Davis v. Davis

47 N.W. 555, 84 Mich. 324, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 588
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 N.W. 555 (Davis v. Davis) 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
Davis v. Davis, 47 N.W. 555, 84 Mich. 324, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 588 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Ghamplin, O. J.

On January 20, 1887, the defendants entered into an agreement with the plaintiffs by which the plaintiffs were to furnish to the. defendants certain creamery supplies on the cars at Chicago, and also to put into operation the machinery, which they furnished to the defendants for a creamery at Minden City, in the' State of Michigan, which ivas to have a capacity for making 1,500 pounds of butter a day. Among the supplies to be furnished were 600 Fairlamb milk-cans, of gallons each. The defendants were to pay the plaintiffs, the sum of $2,065, as follows: $1,065 in cash when the machinery was ready for operation; one note of $500, due on or before April 20, 1888; one note of $500, due on April 20, 1889; and, when the defendants were ready to make butter, the plaintiffs were to convey to them the right to use the Fairlamb patent milk-cans within a radius of 10 miles from Minden City, except when in conflict with other creamery plants established before the date of that agreement.

It appears that the creamery was ready to do business by May 20, 1887, at which date Davis & Rankin, the [327]*327plaintiffs, executed and delivered to the defendants an agreement setting forth that the plaintiffs were the owners of the following valuable patent, to wit, No. 215,-812, secured by letters patent issued by the United States for new and valuable improvements in milk-cans, and thereby granted to defendants the exclusive use of said invention within the said territory of a radius of 10 miles from Minden City, where the same does not conflict with Cass City Creamery or Port Sanilac Creamery, which grant was upon certain conditions mentioned in the agreement, not necessary to mention here. At this time the plaintiffs, through their agent, settled with the defendants, and took their notes, one of which is in suit, and reads as follows:

“Minden City, State or Michigan, May 20, 1887.
■ “April 20, 1888, after date, we promise to pay Davis & Rankin or bearer at the Minden City Bank the sum of $500, with interest-at seven per cent, from date, without defalcation, for value received in filling contract for creamery goods and territory. .-
“$500.”

This note not being paid at maturity, suit was brought upon it, in which the defendants pleaded the general issue, and gave notice that they would show under said 'plea that a part of the consideration- of the note was the full and exclusive right to use the Fairlamb can within the territory mentioned, with the exception of such territory as was at that time used by the Cass City and Port Sanilac creameries; and that they had not been allowed the use and occupation and enjoyment of the privilege of using the Fairlamb can within that territory, as agreed; and that the territory had been used and occupied and enjoyed almost exclusively by a creamery-at Port Huron, which had used and gathered cream within the territory with Fairlamb cans furnished by the plaintiffs, contrary to and in violation of their agreement with [328]*328the defendants. They further gave notice that the plaintiffs expressly agreed and undertook to grant to the defendants the sole right to use the Fairlamb can within the territory granted, and expressly agreed to exclude other persons from using or attempting to use, for the purpose of gathering cream for creameries, the Fairlamb can, which they failed to do; and that, by reason of the plaintiffs’ failure to observe and perform the conditions of the said agreement, the defendants had suffered great damage in lying idle, not being able to operate their creamery at its full capacity, and were compelled to run at great loss.

As a further defense, they gave notice that they would show that at the time stated, when the plaintiffs sold the cans to the defendants, together with the territory specified, they had previously sold, conveyed, and granted to a creamery situated at Port Huron, known as the “Port Huron Creamery,” the right to use the Fairlamb 'can within the territory so conveyed to the defendants’ 'creamery at Minden City, and notwithstanding they had so sold the same and given the right to' the said Port Huron Creamery to gather cream in the Fairlamb can from the territory, the plaintiffs, through their agents and representatives, conveyed the right to use the can in said territory to the defendants, fraudulently, and for the purpose of defrauding the defendants, representing, ;a,b the time they so sold the cans and territory to the ‘defendants, that the Port Huron Creamery had no right ■or interest in the territory conveyed to the defendants, and that the plaintiffs would immediately remove them from the said territory; that the defendants were induced to give the note sued upon on account of the representations made by the plaintiffs at the time as to the right and interest in said territory, and the right to use the Fairlamb can therein, of the Port Huron Creamery, [329]*329all of which, representations were false, and known to be so by the plaintiffs at the timó they were made, and' were so made for the sole purpose of. defrauding defendants, and inducing them to execute the note sued on; and that, by reason of the false representations, they suffered damage.

The trial in the case resulted in a judgment and verdict for the defendants over and above the claim of the plaintiffs sued upon of $1,484.24, and the plaintiffs bring the case here by writ of error.

As to the first defense set up, that there was an agreement to exclude the Port Huron Creamery from the territory named, it could not be made available to the defendants, for the reason that it was not embraced in the writings made between the'parties. The court below took that view of the case, and.charged the jury that the plaintiffs* right of recovery depended upon the question whether they made false representations to induce the defendants to enter into the contract and give the notes in suit, and the damages which resulted, if any, to the defendants by reason of such false representations.

The claim of the defendants made upon the trial was that their damage consisted in a loss of profits which they could and would have ma'de if they had been permitted the sole and exclusive use of the Fairlamb can in the territory designated. The Fairlamb can is not the only can in which cream is collected from among farmers, as appears by the testimony in the case, for mention is made of the Cooley can, and of the Haney can, and it appears from the testimony that the Port Huron Creamery Company had, in its use, in the territory described as the Minden City Creamery territory, 500 of the Fairlamb cans, and 125 other cans; or, in other words, 20 per cent, of the cans used by them in collecting cream from the farmers were other than the Fairlamb cans. These cans [330]*330were owned. by different creameries, and were furnished to the farmers in the territory in which the creamery operated, to deposit their cream, and the cans were then collected by the owners of the creamery, and taken to the place of manufacture by them. During the year 1887, the year for which this judgment was obtained, no charge was made to the farmers for the use of the cans. I mention this simply as bearing upon the question as to the damages which might arise to the defendants from not being permitted the exclusive use of the Fairlamb can.

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Related

Stevens v. Yale
72 N.W. 5 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1897)
Davis v. Davis
56 N.W. 774 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 N.W. 555, 84 Mich. 324, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-davis-mich-1890.