Assignment of Cook

6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 298
CourtVan Wert County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 15, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 298 (Assignment of Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Van Wert County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Assignment of Cook, 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 298 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Matthias, J.

Some time prior to the date of his assignment for the benefit of his creditors Charles Cook had received from the John Deere Plow Company certain farming implements which were in his possession when he made such assignment.

The John Deere Plow Company filed an intervening petition in the Probate Court of Van Wert County in which it set up its claim of ownership of said machinery. By agreement such machinery was sold and the proceeds thereof kept separate and held pending the final determination of the claim made by said plow company.

All the machinery in controversy was received and held by the assignor under and by virtue of a certain printed contract. The question presented is whether as between the plow com[299]*299pany and general creditors the assignor was merely the agent or factor of the plow company. If he was, then the plow company should be paid the fund, arising from the sale of the machinery in question; otherwise it should go to the general creditors.

Is this a contract of agency or a contract of sale?

Upon argument of this case counsel for the plow company urged as applicable to and as decisive of the question here presented the case of Bolles v. Dowagiac Manufacturing Company. That was a suit brought in Fulton county by the company against the agent for the price of a drill. The defense was that he did not purchase it, but was only an agent. The verdict of the jury was no cause of action, and judgment accordingly in common pleas. The circuit court reversed on the ground that the contract between the parties was one of sale. The Su-v preme Court reversed the circuit and affirmed the common pleas (72 O. S., 680). Neither of these decisions are reported, but we have before us, the record and briefs of counsel in the Supreme Court, and from those we conclude that the court of last resort must have held that the contract in question was one of agency, and not one of sale.

The record sets out a copy of that contract and the attorneys discuss it quite fully in their briefs. These we have studied quite carefully for the effect the decision upon the question raised and points presented should have upon the interpretation' of the contract before us.

Judge Sheets and Files & Paxson, counsel for the agent, as he was called, dissected the contract and made many deductions therefrom which supported the view that it was a contract of agency.

We shall review those, and make comparisons with the contract we have in the case at bar, for we assume that the Supreme Court was moved at least by some of such deductions and the argument based thereon to hold that the parties sustained to each other the relation of principal and agent.

It was urged in the first place that ownership carries with it the right of disposition to such person, at snch price and upon [300]*300such-terms as the owner- sees fit. In looking for customers he is not confined to any particular territory; neither is he limited in the price at which he may sell, nor kind of security he may take.

In that contract it was agreed that the defendant should be the sole agent for the plaintiff in the village of Delta and trade tributary.

The right of the “agent” was limited to sell machinery manufactured by the company to trade at Delta and that tributary thereto. He is not permitted to handle any other grain seeding machinery and must sell at ‘ ‘ list price. ’ ’

Machinery “sold” was to be settled for at a discount of twenty-five and ten per cent, in good farmers’ notes, or at a discount of twenty-five, ten and ten for cash. Notes to be drawn upon blanks furnished by the company, payable October 1st of the following year at six per cent.; notes to be indorsed by the agent and security taken if maker of doubtful solvency. The company agreed to fill all orders promptly as long as able, and “to appoint no other agent for said territory.”

Before going further we shall compare the two contracts in the particulars mentioned.

In the contracts before us Cook is not at any time referred to as an agent of the company, but always as the purchaser; he was not confined to any particular territory in which he could resell such machinery; there is no attempt to limit or control the price which he should ask or obtain for it. No restrictions are placed upon him as to the terms upon which he may sell or the kind of security which he may take; nor is he required to confine his sales to the machinery manufactured by the John Deere Plow Company.

It was required of Cook that he “the purchaser ” should settle for machinery by note or cash upon receipt of invoice.

The company makes no agreement to ship its machinery exclusively to Cook within any certain territory.

These are some of the striking differences in these two contracts.

Under the Bolles contract upon the receipt of a consignment .of goods the relation of debtor and creditor did not arise. It [301]*301was at best an - executory contract of sale, the agent agreeing to take what was left over at close of season at a certain price if the company elected to sell. There may not have been any goods left over; if so, the company may elect not to sell. They could take the goods back even though the agent wanted them and offered to pay for them. Certainly with such conditions the relation of vendor and vendee did not arise.

But under the contract before us the parties throughout refer to the transaction as one of sale. No right of election to sell or not to sell is retained by the company.

In the brief in the Bolles-Dowagiac case, to which we have been referred, counsel cited Norton v. Melick, 66 N. W., 780, and Lenz v. Harrison, 148 Ill., 598 (36 N. E., 567). We find the contracts involved in those cases are similar to the Bolles-Dowagiac contract, and therefore no doubt such decisions had influence upon the Supreme Court in the determination of the question in the Fulton county case.

Those contracts, however, are quite different from the one before us in this case.

True all these contracts are similar in one respect, and that is a stipulation that the ownership and right of peossession shall remain in the company, and the proceeds of sale be the property of the company, but this only has a tendency to show the attempt on the part of the company to retain a secret lien on the property.

It is expressly provided in the contract before us that “nothing in this clause shall release Cook from paying for such machinery.” Cook was bound to pay for all machinery sent him under this contract. The relation of debtor and creditor was thereby assumed.

There is absolutely nothing in this contract to show that the relation of agency was contemplated except the one clause referring to accounting for proceeds of sales. Can this .outweigh all else in the determination of the question of sale or agency ? It is the only feature which the two contracts referred to have in common. The rule must be applied, that all parts of the instrument are to be looked to, and to determine its real [302]*302character we are to look to its purpose rather than its name. Can it be said there is no sale? What element is lacking?

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Related

Morrison v. Jackson
92 U.S. 654 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Lenz v. Harrison
36 N.E. 567 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/assignment-of-cook-ohctcomplvanwe-1907.