G. Ober & Sons Co. v. Wm. G. Smith, Inc.

94 S.E. 787, 122 Va. 311, 1918 Va. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 24, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 787 (G. Ober & Sons Co. v. Wm. G. Smith, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. Ober & Sons Co. v. Wm. G. Smith, Inc., 94 S.E. 787, 122 Va. 311, 1918 Va. LEXIS 99 (Va. 1918).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

delivered the opinion of the 'court.

The decree complained of by appellant and upon which cross-errors are assigned by appellee was based upon three master commissioners’ reports, made by the same commissioner on successive recommittals to him of the cause and his reports as first made, to none of which report .was any exception taken by the appellant. To the commissioner’s reports first filed the appellee took exceptions, raising the questions arising upon said cross-assignments of error.

This condition of the record renders it unnecessary for us to state in detail the facts of the case bearing on the appellant’s assignment of error. And in the view we take of it, the following outline of the facts and statement of the questions raised on appeal by appellants and by the appellees will be sufficient.

The appellant is a manufacturer of fertilizer and the appellee (as-it must be taken to be upon the issues made in the cause before us) was appellant’s agent for its sale. The [313]*313contract of agency provided that the compensation of appellee should be $2.00 per ton on all sales of fertilizer by him, the proceeds of sale of which should be collected by appellee or appellant and received by appellant, and an additional compensation of a “bonus” of $500.00 if and when the appellee should sell, collect and settle with appellant for as much as 1,000 tons of the fertilizer.

The appellee, in accordance with the contract, was to endorse farmers’ notes taken for all sales of fertilizer on time, thereby making itself liable thereon to appellant as surety for the payment of such notes. Accordingly, appellee endorsed all of such notes, so taken, aggregating quite a large amount; the particular notes on which appellee was relieved from liability by the decree complained of aggregated, however, only $2,190.85; and under such contract appellee gave a bond, to appellants, with Wm G. Smith and Mrs. Nannie V. Smith as sureties, covering the amount of certain prices of all fertiliser shipped to appellee, conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties of the latter as agent, etc.

The appellant was entitled to the custody and control, under the provisions of the contract aforesaid, of the farmers’ notes -aforesaid which were uncollected on October 6, 1910, because the appellee then, without the consent of appellant, ceased all attention to the business of said agency and accepted other employment in the State of Florida from that date until the latter part of May, 1911. Further—

At the time of such breach of contract by appellee, although 1,176-1/6 tons of fertilizer had been sold .by appellee, as much as 1,000 tons had not been collected for by it, or by it and appellant.

The decree complained of contains the following adjudications, which are drawn in question, namely:

[314]*314(a) It confirmed the last report of the commissioner aforesaid (which was the final result of his several reports), and decreed that the appellee pay over unto the appellant the sum of $1,313.23, with interest thereon at the legal rate from July 15, 1910, “the same being the amount found due the said plaintiff (appellant) by the said defendant (appellee) after allowance of all proper credits.”

(b) It further decreed that the appellee be “absolved and released * * * from further liability * * * as endorser” on said notes; and that upon the payment by appellee to appellant of said sum of $1,313.23, with interest as, aforesaid, .“both the said defendant (appellee) and its surety upon a certain bond herein filed” (being the bond above mentioned) “shall be absolved, and released.”

Appellant complains of the provisions of said decree referred to in sub-paragraph (b) next above, and urges that the evidence returned with said commissioner’s reports is insufficient to sustain the decree in this particular, in that it does not show such laches or other conduct on the part of appellant as would release the appellee from his. liability as endorser aforesaid. This is the sole assignment of error by appellant. We will first consider this assignment of error.

1. Whether there was such conduct amounting to such failure on the part of the appellant to perform its duties under said contract as in equity relieved the appellee as endorser of said notes from liability to the appellant (plain-;tiff in the court below), on the principle that he who asks equity must do equity, depended upon the conduct of the' appellant as shown by the evidence before the commissioner..

In his first report the commissioner reached the conclusion from the evidence before him that the appellee was-“not liable in any way (as endorser or otherwise) to the' plaintiff (appellant) on account of said notes” and so reported. As above stated, there was no exception to that: [315]*315report by the appellant, nor to any of the said commissioner’s reports, tinder the well-settled rule on the subject, the evidence in the cause cannot be looked to by us to ascertain whether the conclusion aforesaid of the commissioner was sustained or not sustained by the evidence. On the face of the reports aforesaid no error is apparent in such conclusion. No exception having been taken by appellant in the court below, as aforesaid, it is too late for it to raise the objection in this court on appeal. Morrison v. Householder, 79 Va. 627; Hansucker v. Walker, 76 Va. 753; White’s Ex’r v. Johnson, 2 Munf. (16 Va.) 285. The conclusion of the commissioner and the adjudication of the court, by the decree complained of based thereon, aforesaid, were, therefore, final' and conclusive upon appellánt and are not open to review in this court. Hence, we cannot sustain the assignment of error of appellant.

The cross-assignments of error of appellee involve two questions only, which will be considered in their order as stated below, which were" raised by exceptions by appellee to the two commissioner’s reports aforesaid first filed.

2- Were the commissioner’s reports and the decree aforesaid thereon correct in allowing the appellee its compensation of $2.00 per ton only on the proceeds of fertilizer sales collected by appellee and appellant and received by appellant and not on the gross sales by appellee?

The commissioner reports sales by appellee of 1,177-1/6 tons of fertilizer and allowed appellee his compensation above mentioned of $2.00. per ton on all proceeds of such sales which were collected by appellant and appellee and received by appellant and which will be received when appellee shall have paid to appellant the $1,313.23 balance due to the latter above mentioned. The decree complained of by appellee made the same allowance.' Appellee claims, however, that it should have been allowed said $2.00 per ton on all of its sales of 1,177-1/6 tons of fertilizer, regardless of [316]*316the fact that some of the farmers’ notes therefor were never collected. Appellee makes this claim on the ground that appellant withdrew certain of the farmers’ notes, among which were those uncollected, ’ from the hands of appellee and also otherwise prevented appellee from collecting such notes, by placing them in the hands of an attorney for appellant and notifying the farmers to pay the notes only to such attorney or to appellant direct; and appellee contends that this was a breach of contract by appellant and that but for such breach of contract by appellant appellee would have collected approximately (sic) all of such notes. As above

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 787, 122 Va. 311, 1918 Va. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-ober-sons-co-v-wm-g-smith-inc-va-1918.