Bennett v. Blumenthal Co., Inc.

155 A. 68, 113 Conn. 223, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 A. 68 (Bennett v. Blumenthal Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Blumenthal Co., Inc., 155 A. 68, 113 Conn. 223, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 91 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Hinman, J.

Chiffon frames, consisting of a pair or set of wooden frames, equipped with hooks, to be connected by a paper core, are required for the shipping of certain kinds of velvet manufactured by the defendant. The plaintiff had been making such frames for the defendant since 1923. He alleged, in general terms, and offered evidence to prove that, late in April, 1928, he called upon the general manager of the defendant’s Shelton plant regarding the requirements as to the number of chiffon frames for the ensuing season, . in order that he might prepare by purchasing the necessary lumber and other supplies. He was referred to Mr.. Tooker, assistant purchasing agent, who did the purchasing at the Shelton plant, and after conference between them and Mr. Fitz, plant engineer, the defendant, through Tooker, entered into an oral agreement with the plaintiff whereby the plaintiff agreed to manufacture for the defendant and the latter agreed to purchase, two thousand sets or pairs of frames per week for six months commencing May 1st, 1928, at a price of ninety-six cents per set. The plaintiff thereupon ordered a quantity of materials substantially sufficient to manufacture that number of *225 frames, and made and delivered about twenty thousand sets, but the defendant thereafter refused tq accept any further frames.

It appears from the finding that the defendant claimed and offered evidence that no such oral agreement was made; also that Tooker had no authority to contract for goods except upon written purchase orders, and that the plaintiff had notice of such limitation through course of dealing with the defendant covering a number of years, upon written orders bearing, on the reverse side of each, an endorsement that “No orders will be considered valid unless written. Orders given orally or by telephone must be confirmed in writing.”

The defendant requested a charge that while ordinarily a purchasing agent has authority to make purchases of supplies, “if facts known to the plaintiff showed that [such] agent had limited authority only, the defendant is not bound by acts beyond the limits of that authority. ... If therefore, in this case, you find that Bennett knew, from previous orders placed with him by the defendant, or in any other manner, that Tooker had no authority to make the oral agreement alleged in the complaint, your verdict must be for the defendant, even if you find that Tooker did make the alleged agreement.” On this subject the court charged in substance that if the jury found that Tooker was authorized or was held out by the company as authorized to make such a purchase and to give such an order, and that he did in fact give it, the corporation is bound by his act, and “unless you find from the evidence that his authority was limited and that the plaintiff knew it, you will be justified in finding that he had authority to bind the defendant. ... If you find that such an agreement was made between the plaintiff and the duly authorized agent of *226 the defendant, then it is binding upon the defendant, and the fact that it was an oral agreement makes no difference. It is just as good as if it was a written agreement, if you find it was in fact entered into.”

The defendant does not appear to have denied the authority of Tooker to enter into a contract of the terms alleged, but contended that his authority was limited to purchase orders in writing, or confirmed in writing, that the plaintiff had knowledge of this limitation, and that the agreement in suit, being oral only, was in excess of T'ooker’s. authority, as known to the plaintiff, and not binding on the defendant. The reasonable and probable effect of the charge given on this point would be to convey the impression that if the subject-matter of the contract was within the authority of Tooker, the fact that the alleged agreement was oral instead of in writing was immaterial. The failure to make clear the real point upon which the defendant relied as to the binding force, upon it, of the agreement, if the jury found it to have been made (as the verdict imports that they did), and the consequence of permitting to be made determinative thereof the agent’s authority regarding the subject-matter rather than the claimed limitation of his authority as to orders or agreements in writing, might have operated to the defendant’s substantial disadvantage. Upon the same issue, Tooker testified that he had instructions from the defendant company as to how he could place orders for supplies, but a further question calculated to elicit whether those instructions limited him to written orders was excluded. Proof of such a limitation of the apparent scope of the agent’s authority was a necessary step toward establishing the claimed ineffectiveness of an oral contract to purchase, and the evidence contemplated by the question was admissible although, of course, no such limitation *227 would avail unless, also, knowledge of it was brought home to the plaintiff. Quint v. O’Connell, 89 Conn. 353, 357, 94 Atl. 288; Knapp v. Tidewater Coal Co., 85 Conn. 147, 157, 81 Atl. 1063; Lyndon Mill Co. v. Lyndon L. & B. Institution, 63 Vt. 581, 22 Atl. 575, 578; 14A Corpus Juris, p. 403.

The finding is that the plaintiff’s evidence placed the total number of frames delivered to the defendant, under the contract alleged, and accepted and paid for, at twenty-three thousand two hundred and seventy-five sets, while the defendant’s evidence was that the number delivered between May 1st and October 1st was twenty-four thousand eight hundred and fifty-three sets, and subsequent to October 1st four hundred and ten sets. The claimed contract called for the purchase and acceptance by the defendant of a total of fifty-two thousand sets. The trial court, in referring in the charge to this feature of the case, stated: “I think it is not disputed that a good many less frames were delivered than the alleged contract called for, and there is no serious difference, as I recall the evidence, between the number of frames which the plaintiff says he delivered and which the defendant admits it received. I think the defendant claims to have received just a few more than the plaintiff claims to have delivered, but that isn’t essential— it isn’t a large difference.” This statement is assigned as error.

The difference in figures in question did not affect the plaintiff’s right of recovery, but if that right was sustained the actual number delivered and paid for was material to the amount of damages to be awarded which, as to this element, as the court charged, would be based upon the profit (which the evidence placed at twenty cents per set) upon the number of sets contracted for but which the defendant failed and re *228 fused to accept. While recollection of the testimony and the conclusion therefrom as to such number of sets was ultimately the function of the jury, the probable effect of the statement quoted would be to lead the jury to disregard, as negligible in amount, the excess claimed by the defendant above the plaintiff’s figures, as to the number of sets delivered; although the claimed difference—on the finding, and disregarding further claims of the defendant hereafter mentioned—amounted to approximately two thousand sets and, consequently, involved an alleged profit of about $400.

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Bluebook (online)
155 A. 68, 113 Conn. 223, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-blumenthal-co-inc-conn-1931.