202 F. 305 | W.D. Wash. | 1913
The right óf the plaintiff to maintain a suit upon the contract now set out in plaintiff’s second amended complaint has heretofore (November 6, 1912) been upheld by this court-on consideration of a former complaint. Upon the defendant’s demurrer to the present complaint, a reconsideration of that ruling is asked.
The contract is set out in the former opinion. By it the defendant Willard Case Lumber Company sold the defendant Mountain Timber Company certain property, including property which plaintiff alleges belonged to it, and in the sale of which it is alleged the Willard Case Lumber Company was acting for plaintiff, and that defendant Mountain Timber Company knew these facts, and knew that the consideration for the purchase of the property claimed by plaintiff should be paid the plaintiff. That part of the property so claimed to have been sold consisted of standing timber. It is provided in the contract that it should be paid for at the rate of $4 per thousand feet, stumpage.
Defendant Mountain Timber Company relies on the following authorities: Talcott v. Wabash R. R. Co., 159 N. Y. 461, 54 N. E. 1; Roosevelt v. Doherty, 129 Mass. 301, 37 Am. Rep. 356; Midwood Sons v. Alaska-Portland Packers’ Ass’n, 28 R. I. 303, 67 Atl. 61, 13 Ann. Cas. 954; Tiffany on Agency (Hornbook Series) 306. The cases cited hold, in effect, that an undisclosed principal, whose goods have been mingled with those of a factor and sold for a gross sum, to be paid the latter, cannot maintain a separate suit for the value of his goods.
The complaint in this case alleges that plaintiff’s interest in the contract was disclosed to the defendant, and that the sale price was not for a gross sum, but that the contract segregated the property claimed by plaintiff and fixed a price upon it, separate from the remaining property sold. The Willard Case Lumber Company, the agent in this sale, has been made a party defendant, all of its stock having been acquired by the Mountain Timber Company, the other defendant, thereby passing entirely into the control of the latter company, which fact would, in any event, obviate the requirement of a suit in the name of the former company, as much so as would fraud or collusion between the defendant companies.
Demurrer overruled.