Globe Paper Co. v. Russell Box Co.

291 Mass. 1
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 3, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 291 Mass. 1 (Globe Paper Co. v. Russell Box Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Globe Paper Co. v. Russell Box Co., 291 Mass. 1 (Mass. 1935).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

On February 8, 1933, the plaintiff Globe Paper Company, Inc., brought a suit in equity against the Russell Box Company for an accounting and to recover compensation by way of a commission of five per cent on all goods sold by the defendant to The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company (hereinafter called the A. & P.), a customer procured by the plaintiff for the defendant.

The defendant admits that prior to January 9, 1928, it entered into a contract with the plaintiff whereby the plaintiff was to receive a commission on all merchandise sold by the defendant to customers contacted and procured by the plaintiff, but contends that the terms of said contract were reduced to writing by the defendant at the request of the plaintiff and are set forth in a letter dated January 9, 1928, from the defendant to the plaintiff’s treasurer, which reads in its portion material to the present issue as follows: “Dear Mr. Goodman: Pursuant to your request of a few days ago, while we were at your home, we give below a statement of our understanding of our relations. You are to receive a commission of 5% on all sales obtained through you or your companies, the Howard Paper Co. and the Globe Paper Co., and Mr. J. R. Clark, with . . . certain exceptions ... We will furnish you with copies of all invoices and all correspondence relating to your orders. We accede to your desire that the accounts shall be balanced once each month, but desire to make the date the 15th of the month following instead of the 10th. Trusting the above confirms your understanding of our discussion, we are . . . .” As charged in the plaintiff’s bill of complaint, the defendant in its answer admits that “the plaintiff did [3]*3contact and procure customers who purchased merchandise from the defendant directly or through the plaintiff,” and “That under said contract the duty was on the defendant to submit to the plaintiff a monthly statement of the account setting out all the orders placed by the customers procured by the plaintiff for the defendant.” The defendant denied that it failed “to submit to the plaintiff any accounting of such purchases”; alleged that “All commissions due on any purchases made from the defendant by customers procured or contacted by the plaintiff during the existence of the contract [above quoted] . . . have been paid”; admitted that the items and figures on which an accounting may be ascertained are peculiarly within its knowledge; and alleged that on May 2, 1929, the contract above quoted was terminated by a letter written by the defendant to the plaintiff, its agents or servants, and that nothing is now due from the defendant to the plaintiff.

On July 22, 1932, the defendant brought an action against the Howard Paper Company, Inc., and on August 8, 1932, the defendant in that action brought an action concerning the same subject against the present defendant. The action of the Howard Paper Company, Inc., is brought for the alleged breach of the same contract upon which the Globe Paper Company suit is founded, dated January 9, 1928, with the difference that the Howard Paper Company, Inc., in its action seeks to recover commissions alleged to be due the plaintiff on said contract from the defendant, as the result of sales of paper boxes by the defendant to the First National Stores Inc., between May 2, 1929, and the date of the writ, August 8, 1932. The defendant’s answer consisted of a general denial and a plea of payment. The action was referred to an auditor with a provision “that the findings of fact shall be final.” On February 17, 1933, the suit in equity was referred to the same attorney as master “to hear the parties, find the facts and report his findings to the court, together with such questions of law, arising in the course of his duty, as any party maj^ request.” This order provided that “Case to be tried with case No. 281,781, Howard Paper Company [4]*4v. Russell Box Company.” The auditor and master duly filed reports in the above entitled action and suit on April 6, 1934, and April 25, 1934, respectively. On the auditor’s report, after hearing the judge “found” for the defendant and the plaintiff duly excepted. To the master’s report there were no exceptions and a motion was made to confirm that report. No interlocutory decree to that end appears to have been filed, but a final decree was entered dismissing the bill with costs. The appeal here is to the entry of the final decree.

Certain facts are common to the action at law and suit in equity. The Howard Paper Company, Inc., and the Globe Paper Company, Inc., are Massachusetts corporations engaged in the business of selling paper and cardboard boxes and similar goods at wholesale. Joseph Goodman was treasurer and director and controlled both of the plaintiff corporations. He was duly authorized to act for each corporation in the making of the alleged contract with the defendant. The defendant is a Massachusetts corporation engaged in manufacturing and selling paper and cardboard boxes. Harlow M. Russell was director, president and treasurer of the defendant company. He made the contract with the Howard Paper Company, Inc., and the Globe Paper Company, Inc., and was authorized to act for the defendant company. In 1926, Goodman and Russell had a conference with the result that the Howard Paper Company, Inc., got the business of the First National Stores Inc. At this conference Goodman “said that he [Goodman] was in a position to get Russell a lot of First National business, both in the type of boxes Russell had been selling them and also new kinds of boxes not previously sold to the First National Stores by Russell.” At this meeting the parties did not agree as to any commission or compensation to be paid Goodman for his services. At a conference in August, 1926, between Goodman (representing the Globe Paper Company, Inc.) and Russell, Goodman told Russell “that he had connections with the Great Atlantic and Pacific Company and could get that [5]*5business for Russell.” The conference resulted in the Globe Paper Company, Inc., getting the business of the A. & P.

At this time the arrangement was that on orders received by the Russell Box Company for the First National Stores Inc. Russell was to bill the goods to the Howard Paper Company, Inc., and this company was to bill them to the First National Stores Inc. and charge the First National Stores Inc. two per cent for its services. We infer that the same arrangement existed between the Globe Paper Company, Inc., and the Russell Box Company, that is, that when orders were received by the Russell Box Company, it was to bill the goods to the Globe Paper Company, Inc., which, in turn, would bill them to the A. & P. when that company should receive the merchandise from the Russell Box Company. The Russell Box Company received orders from the A. & P. because of Goodman’s work on account of the Globe Paper Company, Inc., in October, 1926, and we assume bills were rendered to the Globe Paper Company, Inc., and rebilled by that company plus two per cent to the A. & P. until April, 1927.

In December, 1926, Goodman and Russell had a conference at which it appeared that the First National Stores Inc.

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291 Mass. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/globe-paper-co-v-russell-box-co-mass-1935.