Brand v. Sterling Motor Car Co.

243 Mass. 303
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 243 Mass. 303 (Brand v. Sterling Motor Car Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brand v. Sterling Motor Car Co., 243 Mass. 303 (Mass. 1922).

Opinion

Jenney, J.

In this action the plaintiff alleges that he is entitled to compensation for services rendered in securing from the Poole Engineering and Machine Company of Baltimore, Maryland (hereinafter called the Poole Company), contracts for work required in the manufacture of certain ammunition shells, and in and under an agreement with the defendant relating to a contract with the United States for the manufacture of such shells.

Count one of the declaration relates to services in securing contracts with the Poole Company and count five is founded on the agreement as to the contract with the United States. No other counts are directly involved.

During the World War the defendant was a manufacturer of munitions and the plaintiff was in the business of obtaining and subletting contracts for war material. The defendant, having had previous dealings with the plaintiff relating to munition contracts, on October 5, 1916, addressed to him a letter in which, for the stated “consideration of services rendered and to be rendered in securing contracts” from the Poole Company, it agreed to pay him $8,000 because of a contract then existing with that company after payments thereunder were received, and a commission of eight mills for each shell manufactured on “ any further contracts for machining shells.”

The plaintiff accepted this proposal and on the evidence a finding would have been justified if not required that for some time thereafter both the plaintiff and the defendant acted under [312]*312its terms in all matters relating to the business of the defendant with the Poole Company. No question arises except as to services rendered after the letter was written.

The defendant contended that the evidence did not warrant a finding for the plaintiff upon the first count and excepted to its submission to the jury. The following facts either were not in dispute or warrantably could have been found: The plaintiff had, prior to October 5, 1916, acted in the defendant’s behalf in relation to a contract with the Poole Company and had received a commission for so doing. While engaged in the defendant’s behalf, he ascertained that the Poole Company, of which he had previously known, had a contract for shells with Russia; he communicated that fact to William T. Marsh, the defendant’s president, who agreed to go to New York or Baltimore when notified by him. After meeting the plaintiff in New York, Marsh went to Baltimore and closed the first contract of the defendant with the Poole Company. After the letter to the defendant dated October 5, 1916, the plaintiff kept “in touch” with the defendant by letter, telegrams, and telephone, and from time to time advised Marsh, who acted in its behalf. He also on different occasions saw the manager, superintendent, and some other officers of the Poole Company about further contracts and interviewed the defendant’s vice-president at his office for the purpose of discussing the possibility of such contracts and before the negotiations between the defendant and the Poole Company relating thereto had been concluded reported these interviews to Marsh. In so doing he acted with the knowledge and authority of the. defendant. The defendant in May and August, 1917, entered into contracts with the Poole Company for machining shells. On cross-examination, the plaintiff testified that he knew that the Poole Company contemplated giving the defendant additional contracts and “assisted” in securing them; “but he alone did not secure them; he was one of the causes, but not the cause, of the defendant’s obtaining them.” At the request of the defendant the plaintiff also performed services relative to contracts other than those with the Poole Company. Although he was in San Francisco for about three months from July to September, 1917, this did not necessitate a finding that he had abandoned the contract or that his services were then required [313]*313or necessary. One of the "further contracts” was made before he went away. The letter of February 8, 1917, written to the plaintiff in behalf of the defendant, in which the plaintiff was directed to “discontinue any and all activities in reference to securing work for me ^meaning Marsh, acting in behalf of the defendant],” did not cancel or attempt to cancel the agreement relating to the contract for compensation concerning the Poole contracts, nor release the defendant from liability thereunder.

The judge construed the letter of October 5, 1916, as providing that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover unless his services were the “efficient cause” of the procurement of the contracts, and defined the meaning of this term. This was sufficiently favorable to the defendant. So far as the record shows the plaintiff did not except to the construction adopted, and the jury found in his favor on the count based on the Poole contracts. The case is considered on this basis.

Under the instructions the jury, in the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, could find that the plaintiff was the efficient cause of the procurement of the future contracts even though his connection therewith was limited to services relating to the first contract. The judge said that if the plaintiff was the efficient cause in bringing the Poole Company and the defendant together so that the result of their negotiations was the second and third contracts, this was sufficient to justify a verdict for him. The language used considered in connection with the further instruction, that he did not have to show that he had any part in arranging the details of the contract or that he took part in any of the negotiations between the defendant and the Poole Company, is consistent only with this view.

While the case is close, we are of opinion that the instruction was sufficiently favorable to the defendant and that on the facts disclosed, notwithstanding the quoted testimony of the plaintiff, it was a question for the jury whether the original bringing together of the parties as herein described was an efficient cause of the future contracts. This result is supported by the letter of the defendant dated October 5, 1916, hereinbefore considered. The letter refers to the plaintiff’s services as “rendered and to be rendered” in securing contracts as a consideration for the payments provided for in future as well as then existing con[314]*314tracts. See Tribe v. Taylor, L. R. 1 C. P. 505. The illustration used was not harmful error in view of the conclusion here reached. The instruction that the letter of February 8, 1917, did not deprive the plaintiff of any rights he had acquired by reason of anything that he had done prior to its receipt, was correct.

The exceptions to the instructions to the jury relating to the first count are overruled; those which are to the refusal of the defendant’s fourth and fifth requests for rulings are embraced in those already considered and are disposed of by what has been said.

The substantial parts of the agreement, relating to contracts with the United States, are as follows:

“Nov. 15, 1917.

Mr. James H. Brand,

12 West 44th Street,

New York City.

Dear Sir:—

It is hereby agreed between W. T. Marsh, representing the Sterling Motor Car Co. of Brockton, Mass, and yourself that in consideration of and for services rendered and to be rendered in the assisting of- securing a contract from the United States Government for One Pound Shells complete . . . also for the assisting in the financing of the order, that the following commission is to

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Bluebook (online)
243 Mass. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brand-v-sterling-motor-car-co-mass-1922.