Fleischmann v. Clark

111 A. 851, 137 Md. 171, 1920 Md. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 18, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 111 A. 851 (Fleischmann v. Clark) 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
Fleischmann v. Clark, 111 A. 851, 137 Md. 171, 1920 Md. LEXIS 113 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record in this easel brings up' for review the rulings of the Superior Court of Baltimore City in a case where J. Everett Clark was plaintiff and Edwin M. and Albert J. Fleisehmann were defendants.

The caus© of action arose out of a purchase in February, 1918, of 350 barrels of Gwynnbrook whisky, the agreement between the parties to the suit being a verbal one merely.

Under the terms of that agreement the 350 barrels were to be bought at $1.20 per gallon, and the anticipated profit was to be looked for from a resale of it at an advanced price. Apparently the original agreement wasi entered into between the plaintiff and Edwin M. Fleisehmann only. Fleisehmann was to finance the deal and Clark was to attend to' the selling of the whisky so bought and the profit to' be equally divided *173 between Clark and .Fleischmann. The participation of Albert I. Fleischmann was apparently of later date.

The expenditure for the purchase was to* be shared equally between the parties to the agreement, but before the first payment was made there was a modification of the terms upon which it was to be bought from the original vendors, S. Grabfelder & Co. of Louisville, Kentucky, under1 which ten per cent, of the purchase price was to be paid cash, and the balance in six months.

The ten per cent, was paid by Fleischmann, although the plaintiff did not pay his full contx-ibution to the price until somewhat later. As the month of August rolled around, when the second and final payment was to become due, the plaintiff found himself'unable to meet his share, and he asked Edwin M. Fleischmann to advance the money for him. It was apparently about this time that Albert J. Fleischmann came into the deal, though there is evidence from which a jury might infer that ha had been a party to it before the first ten per cent, was actually paid. However this may have been, there undoubtedly was, upon the paid, of one or both of the Fleischmanns a demand that there should be a, modification of the original agreement in regard to the division of the profits, which, accor ding to the Fleischmann a, was to the effect that whatever profit .was realized on a sale of the whisky at prices between $1.20 a gallon and $1.50 a, gallon should go to them, they agreeing to guarantee to Clark a sale price of $1.50 per gallon; on all excess above $1.50 a, gallon there was to be a division of the profit between the three parties, either into equal thirds, or five-sixths to the .Fleischmann brothers and one-sixth to Clark. The attempt thus made to tie to the original agreement a new and different agreement between the parties inevitably led to a confusion of recollection as to the exact terms and nature of this agreement, so-called, of August, 1918.

It was, therefore, proposed that this should be put in writing for the purpose mainly of avoiding any confusion or un *174 certainty thereafter. The putting of it in writing was entrusted to Mr. Albert J. Eleischmann, and it is claimed by the plaintiff that this constituted a condition precedent to-any agreement. That is denied by the appellants, who have resdsteid Mr. Clark’s suit, upon the theory and ground that a perfectly valid, though oral, agreement had been entered into, and that the writing could neither add to nor detract from the agreement as made in Mr. Edwin M. Fleischmann’s office.

The record presents eight bills of exception, of which the third and sixth were not dwelt upon at the argument of the case, but were in effect abandoned.

The first question to consider is not a part of any of the bills of exception, but arises in this manner. To the declaration of the plaintiff there were filed, as the first and second pleas, the general issue pleas in an action of assumpsit. There was also a third plea, in the nature of a special plea, which was characterized in the brief as a plea in confession and avoidance, and in the oral argument sometimes as a plea of set-off, and sometimes as a plea of recoupment. But since the Act of 1914, Chapter 393, it is of no practical importance in which light this plea is, viewed. In the replication to this plea the plaintiff set up the theory of a condition precedent, and to this a demurrer was filed, which demurrer was overruled. No valid objection can be maintained to this action of the court, inasmuch as the question of a condition precedent, first set up by the replication to the special plea, could have been given in evidence under the general issue plea, on which issue had already been joined.

The first exception of the appellant was to permitting the following question to be put to the plaintiff upon his direct examination: “Well, now, was this proposal ever consummated?” 'Several different grounds have been assigned to show that this was error on the part of the trial court. The ruling, however, of that court upon this exception was correct. The question might have elicited a statement of facts, or a conclusion of law. That could only be told from the answer. *175 If the answer showed a statement of fact, it was clearly admissible); while) on the other hand if the effect of it was to permit the witness to state a conclusion of law, it was as clearly inadmissible. The question was accordingly answered, and no motion was made to strike out the answer, or question and answer, and the same question was in effect asked and answered at a later stage of the proceeding without objection, and thus further consideration of it becomes unnecessary.

The second exception wa.s to thei action of the court in overruling an objection by the defendants to permitting the plaintiff to be asked the following question: “Now, Mr. Clark, did you understand that in connection with this proposal of Messrs. Fleischmann that this agreement was to be' — this proposal; the terms of this proposal were to be embodied .in a written contract, and until that written contract was produced and signed by both parties did you consider yourself not bound and that the other parties were not bound V

This was a question of much importance, since it wenf directly to the issue whether the reduction of the agreement to writing was a condition precedent or not. The contract, so far as there was a valid and binding obligatory contract, depended upon the terms of the instrument, or oral agreement, which showed a meeting of the ininds of the parties. The contract was confessedly an oral contract, and the question was thoroughly pertinent to show whether there had been or not any meeting of the minds of the parties, and thus was a question to be passed upon by a jury upon the evidence adduced before it. This action of the court was, therefore, entirely proper. This is made the more manifest by a perusal of the cross'f-eKamination of this witness, where without objection he answered practically the same question. See Black v. Bank of Westminster, 96 Md. 399; B. & O. R. R. v. Deck, 102 Md. 669; Parks v. Griffith & Boyd Co., 123 Md. 233; Rice v. Dinsmore, 124 Md. 276; Furness-Withy & Co. v. Fahey, 127 Md. 337.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 851, 137 Md. 171, 1920 Md. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleischmann-v-clark-md-1920.