Balderston v. National Rubber Co.

27 A. 507, 18 R.I. 338, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 1, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 27 A. 507 (Balderston v. National Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balderston v. National Rubber Co., 27 A. 507, 18 R.I. 338, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 51 (R.I. 1893).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

By agreement of the parties, this case is submitted to the court, on the following-questions of law, viz.:

1 First. Whether under the agreement between the com *339 plainants and the respondent corporation, annexed to the bill as Exhibit A, the complainants are or not entitled to receive from the assignee of the National Rubber Company a dividend upon the whole amount of the advances made by them to said Rubber Company and unpaid from the proceeds of goods sold at the time of the company’s assignment, or only on the balance, if any, that might thereafter be found to be due after crediting the proceeds when sold of the goods on hand at the date of the assignment of said Rubber Company.
£ £ Second. Whether or not the failure of the complainant, John C. Balderston, to include said advances from said complainants as an indebtedness of said Rubber Company in tire returns made by said company under the manufacturing corporations law of the State of Rhode Island and signed by him as president and director of said company, estops said complainants from making any claim for advances as a then present indebtedness from said company to said complainants in light of the following:
£ £ In the answer of the respondent, it is alleged that said John C. Balderston, one of the complainants, was a director of the National Rubber Company, and as such director signed annual returns of said Company’s affairs, as required under the provisions of the manufacturing corporations act, so called, Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 155, which returns as alleged in said answer did not include in the statement of the Company’s indebtedness said advances of the complainants made under their said agreement, and the respondents claim that said failure to set forth said advances in said returns as indebtedness of said Rubber Company estops said complainants from making any claim for said advances as a then present indebtedness from said Rubber Company to said complainants.
“ The complainants now assert in the way of explanation of said returns that the method pursued by said Rubber Compujiy m^iSáPing calculation for the same was as follows: that {lie officers of1<he Rubber Company deducted from the amount of merchandise in- the hands of the complainants the amount *340 of said advances thereon, and treated the balance with other personal estate of the Rubber Company as the aggregate amount of its personal assets, the complainants further asserting and the defendants for the purpose of this hearing admitting that mode to be the usual mode pursued by the officers of said Company and the mode usually pursued by corporations in said State of Rhode Island.
“Said allegations of the respondents in the answer as to said returns, however made up, are not deemed material by the complainants, and it is understood that said allegations as set'forth in said answer, and said assertions and explanations made by said complainants, as hereinabove set forth, are admitted by the parties hereto only for the purpose of this hearing and for no other purpose and without prejudice to proving to the contrary in the later stages of this case if material.
“And all further questions, including the state of accounts between parties, shall be reserved until the above questions of law have been heard and determined.”

The agreement above referred to is as follows:

‘c Memorandum of an agreement between the National Rubber Co., and Balderston & Daggett, made this second day of April, A. D., eighteen hundred and eighty-four.
“First. The National Rubber Company are to consign all their production of boots and shoes to Balderston & Daggett for sale and returns, with the following exceptions: 1. Said National Rubber Co. are to have the liberty to sell or consign goods to foreign countries except to the British provinces of North America. 2. They are to have the liberty to retail boots and shoes from their factory at Bristol.
“Second. The National Rubber Co. are to pay Balderston & Daggett five per cent, upon the net amount of their sales as a commission and_ guaranty, and also interest upon any sums which they may owe them, at the rate of six per cent, per annum, or such other rate as may from time to time in writing be agreed upon to be a fair rate, taking the market value of money into considerat io n.
“Third. The National Rubber Co. agree'fo deliver the goods *341 at the warehouse of Balderston & Daggett in Boston or in New York (if it is agreed that a branch shall he established there), free of expense to Balderston & Daggett.
“Fourth. Balderston & Daggett agree to receive on consignment the production of the National Rubber Oo. in boots and shoes as contemplated in the first article, and to use their best exertion to sell the same to the best advantage and to account to the National Rubber Co. for the same at the price that they shall obtain for them, and to charge as commission and guaranty five per' cent., and from time to time to advise what kinds and styles of goods are necessary to be made in order to have the stock well assorted.
“Fifth. Balderston & Daggett agree to advance to.the National Rubber Oo. at least fifty thousand dollars per month, upon the basis of eighty per cent, of the market value of the boots and shoes consigned by'them to Balderston & Daggett at the rate of interest hereinbefore named.
1 ‘ Sixth. It is understood that such goods as are usually sold as clothing and placed on the clothing list, as for instance lumbermen’s pants with boots, and c Baptismal pants,’are.not consigned exclusively to Balderston & Daggett.
‘ ‘ Seventh. This agreement is to continue in forcé for the term of five years from the first day of April, 1884, unless sooner terminated by the dissolution of the firm of Balderston & Daggett, or by the long continued incapability of both of said general partners to attend to the business thereof. It is also provided that this contract shall terminate on the first day of April or first day of October, whichever shall first occur next after the death of either general partner in said firm, whether said firm be then dissolved or not.
“Eighth. The prices, for which the boots and shoes consigned to Balderston & Daggett by the National Rubber Oo., are to be sold, are to be fixed by the National Rubber Oo. from time to time, upon consultation with Balderston & Daggett, and having due regard to the prices at which other leading manufacturers áre selling their boots and shoes of equal quality.
In witness whereof the parties hereto have set their hands *342

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 507, 18 R.I. 338, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balderston-v-national-rubber-co-ri-1893.