Foster v. Goddard

9 F. Cas. 534, 1 Cliff. 158
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1858
DocketCase No. 4,970
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 534 (Foster v. Goddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Goddard, 9 F. Cas. 534, 1 Cliff. 158 (circtdma 1858).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

Ten exceptions are filed by the respondent to the master’s report, which will be considered in the order in which they were made. In the first place, the respondent complains that he was not allowed by the master to debit the assets on hand, under the first contract, with the sums paid by him for clerk hire, taxes upon the property, and for advertising the business. Those expenses amount in the whole, as alleged by the respondent, to the sum of five thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars and sixty-eight cents, and it is insisted by the respondent that the decision of the master on this point was incorrect. Net ¡ profit was the basis prescribed by the con- i tract, by which the amount of the complain- ¡ ant's compensation was to be ascertained. If there had been no net profit, then he would have been entitled to no compensation, except the six hundred dollars allowed for his support. As a general rule, the term “net profits” may be defined to be the gain made by the merchant in buying and selling goods after paying all costs and charges for transacting the business, and such it is insisted by the respondent is the sense in which the words are used in this instrument. By the terms of the contract, the complainant was entitled, at the expiration of five years, to one tenth of the net profits of the business in that trade, and by necessary implication the remaining nine tenths of the profits belonged to the respondent Were this the whole of ] the contract, It would unquestionably follow, I as iscontended bythe counselfor therespond- ■ ent, that each of the nine parts of the profits ! belonging to the respondent ought to be equal ! to the one tenth part allowed to the com-j plainant. On the part of the complainant it 1 is insisted that the words “net profits,” as ' used in this contract, must be understood in ; a special sense, and that they mean the gain ¡ made in the business after the expenses there-i in specially enumerated have been deducted. Suppose it to be so for the sake of the argument, it still remains to ascertain whether the charges in question are not properly embraced in the expenses appertaining to the goods themselves, which it is admitted are specially enumerated among those which are-to be deducted. Unless clerk hire and expenses for advertising fall within that class of expenditures, it is difficult to see what terms short of the actual enumeration of those expenses could have been employed to accomplish that purpose. Expenses for clerk hire and advertising are as much incident to the transaction of mercantile business as those incurred for insurance, “freight,” and storage, and the merchant might as reasonably calculate to procure goods without cost, as to expect to keep them on hand for sale without their being subject to taxation. Interest on capital was, doubtless, enumerated, on account of the special character of the arrangement, to exclude the conclusion that might otherwise follow, that the capital for the business was to be furnished by the respondent without any such allowance, and the same remark applies also to the costs and expenses in victualling, manning, and sailing the vessels employed, and keeping them in repair. Necessary expenses of that sort would arise at home as well as abroad, and hence it was provided that all such expenditures should be deducted from the gross proceeds of the business, in order to ascertain the net profits, to diminishing the usual signification of tlyxt term. For these reasons the first exception to the master's report is sustained.

Complaint is made, in the second place, by the respondent, that the master has erroneously charged the business with ?1.7S9.S9. being the amount of a loss made in prosecuting the same, for which payment has not been made. Credit had been given to the debtors owing this sum to the amount of $2,-173.04 on the sale of a certain quantity of wool; but the amount actually due was in dispute. They tendered to the respondent, in 1850 or 1S51, the sum of $1,500, which he declined to receive. Nothing further was done by either party until January, 1S37, which was three years after the demand was barred by the statute of limitations. At that time the debtors offered to pay the sum charged by the master to the general account, but the respondent refused to accept it, and also declined to allow the complainant to receive the proportion belonging to him, although [542]*542the complainant was present and requested permission so to do. Mere omission to collect, without more, would not render the respondent liable for a claim of this description; but the claim in this case does not rest on that fact alone. He not only suffered the demand to be outlawed, but when the debtors voluntarily came forward after the limitation had taken effect, and offered to' pay nearly the whole amount of the principal, he refused to receive it, and by virtue of his exclusive control over the accounts withheld from the complainant the means to adjust the proportion belonging to him. Suffice it to say on this point, that X am of the opinion that the decision of the master was correct, and for the reasons that he assigned for his conclusion. Both of the preceding exceptions refer to the business transacted under the first agreement, and so does the third, which will now be considered.

It is to the effect that the master has improperly allowed to the complainant one tenth of the profits made by the respondent in the construction and subsequent sale of the vessel called the Valdivia, which he alleges was sold by him for his own benefit. By the terms of the contract, the respondent had the right of purchasing, selling, and chartering the vessels designed for this trade, at his option; and it was expressly stipulated that the loss or profit attendant thereon should be charged or credited in the general account. According to the report of the master, the allegation that this vessel was never employed in the business is technically correct, but she was constructed under a contract made by the respondent, and was in fact built and designed for that purpose, and by the express words of the contract, the interest of the complainant to the full extent of his one tenth was made liable for all the risks and casualties in the business, whether attendant upon the goods or the vessels. As early as the 17th of March, 1S4G, and before the vessel was constructed, the respondent wrote to the complainant,' informing him that he had made the contract for her construction, expressing the hope, at the same time, that she would make the outward passage in sixty-five or seventy days. On the 22d of August, 1S4G. he wrote again, to the effect that one of the masters employed in the business was waiting for this vessel, adding, in the same letter, that she would be despatched in November. His next letter is dated October 12, 1S4G, in which he informs the complainant that the vessel would be launched on the following day, saying, “She will be our next ship.” In that letter he also informed the complainant that he had engaged a part of her outward cargo, and in a letter dated on the daj following he instructed the complainant not to sell anything to arrive by this vessel. During the period covered by this correspondence, and before any intimation had been given by the respondent of any different arrangement, the complainant, on the faith of these letters, had procured a part of her return cargo.

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Related

Pittsfield & North Adams Railroad v. Boston & Albany Railroad
157 N.E. 611 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 534, 1 Cliff. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-goddard-circtdma-1858.