Darling v. Bradstreet

93 A. 50, 113 Me. 136, 1915 Me. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 1, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 93 A. 50 (Darling v. Bradstreet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darling v. Bradstreet, 93 A. 50, 113 Me. 136, 1915 Me. LEXIS 109 (Me. 1915).

Opinion

Haley, J.

This is an action of assumpsit to recover damages for the breach of an alleged contract for the sale of one-sixth of the capital stock of the Bradstreet Lumber Company, was tried to a jury at the March term, 1914, in Kennebec County, the plaintiff recovered a verdict for $25,129.24, and the case is before this court upon motion and exceptions.

It is the claim of the plaintiff, the son-in-law of the defendant, that while working in New York, in March, 1905, he entered into negotiations with the defendant for the purchase of one-sixth interest in the capital stock of the Bradstreet Lumber Company, and, as a result, the contract relied upon in the case was made.

[138]*138Nine letters passed between the parties in reference to the sale of the stock and employment of the plaintiff, and the contract claimed by the plaintiff is only stated in one of the letters, which is the letter of the defendant to the plaintiff, dated March 9, 1905, and which reads as follows:

“Office of F. T. Bradstreet,

“Wholesale Dealer in Pine, Spruce and Cedar Logs.

Gardiner, Maine, March 9th, ’05

My dear Harry:—

I have read your letters and Laura’s.

I will sell you ^ of my 1-3 interest in the Bradstreet Lumber Co. for $5,000. This interest shall carry the treasureship at a salary of $1200 per year. The $5000 to be paid out of the profits when they can be divided. We are not dividing at present as no one is suffering for them and we want to get a working capital. At the present Mrs. J. S. and I are furnishing it, or at least the collateral on which we borrow it. So you and the girl for two or three years would have to live on your salary and her allowance. The $5000 when paid to be Babjr Anne’s and to be invested for her benefit. The profits last year show $20,000, and I look for as good a year this. We can’t expect to do this every year but ought to do from 10 to $12,000. This will make you your own man and as interested in the welfare of the Co. as any of us. You can live in Richmond summers and anywhere your income will allow winters. Although it would be desirable for you to spend part of your time in the woods familiarizing yourself with the value of our lands as well as others that we might wish to buy, or the stumpage from them.

Tell Laura if she wants Port or anything else to go to Kirk’s Corner of B’dway and 27th and buy it and buy Rachael some “black and white.”

Y’rs truly,

Dad.”

[139]*139There was no acceptance in writing of the offer contained in the above letter, although there was more or less correspondence between the parties and the plaintiff’s wife and the defendant after it’s receipt by the plaintiff. On March 13th the plaintiff wrote the defendant and inquired when he would want him to begin his employment, “and. also who determines whether profits are to be divided, and when divided to what they are credited? As I understand the matter the shares you offer me could not become mine unless and until the profits were divided. Am I right? .... If you are sure you can use me and I am sure of it, w-'hen would you want me?” And the defendant’s reply to that part of the inquiry was, “You should begin very soon as I want two of our towns looked over this spring with a view of logging them next winter. The time of dividing the profits will probably be determined by vote of the Co. I don’t think, however, that they will be divided until w-e get about $60,000 for a working capital. Last years profits are now in logs and lumber carried over and not in cash. We have borrowed 40 M on the winter’s operation. We want, about 60 M to carry on the business & be all easy. There is no doubt you and Laura would have to live on your salary for two or three years.”

June 1, 1905, the plaintiff came to Maine and entered upon his duties as treasurer of the Bradstreet Lumber Company, to which office he was elected on that date, and held the position until the corporation meeting April 18, 1910, when he was not re-elected. From August 18, 1910 to November 1, 1913, he continued as bookkeeper of the company and performed all the duties of treasurer, except that of signing the company’s checks and notes.

Exceptions.

The plaintiff was asked, upon cross examination: “Q. — -After you came down here and got ready to establish your home, were you informed that Mr. Bradstreet had provided a house that you could occupy, rent free?” The question was objected to, excluded and exception taken to its exclusion. There is no pretense that the furnishing of the house, if furnished, was a part of any contract entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant. That, if furnished, it was a mere gratuity upon the part of the defendant there can be no question; and it had no tendency to prove or disprove the contention of either the plaintiff or the defendant. The only issue submitted to the jury was: Was there a contract between the [140]*140parties as shown by the letter of March 9th and referred to in the letter of March 13th, and the furnishing of house rent free would have no tendency to prove or disprove the making of such a contract, and the exception must be overruled.

The bill of exceptions also contains an extract from the Judge’s charge, to which exceptions were taken. It covers more than four pages of the printed record, and contains several propositions of law and fact, many of which were admitted at the trial or conceded by both sides to be the correct rule, and the only one that is urged is to an instruction allowing the jury upon that branch of the case to fix the value of the mill. The exception is not in proper form, does .not comply with the statute, Sec. 51, R. S., Chap. 70, and, as held in McKown v. Powers, 86 Maine, 295, such a bill of exceptions is a direct violation of the practice of this court and has been condemned by a long line of decisions. But, as the only question urged in the bill of exceptions is discussed upon the motion for a new trial, the defendant has the same benefit that he would have had, if it had been in conformity with the statute.

Motion.

The plaintiff claims that he accepted the offer made in the letter of . March 9th, and that, relying upon that and the other letters of the defendant as to the terms of the employment, he moved to Maine and entered upon the performance of the duties required by the ' terms of the contract to entitle him to a one-sixth interest in the stock, and the profits earned by the stock, that during his employment the dividends earned by the stock more than paid the agreed price of the stock, and that The defendant has never delivered or accounted to him for the stock or its value; that the defendant understood that the offer had been accepted, and allowed the plaintiff to so understand, until the winter of 1905 or 1906, when the plaintiff, by reason of something that occurred, went to the home of the defendant in the evening, accompanied by his wife, with the letters introduced in the case, at which time the defendant denied that he had made any contract with the plaintiff, as follows: “Q. — What did he say to you about it? A — He denied there was any agreement, asked me to leave the letters which I had regarding it, and said, ‘If you don’t leave the letters you may never speak to me of this thing again, and if you try to force this matter, your position in the company will be very unpleasant.’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 50, 113 Me. 136, 1915 Me. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darling-v-bradstreet-me-1915.