Bay Colony Marketing Co. v. Fruit Salad, Inc.

672 N.E.2d 987, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 662, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 855
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1996
DocketNo. 94-P-1796
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 672 N.E.2d 987 (Bay Colony Marketing Co. v. Fruit Salad, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bay Colony Marketing Co. v. Fruit Salad, Inc., 672 N.E.2d 987, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 662, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 855 (Mass. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Warner, C.J.

This appeal turns on whether the Statute of Frauds, G. L. c. 259, § 7, bars the plaintiff food broker’s recovery on an oral contract for the placement of the defendant seller’s food products with various other food brokers and markets. In answer to special questions, a Superior Court jury found that the parties had an oral agreement, that the seller was in breach of that agreement, and that the broker’s damages were $50,000.1 Having properly preserved the issue, [663]*663the seller moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the basis that the Statute of Frauds barred the broker’s recovery. The trial judge denied the motion. After entry of judgment on the jury verdict, the seller appealed. We reverse.

We recite the pertinent facts in the light most favorable to the broker and to the verdict which it obtained. See Tobin v. Norwood Country Club, Inc., 422 Mass. 126, 127 (1996). The broker is a New Hampshire corporation performing the functions of a broker in the food industry. The seller is a Massachusetts corporation with a primary place of business in Lawrence, and is primarily engaged in the business of cutting fresh fruit, packing it into jars, and selling it to the food service industry and to supermarket chains and retail stores. In April, 1989, pursuant to a written agreement, the seller retained the broker for purposes of placing the seller’s food products in military commissaries, known as the military resale market.2 About December, 1989, or January, 1990, having previously discussed the seller’s desire to expand its sales into the civilian market on a national basis, the parties entered into a separate oral agreement whereby the broker agreed actively to solicit new accounts and sales territories for the seller’s food products within civilian markets, in return for the seller’s payment of a commission equalling three percent of the amount of its gross sales as so placed. The seller agreed to pay the broker, on a monthly basis, a commission for all gross sales to accounts resulting directly or indirectly from the broker’s efforts (i.e., through other food brokers which the broker procured), and agreed to continue to pay the broker a three percent commission for as long as the seller’s products continued to be sold to these accounts. This agreement had no termination date.

After entering this oral agreement for the civilian market, the broker secured a number of supermarket chains as new accounts for the seller’s products. The seller paid the broker [664]*664its commission under the oral agreement until September 30, 1990, when payments ceased, although the seller continued to sell its products to accounts secured by the broker. On April 5, 1991, at which time the broker was not actively performing any services for the seller, the broker received a thirty-day termination letter (dated April 3) from the seller. This action followed. From early 1991 through 1993, the seller sold approximately $1,500,000 of its products to accounts which the broker had secured.

General Laws c. 259, § 7 (inserted by St. 1984, c. 321), provides, in full:

“Any agreement to pay compensation for service as a broker or finder or for service rendered in negotiating a loan or in negotiating the purchase, sale or exchange of a business, its good will, inventory, fixtures, or an interest therein, including a majority of voting interest in a corporation, shall be void and unenforceable unless such agreement is in writing, signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by some other person authorized. For the purpose of this section, the term “negotiating” shall include identifying prospective parties, providing information concerning prospective parties, procuring an introduction to a party to the transaction or assisting in the negotiation or consummation of the transaction. The provisions of this section shall apply to a contract implied in fact or in law to pay reasonable compensation but shall not apply to a contract to pay compensation for professional services of an attorney-at-law or a licensed real estate broker or real estate salesman acting in their professional capacity” (emphasis supplied).

In denying the seller’s motion for a directed verdict, the judge ruled that § 7 does not apply to all brokerage contracts, but is confined to brokerage contracts relating to the negotiation of a loan, see Charles River Mort. Co. v. Baptist Home, Inc., 36 Mass. App. Ct. 277, 281-282 (1994), or for the purchase and sale of a business, see Alexander v. Berman, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 458, 458-459, 461-462 (1990), and thus that the statute did not apply to the oral brokerage contract at issue. We do not construe the statute so narrowly.

We must ascertain the intent of a statute from all of its parts, from the subject matter to which it relates, and we [665]*665must construe it so as to render the legislation effective, consonant with reason and common sense. See Globe Newspaper Co. v. Beacon Hill Architectural Commn., 421 Mass. 570, 592 (1996); Champigny v. Commonwealth, 422 Mass. 249, 251 (1996). The statutory language itself is our principal source of insight into the legislative purpose. Scheffler’s Case, 419 Mass. 251, 255 (1994). We think it plain that the purpose of the statute is to require written agreements for compensation for certain services,3 although the scope of such services, based upon the statutory language, is unclear. Each provision of the statute is to be given some meaning. See Volin v. Board of Pub. Accountancy, 422 Mass. 175, 179 (1996); Champigny v. Commonwealth, supra at 252. Accordingly, we interpret the statute to require written agreements where there is to be compensation “for service as a broker or finder,” or “for service rendered in negotiating a loan or in negotiating the purchase, sale or exchange of a business [or component elements thereof].” The repetition of the words “for service” in discrete phrases coupled with the use of the disjunctive “or” suggests that the Legislature considered each category of services separately.4 “The word ‘or’ is given a disjunctive meaning unless the context and the main purpose of all the words demand otherwise.” Nuclear Metals, Inc. v. Low-Level Radioactive Waste Mgmt. Bd., 421 Mass. 196, 212 (1995), quoting from Eastern Mass. St. Ry. v. Massachusetts Bay Transp. Authy., 350 Mass. 340, 343 (1966). [666]*666Bello v. South Shore Hosp., 384 Mass. 770, 782 (1981). Nothing in the language of the statute or the context in which it is used demands or even suggests other than a disjunctive meaning here, or that it was the intent of the Legislature to limit the applicability of the Statute of Frauds to brokers of loans and businesses, as the broker contends.5

The broker argues, however, not without some force, that our interpretation of § 7 renders it applicable to myriad occupations (e.g., stockbrokers and commodity brokers), and thus that it is unlikely that the Legislature intended that the statute have such broad application. Mindful of “the maxim of statutory construction which suggests that a statutory expression of one thing is an implied exclusion of other things omitted from the statute[,]” Harborview Residents’ Comm., Inc. v. Quincy Hous. Authy., 368 Mass. 425, 432 (1975), see Aquino v. Civil Serv.

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Bluebook (online)
672 N.E.2d 987, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 662, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bay-colony-marketing-co-v-fruit-salad-inc-massappct-1996.