Cudahy Bros. v. West Michigan Dock & Market Corp.

280 N.W. 93, 285 Mich. 18
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1938
DocketDocket No. 28, Calendar No. 39,862.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 280 N.W. 93 (Cudahy Bros. v. West Michigan Dock & Market Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cudahy Bros. v. West Michigan Dock & Market Corp., 280 N.W. 93, 285 Mich. 18 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

North, J.

Cudahy Brothers Company, plaintiff herein, is a Wisconsin corporation. Its business is wholesaling meats and kindred products. It brought this suit to recover a balance of the purchase price for meats alleged to have been sold by it to the defendant, West Michigan Dock & Market Corporation. The defendant owns and operates a cold storage plant, a freight warehouse and dock at Muskegon, Michigan. It is known as the Mart. The case was tried by a jury and plaintiff had a verdict for $2,661.87; but on defendant’s motion judgment non obstante veredicto was entered. Plaintiff has ap *21 pealed on the sole ground that the circuit judge erred in entering this judgment.

There is no question but the merchandise for the price of which suit is brought was sold and delivered by plaintiff. However, defendant asserts that it did not give the orders for or receive the meats shipped; but instead the buyer was one Albert Misket. It is plaintiff’s contention that defendant should be found liable for the account on the theory that Misket acted as defendant’s agent. "While there is no proof of an actual agency, plaintiff does contend that liability should attach to defendant on the theory that it ratified the acts of Misket as its agent or that it is estopped from denying* liability for the purchases by Misket as defendant’s agent.

Defendant rents portions of its property to parties who carry on various commercial activities. Albert Misket, who did a “meat truck business,” was such a tenant doing business under the- assumed name of West Michigan Wholesale Meat Co. His wife was associated with him in the business. In front of the space occupied by Misket he maintained a sign about five feet long and two feet wide which read “West Michigan Wholesale Meat Company, Distributors of Oscar Mayer’s Meats.” The mail for defendant’s tenants was delivered at the general office of the Mart and an employee distributed it to the respective tenants. Misket testified that this mail clerk at his direction delivered all mail pertaining to meats at his office.

On February 1,1936, Misket contacted John Kloosterman, who was a salesman for plaintiff in the Muskegon territory, and gave him the initial order for a shipment of meat from plaintiff. In all there were 65. shipments. Fifty-one of these shipments *22 made prior to June 6, 1936, were paid, but payment was not made for the balance of the shipments which continued to June 29th. All shipments (with seemingly one exception) were made and billed to the West Michigan Dock & Market Corporation. There is testimony they were tagged “West Michigan Dock.” When the Cudahy shipments arrived they were either taken by or turned over to Misket’s employees and used in his business. Plaintiff received 14 checks in payment on account. Each of these checks was signed “West Michigan Wholesale Meat Co., by A. Misket.” The circumstances of taking the first order in defendant’s name and of continuing the account in defendant’s name is to some extent disclosed by the following testimony of Misket, which is somewhat significant because in so far as it pertains to opening the account in defendant’s name this testimony is not disputed by plaintiff’s salesman, Kloosterman, although he was a witness:

“He (Kloosterman) asked me who we wanted the first order made out to. * * * He said that the Mart had an established rating-, that the West Michigan Dock & Market Corporation did and we did not, and he said he would bill it to them.
“Q. And the bills, after he told you he was going to bill it to the West Michigan Dock & Market Corporation, did come through that way?
“A. Yes, sir, they did.
“Q. Then when you talked to Mr. Kloosterman in May relative to this matter he said he believed there was some confusion and it would be corrected?
“A. Yes, that is right.
“Q. And it was not corrected?
“A. That is right. None of the 65 orders were prepared by me. I had nothing- to do with the statements appearing upon them. * * * It was entirely Mr. Kloosterman’s work. That was true of the 14 *23 orders that were offered in evidence here covering the period from June 6th on. I never wrote np any order on any Cudahy order blank. ’ ’

Clearly from the outset and throughout these dealings Kloosterman knew the orders he was taking were Misket’s orders, not those of defendant. He so testified:

“Q. The question is whether you had any knowledge he was doing business as the West Michigan Wholesale Meat Company until after Mr. Keyser (plaintiff’s credit manager) came over here (July 1, 1936).
“A. I never had an account as the West Michigan Wholesale Meat Company.
“ Q. Did you know he was doing business under that name?
“A. He might have used that trade name, as far as that is concerned, but that had nothing to do with me. I was not selling to him under that name.
“Q. Didn’t you know he was doing business under that name, Mr. Kloosterman? Just answer the question yes or no.
“A. Yes.” „

Even after McCrea, defendant’s vice-president and general manager, protested about shipments of Misket’s orders in defendant’s name, Kloosterman did not advise his principal promptly. He testified:

“I did not immediately notify my company not to make further shipments to the credit or account of the West Michig'an Dock & Market Corporation after my talle with Mr. McCrea (about June 27th).”

Kloosterman was frequently in Misket’s place of business. He secured his orders from Misket, and he went to Misket to urge payment when the latter was slow in making payments on the account. Notwithstanding defendant’s manager, McCrea, was on *24 the same premises, Kloosterman at no time went to McCrea to secure payment. The conclusion is inescapable that Kloosterman was well aware that this was Misket’s account, not defendant’s.'

The legal question presented by appellant is whether the trial judge was correct in entering judgment in defendant’s favor non obstante veredicto. The knowledge possessed by plaintiff’s agent is chargeable to plaintiff as a matter of law. The result is that from the first of this series of transactions plaintiff is chargeable with knowledge that the purchaser was Misket, doing business as the West Michigan Wholesale Meat Co.; that the orders came from him; that plaintiff was to look to him for payment; that irregularities and discrepancies in the account 'were adjusted with Misket who was carrying on a business wholly independent of that of defendant. Under such a record there is no possibility of recovery by plaintiff on the theory that defendant is chargeable with Misket’s purchases by reason of ratification or because of estoppel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 N.W. 93, 285 Mich. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cudahy-bros-v-west-michigan-dock-market-corp-mich-1938.