B. F. Sturtevant Co. v. Cumberland Dugan & Co.

68 A. 351, 106 Md. 587, 1907 Md. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 68 A. 351 (B. F. Sturtevant Co. v. Cumberland Dugan & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. F. Sturtevant Co. v. Cumberland Dugan & Co., 68 A. 351, 106 Md. 587, 1907 Md. LEXIS 116 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Rogers, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the Superior Court of Baltimore City. The appellant (plaintiff below) is a Massachusetts corporation, doing business as a manufacturer of machinery, in or near Boston. The appellees (defendants) are a firm in Baltimore City, and have for nearly a half a century been engaged in handling and selling machinery as factors or commission merchants, and as such have been dealing with B. F. Sturtevant and the appellant for 35 or 40 years before this suit was brought. Having for that period of time, received consign *608 ments of B. F. Sturtevant’s and the appellant’s machinery to-be sold by them as factors, their principals being first B. F.. Sturtevant, and next the appellant.

When the great Baltimore fire occurred, the appellees had in/i their custody in consignment, a lot of machinery of the appellants known as “blowers and fans.” The great Baltimore fire-destroyed this machinery, which was not insured. The appellant-, claims that it was the duty of the appellees as its factors, to - have insured this machinery for the benefit of the appellant,, and not having so insured it the appellees are liable to the appellant, and this suit is accordingly brought to recover the-equivalent of the insurance, namely the market value of the machinery on the date of its destruction by fire. This claim-of the appellant is based solely upon this contention — which is-denied by the appellees — that the only instruction the appellant ever gave the appellees to insure said machinery were the-printed words, “Stock to be kept covered by insurance for the-benefit of the consignor,” printed in the smallest type at the-extreme bottom edge of long invoices, which it is claimed,. which is also denied, accompanied the consignments of machinery.

It is also virtually admitted by the appellant, that no letter.was ever written, or verbal instruction given, to the appelleesto effect any such insurance; nor was there ever made of theappellees any inquiry, as to whether any such insurance had: been made. The sole reliance of the appellant upon which it bases its right to recover, is the alleged instruction contained in these printed words on the invoice. The whole testimony of the appellant, its letters and depositions of its employees-; attest the correctness, of this statement. The appellees, in. reply to this claim of appellant, prove by the uncontradictedá evidence of Mr. Cumberland Dugan, Sr., the senior member of the appellee’s firm, that 35 or 40 years before the beginning of this suit he, through correspondence, by letters (destroyedsi by fire) had with Mr. B. F. Sturtevant then the owner and-, conductor of the business, an express and special- contract, under which, all machinery was to be consigned to his firm;. *609 the appellees, as factors; that this contract has been ever since the time it was made in operation and effect, and the machinery destroyed by the fire was consigned to his firm, the appellees, under said contract and by the appellees so accepted. Mr. Cumberland Dugan, Senior, having testified that all the letters in reference to this contract had been destroyed by the great Baltimore fire, gave the contract as made and set forth in these destroyed letters virtually as follows: That about 1869 the correspondence took place by which Mr. B. F. Sturtevantthen agreed to consign tothe appellees for sale as his agents,, the machinery made by him, and to pay the appellees certain: compensation for selling the machinery, and one specified; charge for expense was to be paid by the appellees on said machinery, which was tobeputf. o. b. in cars at Boston for Baltimore consigned to the appelless. That the appellees were to be allowed for their services and this one charge, twenty-five per cent, from the list or invoice prices of said machinery, and that the only thing above-mentioned the appellees were to payout of this discount, was the freight from Boston to Baltimore.. That insurance, was not named as an item, which his firm had to pay out of this discount for the benefit of Mr. B. F. Sturtevant or the appellant. That under this express contract his-firm had received consignments from B. F. Sturtevant until his-death, and subsequently from the appellant, and that the machinery destroyed by the fire was accepted by the appellees, under this contract. He further testified without contradiction, that from the first consignment of the machinery until the great Baltimore fire, his firm had never received a word by letter or otherwise, modifying or altering this contract, or instructing his firm to insure the machinery for the benefit of B. F. Sturtevant or the appellant; that his firm always supposed B. F. Sturtevant and the appellant effected and carried its own insurance, on its consigned machinery, as was done by other machinery firms with which the appellees dealt as factors.

As to the invoices with printed words on them, Mr. Cumberland Dugan, Sr., and Mr. Cumberland Dugan, Jr., the two *610 appellees, who composed the firm of Cumberland Dugan and Company, and Mr. Lannon, their bookkeeper, without contradiction testified that they only received consignments with invoices about two or three every two years; that the invoices . accompanying these consignments so far as they saw, had on them no such printed words, directing the appellees to insure the machinery for the benefit of the appellant; that if such printed words had been on the invoices they would certainly have seen them. Mr. Dugan, Sr.-, further testified, that these printed words were not on the invoices accompanying the consigned machinery. They all testified that no instruction was ever given by the appellant to appellees to insure the machinery for the benefit of the appellant, and that no inquiry was ever made as to whether any such insurance had been ■made. On this testimony the Court of its own motion gave the following instruction covering the case, and submitted the case to the jury on this'instruction, and the verdict of the jury was for the appellees. •

By the Court:

“If you find that the goods, the subject of this suit, were consigned by the plaintiff to the defendants with invoices plainly requiring “stock to be covered by insurance for the benefit of the consignor,” that the goods were accepted by the defendants without objection, that no such insurance was máde, and that the goods were.- destroyed by fire, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover.
“But if, on the contrary, you find that the goods were consigned and accepted -under a prior subsisting contract between the parties not requiring such- insurance, then the defendants are entitled to your verdict. ' -
“This means that whether the defendants are or are not - liable to the plaintiff, depends upon the terms of the contract under which the goods mentioned in the evidence were held by the defendants. It means that the question of what were the terms of this contract is a question for the jury to decide from all the evidence in the case.
“It means that there is sufficient evidence from which the *611

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 351, 106 Md. 587, 1907 Md. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-f-sturtevant-co-v-cumberland-dugan-co-md-1907.