defendant’s place of business. The whole question, whether the defendant dealt with the plaintiff as his direct agent, and whether the services rendered and the expenditures made by the plaintiff were reasonable and necessary and justified by the relations between the parties, related to facts within the province, of the jury to determine.
, Testimony to the effect that the defendant had made claim ágainst W. R. Grace & Company for breach of contract in not delivering the merchandise in Boston appears to have been remote from any issue on trial and ought to have been ex-
The record in this case is inordinately long and ought to have been much abbreviated. Isenbeck v. Burroughs, 217 Mass. 537. John B. Frey Co. Inc. v. S. Silk, Inc. 245 Mass. 534, 537, and cases cited. A careful reading of it all convinces us that no injustice has been done the defendant by the trial. G. L. c. 231, § 125.
Exceptions overruled.