Cecca v. Marotto

87 A.2d 421, 79 R.I. 246, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 26, 1952
StatusPublished

This text of 87 A.2d 421 (Cecca v. Marotto) 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
Cecca v. Marotto, 87 A.2d 421, 79 R.I. 246, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 38 (R.I. 1952).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This action of assumpsit was heard in the superior court by a justice sitting without a jury. He rendered a decision in favor of the plaintiff for $3,612.80 and the defendant duly prosecuted his bill of exceptions to this court.

The plaintiff, who has declared on book account and on the common counts, is suing to recover commissions allegedly due him from defendant and certain sums of money paid out and expended by plaintiff for defendant’s use and benefit at his request. Only some of the large number of exceptions taken are now being pressed. These include certain exceptions to the rejection of evidence attempted to be introduced by defendant and an exception to the decision itself. All other exceptions not briefed or argued are deemed to be waived.

It appears from the evidence that plaintiff, of Winthrop in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, was a fruit broker; that defendant, of Providence in this state, was the owner of a fruit company; and that they entered into business relations. The defendant, who was a successful printer for many years and who had acquired some property, decided in the early part of 1949 to embark in the wholesale fruit business, as an additional activity, under the name of Jay Fruit Company, located in Providence. An arrangement was entered into sometime prior to April of [248]*248that year whereby the plaintiff as broker would purchase in Boston, Massachusetts, for delivery at defendant’s place of business, such produce as the latter, through his agent, would order daily from plaintiff. The business was conducted on that basis until the middle of October 1949 when it was discontinued by defendant.

The evidence shows that his fruit company was set up as follows. He hired as bookkeeper a man who was regularly employed as a clerk in a bank. This bookkeeper personally made out and signed in the name of the Jay Fruit Company all the checks for that company. Many of these were signed with the amount left blank as will hereinafter more fully appear. The defendant himself signed no checks. These two men would spend between two and four hours every Sunday morning going over the books of the company. The defendant also employed Albert Martucci as general manager of the business and the latter’s brother as handy man and truck driver. The general manager ordered the fruit through plaintiff in Boston and had charge of the details of the company’s operation.

Under the arrangemeilt between the parties the plaintiff as broker bought fruit for the defendant either at a public fruit auction held in Charlestown, Massachusetts, or at the terminal wholesale fruit markets located in South Boston in that state. His brokerage fee was 10 cents a package for purchases at the auction and 5 cents a package for transactions at the terminal markets. In April 1949 at the outset of business relations defendant had a small credit at the auction house, but that was quickly exhausted and thereafter plaintiff had to pay cash for whatever he purchased there for defendant. For a considerable time the latter reimbursed plaintiff at short intervals for such advances but toward the conclusion of their relationship he apparently failed to do so. The defendant, who kept a credit at the terminal markets, was billed by them directly each week for the fruit ordered by plaintiff. However, the [249]*249evidence is somewhat conflicting as to whether or not this credit was maintained by defendant during part of September and October, 1949. There was some evidence that plaintiff had to make payments also to certain markets on behalf of defendant.

The plaintiff’s testimony respecting the way in which the parties did business was corroborated by that of defendant’s witnesses. The latter’s general manager testified as follows: “A. Mr. P. D. Cecca would call me every morning. I would place an order with him. He would try to fulfill that order. And in the meanwhile our trucks, or my representative, my brother, that worked for me would go to Boston with a blank check and any purchases that Mr. Cecca made for me, as much as he could on the order that I had placed with him, he would get a blank check and fill it out to the amount for whatever he had bought for me plus adding his brokerage to it; that is, any purchases made at the auction in Boston. Then we had a credit in the terminal in Boston which was charged directly to us and once a week our bills would have to be paid in the terminal, that is where we had our own credit.”

The defendant’s truck driver stated: “A. I would bring a check'in every Monday made out from Jay Fruit Company, that is, a blank check, and Mr. Cecca would go into the offices and fill them out himself and pay for whatever sum was the amount owed to the companies. Q. That would be at the terminal? A. At the terminal.” As to the method of delivery, the witness said: “A. Most times I had my own truck there, that is, the company’s truck there, and we would make the company’s truck load up first and send him home; then when we didn’t have the company’s truck there we would give it to some transportation company to take to Providence.”

The plaintiff began the instant proceeding by writ dated January 3,1950 claiming that defendant owed him $6,668.58 as a result of their business relations. However, before the [250]*250action -came to trial defendant paid plaintiff $3,300 on the claim. The latter presented his case through his own testimony and that of his attorney, introducing ledger sheets kept in the regular course -of business, certain checks, and a large number of slips or so-called auction catalogues showing the dates and prices of individual purchases made for defendant and the names of the sellers. The plaintiff makes no claim for money owed growing out of dealings prior to September 9, 1949, stating that he was paid in full up to that date. The present demand relates only to transactions between September 9 and October 14, 1949, and he breaks down his claim for that period as follows. He says that for business between September 9 and 14 he was owed $2,585.89, for which amount he received from the fruit company a check which went to protest. He was paid for transactions between September 16 and 30 but for those from October 3 to October 7 he was owed $2,232.60. He received a check covering that amount which also went to protest. Between October 10 and October 14 he did business amounting to $1,839.50 which remains unpaid. After correcting errors in figuring he testified the amount owed was $6,668.58 when suit was brought and before the payments aggregating $3,300 were made by defendant.

The exceptions numbered 1 to 5 relate to rulings of the trial justice preventing defendant from cross-examining plaintiff as to transactions which they had between the starting of business relations and September 9, 1949. In sustaining plaintiff’s objections to such examination the trial justice made the following statement: “ * * * Let’s find out what the claim of the plaintiff is, and his claim is narrowed to a relatively short period, from September 9th to October 14th; and then you may be able to show in defense that money was paid prior to that time for which you received nothing and that will be a credit then for this period for which the plaintiff is making claim. * * * I am not in any sense cutting you off because you will have an [251]*251opportunity. The question is as to the time for it, that is really the point.”

The defendant argues that the above ruling was erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
87 A.2d 421, 79 R.I. 246, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cecca-v-marotto-ri-1952.