American Marine Paint Co. v. Nyno Line, Inc.

233 P. 366, 70 Cal. App. 415
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1924
DocketDocket No. 4800.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 233 P. 366 (American Marine Paint Co. v. Nyno Line, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Marine Paint Co. v. Nyno Line, Inc., 233 P. 366, 70 Cal. App. 415 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

An appeal by plaintiff from a judgment rendered in favor of defendant, after verdict by a jury, in an action brought to recover the sum of $16,500, claimed to be due appellant as commission for the sale of the steamer *418 “Portland,” belonging to the respondent, under a contract wherein a gross commission of five per cent of the purchase price was agreed upon. The contention of respondent upon the merits was and is that W. C. Lacombe, the admitted agent and representative of the appellant company, with whom the agreement with respondent for the sale of said steamer was made, and by whom the transaction with the purchaser thereof was conducted, had procured the contract calling for a five per cent commission through fraud in that he had falsely and fraudulently represented to respondent that he would be required, in any sale which he would consummate, to pay the purchaser or purchasers of said steamer a sum equal to three per cent of the purchase price, out of his commission; and that for that reason he would have to receive a commission equal to five per cent of the purchase price, otherwise he could not consummate said sale and would not undertake to do so. Respondent claims that relying upon such representations it agreed to make said sale and to pay said commission, which it otherwise would not have done.

This is the third time an appeal has been taken in this action. Juries in the two former trials found for the appellant, but the verdicts were set aside and new trials were granted by the trial court and the orders granting the same were, upon appeal, affirmed. The order granting the new trial following the first verdict was general in its terms, but upon appeal, when the question arose as to the ground upon which it was granted, it was held that whether said order was based upon the insufficiency of evidence or confusing instructions, the trial court had not abused its discretion in granting the same. (American Marine Paint Co. v. Nyno Line, 45 Cal. App. 1 [187 Pac. 71].) The order granting the retrial following the second verdict was made upon the express ground that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict. Upon appeal it was again held that the trial court acted within its discretion in granting a new trial and that therefore the order appealed from should be and was affirmed. (American Paint Co. v. Nyno Line, 56 Cal. App. 331 [205 Pac. 45].) In this last trial the jury found a verdict for respondent, and judgment was entered accordingly. Appellant now seeks a reversal of said judgment upon the grounds that the instructions given to the jury were erro *419 neons and that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict. The evidence offered during this last trial was practically the same as that presented upon the preceding trial.

Briefly stated, it is to the effect that in January, 1916, the “Portland” was on drydock near the city of New York, and at the request of a representative of the president of the respondent company, Lacombe agreed to interest himself in the sale of said steamer for a commission equal to three per cent of the sale price. A month later Lacombe opened negotiations with one Aaby, the son and representative of a Norwegian ship owner, which resulted in the making of a tentative offer by Aaby for the purchase of said steamer for $325,000', which included the payment of a commission to Aaby out of the sale price. Lacombe forwarded the terms of Aaby’s offer, by telegram, to Will E. Keller, the president of respondent company, who at that time was in California, and regarding commissions stated ‘ ‘ commissions five per cent foreign buyers which makes additional commissions necessary to close déal.” Keller, in his reply telegram to Lacombe, after setting forth the terms upon which he would sell the vessel, stated: “Out of this will pay you eight thousand dollars commissions. ’ ’ A few days later Lacombe wrote Aaby a letter offering on behalf of Keller to sell the steamer for a gross price of $325,000' and on the same day wrote him another letter wherein he stated that upon final payment for the vessel Aaby would receive a commission of one per cent on the total purchase price. About the same time, pursuant to a previous private arrangement between Lacombe and one Palmer, Lacombe agreed to pay Palmer one per cent of the purchase price. Later, on the same day, Lacombe sent a telegram to Keller reading: “Compelled to allow buyers three per cent; cannot complete deal less five per cent.” Afterward, on the same day, February 29, Aaby handed Lacombe a letter specifying more particularly the terms of his offer and at the same time deposited with Lacombe a check for $25,000. Thereupon Lacombe immediately sent Keller a telegram embodying the terms of Aaby’s offer, but making no mention of the commissions. Lacombe learned, for the first time, from the check and letter of Aaby, that the Kerr Steamship Company of New York city, and not Aaby’s father, as he had previously supposed, was the prospective purchaser. The contents of the telegrams *420 above mentioned are set forth in the opinion rendered upon the preceding appeal, making it unnecessary to again quote the same here. In order to avoid any misunderstanding about the matter Laeombe during the evening of that same day, February 29, 1916, telephoned to Keller at Los Angeles, the former being at the time in New York, and the terms of that conversation, over the telephone, apparently served as the vital factor in the case, and about the truth of which the parties are wholly disagreed. Regarding the discussion of commissions over the telephone Laeombe testified: “I asked Mr. Keller had he -received my two telegrams. Mr. Keller replied that he had and said didn’t I think the commission was rather stiff, and I told him ‘No,’ I had to have the amount stated in my telegram and I had other parties to take care of. Mr. Keller’s remark to me over the phone was, ‘Well, then go ahead and close it up.’ ” Lacombe’s testimony is, to some extent, corroborated by Palmer, who was with Laeombe when the latter telephoned. Keller’s version of the telephone conversation is different. He testified as follows: “He said he would have to allow the buyers three per cent or the trade would not go through; claimed he would have to have five per cent to put the trade through or it would not go. I objected to paying five per cent and told him I thought it was entirely too high. He said the trade would not go through unless he could allow the purchaser of the boat three per cent. I told him I was anxious to sell the boat, and if it was absolutely necessary to make the trade and he had to allow the buyers three per cent, to go ahead.” Keller’s testimony is in a measure supported by Aaby, who was also present with Laeombe when the latter telephoned from New York. Later Keller, at Lacombe’s request made over the phone, confirmed by telegram the authority to sell the vessel, and regarding commissions, the telegram read: “We to pay you five per cent commission on three hundred and twenty five thousand dollars when remainder three hundred thousand is paid.” The vessel was afterward delivered to the buyer and the purchase price was paid.

The court gave the following instruction to the jury, at the request of respondent: “In considering the evidence, you must treat the American Marine Paint Company, the plaintiff herein, and Mr. Laeombe, as one person, and if you

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233 P. 366, 70 Cal. App. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-marine-paint-co-v-nyno-line-inc-calctapp-1924.