Eastern Iron & Metal Co. v. Patterson

39 Haw. 346, 1952 Haw. LEXIS 52
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1952
DocketNO. 2764.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 Haw. 346 (Eastern Iron & Metal Co. v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastern Iron & Metal Co. v. Patterson, 39 Haw. 346, 1952 Haw. LEXIS 52 (haw 1952).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

This is a bill in equity for injunction, establishment of constructive trust and incidental relief. Attached to it and made parts thereof are a written agreement for sale and *347 delivery executed at Los Angeles, California, between tbe petitioner, a foreign corporation, as buyer, and the respondent, Patterson Construction Company, Limited, a Hawaiian corporation, as seller, and a supporting bill of sale contemporaneously delivered to tbe petitioner by that respondent. Tbe terms of tbe agreement are that the respondent corporation warranted that it was “tbe owner -* * * an(j a position to convey title and possession” of 1500 tons of cast-iron scrap and agreed to sell that cast-iron scrap to tbe petitioner at tbe rate of $50 per ton to be delivered at Los Angeles by a certain steamship line, in consideration of which tbe petitioner agreed to purchase such scrap at that rate so delivered and to pay $35,000 in advance. Tbe agreement recited that tbe “bilL of sale transferring title as of this date for said merchandise” was delivered as evidence of tbe warranty expressed in tbe agreement or contract itself and that “Title is conveyed for tbe purpose of assuring performance of this contract, but tbe fact that title is so conveyed shall not affect tbe liabilities or responsibilities fixed upon tbe Seller [i-. e., the respondent corporation] by reason of tbe fact that tbe merchandise is being sold E.O.B. rail cars Los Angeles Harbor.” Tbe bill of sale, so delivered and so conveying title, described tbe 1500 tons of cast-iron scrap sold as 600 tons thereof “now located at Wainae Sugar Mill, Oahu” and as 900 tons “now located at Waimea Sugar Mill, Kauai, Territory of Hawaii.” The bill for injunction alleges that tbe “Petitioner has in accordance with bis contract paid to Respondent Patterson Construction Company, Limited, tbe sum of $35,000.00 in and for partial payment for said scrap cast iron.”

As grounds for equitable relief, tbe bill alleges (1) that tbe respondent corporation “is insolvent and has no intention of complying with tbe terms of said contract or of delivering said merchandise” [i. e., said cast-iron scrap] ; *348 (2) that the respondent corporation and H. C. Patterson, its president, and respondent Industrial Development, a foreign copartnership, and William G. Meagher, its attorney in fact, “have entered into a plan to defraud Petitioner of said merchandise and to convert same to their own use”; (3) that “in furtherance of their plan said Respondents are now in the process of loading said merchandise on a barge or barges * * * to be shipped to an unknown destination * * * [and of] mixing the cast iron scrap sold to Petitioner with other scrap so that the same cannot he identified” and have already done so in part; (4) that “if said scrap is converted as alleged, Petitioner will suffer irreparable damage”; (5) that “Petitioner does not have a complete, full and adequate remedy at law.”

The relief prayed in the bill is (1) to require the respondents to show cause why they should not be permanently enjoined from shipping said merchandise to anyone other than to the petitioner at Los Angeles; (2) to issue a temporary restraining order restraining them from conveying, transferring, shipping, loading or encumbering any cast-iron scrap until the title to the same has been determined judicially; (3) to impress a trust on said merchandise in favor of petitioner; (4) to set aside and cancel any sale of said merchandise made from respondent corporation to any of the other respondents; (5) to issue a mandatory injunction requiring respondent corporation to comply with the terms of said agreement and to give proper security therefor; (6) to order respondents to pay damages sustained by petitioner and his costs, and for such other and further relief as may be appropriate.

On the filing of the bill, a temporary restraining order and an order to show cause issued. After various returns, answers, motions to dissolve the temporary restraining order and other pleadings made by the respondents, the cause came to issue and on stipulation of the parties a trial *349 on tlie merits was held. At the close of trial the presiding judge in equity, by oral decision and thereafter by interlocutory decree, dismissed the bill in its entirety and denied its prayer for equitable relief but reserved the question of damages which may have been suffered by the respondent copartnership pending disposition of the instant appeal, which the petitioner had indicated that it would take from that decree.

The specifications of error meriting consideration challenge the interlocutory decree and present five paramount and interdependent questions pertaining to the written warranty agreement for sale and delivery. The first question so presented is whether that agreement constitutes a valid and binding contract of sale and purchase upon the respondent corporation and the petitioner as parties thereto. The second is whether the sale made therein was authorized by the terms of an existing oral agreement for joint venture which the respondent corporation had entered with the respondent copartnership. The third is whether the sale made by the respondent corporation to the petitioner was an exercise of such authority within the scope of the joint venture. The fourth is whether the respondent copartnership is bound by the contract made by the respondent corporation. The fifth is whether those respondents are in breach of contract, and if so, what is the nature thereof and the part played therein by the other respondents?

As to the first question, the written warranty agreement for sale and delivery on its face unquestionably meets every requisite of a valid and binding contract. The respondents claim that it does not bind the respondent corporation because that corporation did not expressly ratify the contract but, according to respondent Patterson’s testimony, subsequently rejected it. They do not seriously claim, however, that the respondent Patterson, who signed *350 the contract on behalf of the corporation as its president, did not have authority to bind the corporation to that contract. Nor could they reasonably do so under the undisputed evidence which shows that the contract was executed by the president of the corporation in the ordinary course of the corporation’s business as had been adopted by the corporation without dissent in the past, such as in its prior transfer to the joint venture and dealings of a similar nature with the petitioner itself. That evidence establishes that the respondent Patterson, as president and chief administrative officer, had at least apparent authority, if not expressed or implied authority, to bind the corporation to the contract and that the petitioner had the right to rely on that authority. (For collection of authorities see 13 Am. Jur. § 890, p. 870.) Being so authorized, the contract did not require ratification. Admittedly, the act of the respondent Patterson was on behalf of the corporation in executing the contract and in perpetrating a fraud upon the petitioner. Under the undisputed evidence, that act as to both phases, assuming arguendo

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Haw. 346, 1952 Haw. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastern-iron-metal-co-v-patterson-haw-1952.