Friede v. Myles Salt Co.

177 So. 105
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1937
DocketNo. 16715.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 177 So. 105 (Friede v. Myles Salt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Friede v. Myles Salt Co., 177 So. 105 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Vladimir M. Friede claims from Myles Salt Company, Limited, $200, with interest, alleging that to be the balance due for services rendered by him in the preparation of a traffic study involving the advisability of defendant’s establishing a transportation system for the moving of its product from its salt mines at Weeks Island, in Louisiana, to a distribution center on the Eastern seaboard of the United States. Defendant, admitting that Friede made the said investigation and reported thereon, avers that it paid him $300, which represents more than the fair value of the services rendered, and denies that any further sum is due, and it especially denies that, in any event, interest is due except from judicial demand.

In the court a qua there was judgment in favor of plaintiff, with interest from June 11, 1936, which is the day on which the plaintiff rendered bill for his services. Defendant has appealed.

There are many facts which are not in dispute. The salt mines of defendant are located in the southern part of Louisiana, adjacent to the newly-completed intra-coastal canal. One of the principal markets for defendant’s product is centered around Hoboken, N. J., on the Northeastern seacoast of the United States. Defendant’s ■officers conceived the idea that, in the transportation of its product from the mines to Hoboken, a saving might be made by making use of the said intracoastal canal in connection with the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean for the establishment of a line of vessels operating between the said points, and they consulted Mr. Friede, a naval architect, who, apparently, had had experience as a traffic expert, requesting that he investigate and advise as to the feasibility of establishing and operating such a water transportation system. Mr. Friede made the investigation, found it inadvisable to establish the system, and then sent defendant a bill for $500 for the services which he had rendered.

Defendant contends that, when plaintiff was consulted, he stated that it was not his intention to make a charge for his advice *107 concerning the establishment of a system of transportation, but that, if such a system should be found advisable, there would be contemplated the construction of vessels and that, as a naval architect, he would in all probability be employed to design and supervise the construction of such vessels, and would thus receive his compensation for all services rendered.

Mr. Friede was first approached by Mr. Schaffenburg, the traffic manager of defendant company, who arranged a conference with certain of defendant’s officials, and it is at this conference that defendant’s officials contend that Mr. Friede stated that he would make no charge for his services in connection with the traffic study. They all admit, however, that Mr. E. B. Benjamin, the vice president and, apparently, the executive head of defendant company, stated that he would not be willing to accept the services without making payment therefor, and that he intended to send Mr. Friede a check in payment for those services. The other officials, with the exception'of Mr. Schaffenburg, all testify in a general way to the conversation above referred to, but no one of them is able to fix the amount which Mr. Benjamin stated he would send. Mr. Benjamin says that he told Mr. Friede: “We cannot accept such information absolutely gratis, we will send you a check for $100.00 or so in compensation. * * * ”

Mr. Schupp, the general sales manager of defendant, testified that Mr. Benjamin stated : “That we would insist on sending him a check, and the amount, as I remember it, was either $100.00 or $150.00.”

Mr. Robert H. Polack, vice president and secretary-treasurer of defendant company, stated that Mr. Benjamin said: “That he would not expect Mr. Friede to do this work for nothing and would certainly expect to send him a check for the work.”

Mr. E. V. Benjamin, Jr., brother of Mr. E. B. Benjamin, testified that: “There was no specific amount mentioned, as far as I remember, but my brother was positive in his statement that he would send him a check for an amount.”

Mr. Schaffenburg, the traffic manager of defendant corporation, did not state that Mr. Friede had said that he would do the work for nothing, but testified as follows: “Mr. Friede was asked what his compensation would be * * * and his answer was that in such preliminary work it was the usual custom to determine the amount of fee after any ideas were accepted,” and, when asked if Mr. Friede mentioned any price, he answered, “no.”

If any price had been at that conference agreed upon, or if Mr. Benjamin had definitely stated any particular amount that, would be sent to Mr. Friede, there were two subsequent occurrences which would indeed' appear strange. One is that very shortly thereafter, when the work was completed, Mr. Friede sent to defendant a bill for $500, and the other is that, when the bill was received, defendant sent to Mr. Friede a check for $300 without protest, and without in any way referring to any agreed amount, and without writing that the $300 payment should be considered as payment in full.

Surely, if the officials of the defendant company, only a few days before, had heard their vice president say that he would pay $100 or $150 for the services rendered, they would have expressed surprise, or made a protest, when, only a very short time later, they received a bill for $500. Certainly they would not have remitted, without protest and as payment on account of such a bill, an amount more than double the total amount which they contend was agreed upon as the value of the services.. Whatever those officials may have believed as to an understanding, we think that it is quite evident that no such understanding was agreed to by Mr. Friede, and that the circumstances were not such as would justify the conclusion that he should be held to have accepted as correct the valuation placed upon his services by Mr. Benjamin, if, in fact, such a valuation was placed on those services. Since, then, the services were rendered under circumstances which do not justify the conclusion that the minds of the parties met on the fixing of compensation, the amount to which Mr. Friede is entitled must be determined on a quantum meruit basis. We must take into consideration the value of the services to defendant, the extent of the report, the time and study spent thereon, and so forth.

It is contended by counsel for defendant that the report could have been prepared in a very few hours; that practically all of the information contained therein was already in the possession of Mf. Friede; and that all that was required was that he prepare in typewritten form certain statements from information already possessed by him.

*108 But an examination of the report does not convince us that that was all that it was necessary for Mr. Friede to do. It was necessary that he investigate the time required by various types of vessels to make the trip contemplated; that he ascertain the time necessary to load and unload each vessel; that he ascertain the cost of operating such a vessel, that is to say, fuel expense, wages of crew, cost of provisions and supplies, etc. All of these things unquestionably required the services of an expert. We also take into consideration the fact that the matter apparently was one of considerable importance to defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friede-v-myles-salt-co-lactapp-1937.