Equitable Gas Light Co. v. Baltimore Coal Tar & Manufacturing Co.

63 Md. 285, 1885 Md. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 11, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 63 Md. 285 (Equitable Gas Light Co. v. Baltimore Coal Tar & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Equitable Gas Light Co. v. Baltimore Coal Tar & Manufacturing Co., 63 Md. 285, 1885 Md. LEXIS 89 (Md. 1885).

Opinion

Alvex, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a bill filed by the appellee, the plaintiff below, for an injunction, and for specific performance of a contract set forth in the hill. The injunction was granted, and, upon answer filed hy the defendant, an appeal was taken from the order granting the injunction. We are [294]*294to enquire therefore whether, upon the allegations of the hill, assuming that they will he supported hy proof, there is such case stated as justified the Court in granting the injunction ? And this depends upon the antecedent question whether, upon proof of the allegations of the bill, there will he such case presented as will justify the Court in decreeing specific performance of the contract alleged.

The contract alleged in the hill is, that on the 14th of Eeb., 1882, the defendant agreed to sell to and allow the plaintiff to take away all the coal-tar that might be produced at the defendant’s gas works in the city of Baltimore, for and during the term of five years from that date, for a stipulated price per gross ton, payable four months from the 20th of each month. That this contract, at the time the terms thereof were agreed upon, was not otherwise reduced to writing than in the form of a mere memorandum in a pocket memorandum hook of the president of the plaintiff company, and that such memorandum was not signed hy any one for or on behalf of the defendant. It is alleged that the terms of the contract, as briefly noted in the memorandum-made at the time, were expressly assented to hy the vice-president, then acting as president, of the defendant company; a'nd that it was then and there distinctly agreed that the terms of the contract thus agreed upon should he reduced to writing in proper form, and he signed hy the parties thereto ; and to that end it was agreed that the president of- the plaintiff should have the contract prepared in writing for the signatures of the proper officers of the respective parties: That such contract was, in due time, prepared in duplicate form, one of which duplicates was signed hy the president of the plaintiff company, and both duplicates were submitted to and left with the president of the defendant for execution, and that said president approved of the contract thus prepared, and promised that it should he [295]*295signed forthwith by the proper officers 'of the defendant. That the plaintiff, supposing that the contract had been duly signed on the part of the defendant, and confiding in the good faith of its officers, failed to call for the .duplicate that was, or should .have been, signed on the part of the defendant, but proceeded at once to carry out tbe terms of the contract on its part, by taking away the coal-tar from the works of the defendant, and paying therefor as required by the terms of the agreement; and that it has continued so to take away and pay for such coal-tar down to the time of filing the bill.

It is then alleged that the defendant, through its president, in Bov., 1882, notified the plaintiff that the latter should pay a higher price for the coal-tar than was agreed upon by the contract recited, or otherwise it could not get the coal-tar ; but tbe plaintiff refused to accede to such proposition, and insisted upon the observance of the terms of the contract: That the plaintiff then demanded the production of the written contract, which was supposed to have been signed by the proper officers of the defendant, but which demand was refused, under the profession of ignorance of the existence of such contract. It is then charged that the written contract left with the president of the defendant was either signed on behalf of the defendant and afterwards fraudulently withheld by its officers, with the view of obtaining an undue, and fraudulent advantage of the plaintiff, or such officers had purposely refrained from signing such contract, with the fraudulent intent of deceiving .the plaintiff, and of keeping the matter within their own control, to enable the defendant to extort from the plaintiff a higher price for such coal-tar than that agreed upon in the contract. It is then alleged, that in June, 1884, the defendant gave notice to the plaintiff that the latter would not be allowed to take away any more of the coal-tar after the last day of that month; and the bill then proceeds to [296]*296charge, that if the defendant is permitted to evade or escape from the obligation of its contract, and be allowed to sell and deliver the coal-tar to other parties, the plaintiff will thereby suffer great and irreparable damage, -for which no adequate^ redress or remedy could be obtained at law, for the reason that the plaintiff is engaged in the manufacturing of certain articles for which the coal-tar is a necessary material, and relying upon the contract with the defendant, the plaintiff has contracted for the sale, in advance, of all the products that can be made by it from the coal-tar to be obtained from the defendant’s gas-works for the next twelve months; and as a supply of such coal-tar cannot he otherwise obtained in the city of Baltimore, it would he impossible for the plaintiff to fulfil its contracts otherwise than by purchasing the coal-tar in other and distant cities, and transporting the same at great expense and loss, the amount of which it is impossible to estimate in advance, &c.

Upon these allegations the plaintiff prays that the defendant may be required to produce in Court the written contract prepared and left with its president to be signed, and if not already signed on behalf of the defendant, that the latter be required to execute the same as originally contemplated; or, if the duplicates be lost or destroyed, that the defendant, by its officers, he required to sign the original memorandum made at the time the terms of the contract were agreed upon, and which is filed with the hill as an exhibit. The plaintiff also prays that the contract, as set forth in the hill, he specifically enforced ; and that the defendant, in the meantime, he restrained by injunction from disposing of the coal-tar to any third party; and for general relief.

It is very clear that the contract alleged, unless evidenced by a sufficient writing, is within the prohibition of the fifth clause of the fourth section of the Statute of Frauds, of 29 Charles II, ch. 3, which declares that no [297]*297action shall he brought upon any agreement that is not to he performed within the space of one year from the making thereof,” unless such agreement, or some memorandum or note thereof shall he in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorised.” Here the memorandum made of the contract, not being signed by the party sought to be charged, is not sufficient to charge the defendant at law; yet the contract is not void. The statute only interposes a prohibition to maintaining an action thereon. But it seems to be regarded as a settled principle, that the equity of part performance, to entitle the plaintiff to specific execution of contracts within the Statute, does not extend to contracts within the prohibitory clause just recited, when such contracts, not being evidenced by writing, relate to personal service, or the subject-matter of them is the sale and delivery of mere personal chattels. Pom. Spec. Perf. of Contr., secs. 99, 100; Britain vs. Rossiter, on Appeal, 12 Q. B. Div., 123, referred to with approval by the Lord Chancellor and Lord Blackburn, in the recent case of Madison vs. Alderson, 8 App. Cas., 474, 490.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Md. 285, 1885 Md. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equitable-gas-light-co-v-baltimore-coal-tar-manufacturing-co-md-1885.