Graham v. Oregon R. & Nav. Co.

145 F. 718, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 223
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 9, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 145 F. 718 (Graham v. Oregon R. & Nav. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Oregon R. & Nav. Co., 145 F. 718, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 223 (S.D.N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

ADAMS, District Judge.

This action was brought by Robert A. Graham against The Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company to recover the damages alleged to have been sustained by him by reason of the breach of an agreement made on or about October 1st, 1900, at Portland, Oregon, for the furnishing by the libellant of steam vessels to run monthly between Portland and ports in China and Japan and to carry cargoes to be furnished by the respondent in trade between points in the United States, Canada and Europe and the said ports in the Orient. The matter has been before the court several times, on the question of jurisdiction (134 Fed. 454; 135 Fed. 608), and of the authority of the court to allow an amendment, where an exception to the jurisdiction is sustained (134 Fed. 692). The libels were set forth at length in those decisions and it is unnecessary to re-state the claims here. Briefly, the libellant claims that a contract for 3 years was made and the breach of it, involving damages to him of $683,931. The respondent again urges the lack of jurisdiction and denies that any such agreement as claimed was made but alleges that in the summer and fall of 1900, it was arranging to put on a steamship line of its own to cover the points and until that arrangement was perfected, it exchanged freights with the steamships of the libellant temporarily on a basis of the division of the through rates, it being understood that the libellant was not to cui rates, and further alleges that an agreement was drawn by Mr. Campbell, the traffic manager of the respondent, for submission to and approval by the president and directors of the respondent, covering the terms of the proposed temporary arrangement. The respondent further alleges that in March, 1901, the libellant notified the respondent that he was going to send his steamships to San Francisco, and in the meantime would make certain rates of freight, which was a cutting of rates, and that thereupon the respondent rightfully ceased to have any further dealings with him.

The question of jurisdiction has again been argued at great length, and the respondent urges three other points, viz.: that Mr. Campbell, the traffic manager of the respondent, had no authority to execute the contract alleged by the libellant and that there was no ratification of it by the respondent; that the contract which the libellant alleges was made by Mr. Campbell was never made, and if such contract had been made, the action of the libellant in cutting rates was a breach of it.

The question of jurisdiction is an important one and it is very doubtful if the libellant has by the testimony brought himself within the amendment to the libel, which was allowed upon the allegation that the negotiations culminated in an agreement, which referred to Appendix A as a memorandum incidental to the main contract. In the original [720]*720libel Appendix A was alleged as a statement of the terms of the agreement, but in the amended libel it was alleged that such Appendix, instead o'f being a statement of the terms of the agreement was subsidiary thereto and merely incidental. It was held that the new allegation made the alleged agreement a maritime one within the authorities and therefore within the jurisdiction of the court ([C. C.j 135 Fed. 611). The case, as made by the evidence, seems to show such a state of affairs as made the contract one not within the jurisdiction of court under the authority first cited in the matter (134 Fed. 462-464), but it is not necessary to determine the case upon this question, as its presentation has put before the court the testimony in full and I have thereby become convinced that upon the merits the libellant has not made out a case upon which recovery should be allowed. The controversy upon the question of jurisdiction, however, has furnished a part of the material upon which a conclusion is reached that the contract which the libellant alleges was made with Mr. Campbell was not in fact ever made. This conclusion dispenses with the necessity of considering the other points raised by the respondent.

Some of the considerations which have led me to the conclusion, apart from my impressions on the trial from the bearing of the witnesses, which were decidedly favorable to the respondent, are as follows:

The libellant has put himself in a false position with respect to the claimed agreement. When he verified the original libel, he swore that Exhibit A was the agreement. When it was held that the original libel would not sustain a claim of jurisdiction of this court, he swore that Exhibit A was merely incidental to another agreement, which set forth a maritime cause of action. When he testified in court he said several times that Exhibit A was the agreement upon which he based his right of recovery.

It appears that the respondent had a contract for its Orient business with the Northern Pacific Steamship Company, operating from Tacoma, dated August 28th, 1897. It expired bv its terms in 3 years, that is August 28th, 1900, but was extended for thirty days b3 mutual consent. This was executed for the Steamship Company by George B. Dodwell, for himself and partners, and was therefore known as the Dodwell contract. When this contract was about expiring, there- were negotiations between the libellant and Mr. Campbell respecting the Oriental business. The libellant had some steamers at his disposal and desiring to make a contract to replace the expiring contract, he called upon Mr. Campbell and broached the topic. There is a strong dispute as to what took place, the libellant contending' that a 3 years’ contract was the subject of negotiation and Mr. Campbell that his company at the time was about arranging for a line of its own and would do no more than make a temporary arrangement for the interchange of business and'allow the libellant the same rates his compan3 had to pay in the Dodwell contract. There were a number of interviews in September and October, at one of which a Mr. Creighton was present. He was to represent the libellant in the Orient, in the management of his business there and testified strongly in his favor. It is urged by the [721]*721libellant that the fact of Creighton giving up a remunerative position, as he testified he did, and going to China was inconsistent with any other understanding on Creighton’s part than that the libellant had a 3 years’ contract, but it is almost as consistent with an understanding that the libellant intended to establish a line of his own to the Orient for the period of 3 years and the expectation that he would get a contract for that time with the respondent. Creighton knew that the contract had not been executed when he left for China, although it was necessary that it should be signed by the president of the respondent to make it valid and binding. He knew that some officer of the respondent, at least, should sign it, if not the president, nevertheless he went away with the knowledge that it was not executed by any one on the part of the respondent. After reaching China, be cabled to the libellant, on the 26th or 27th of November: “What information have you of permanent exclusive arrangement — railway. I must know — Mail not yet arrived.’-’ To this, the libellant cabled November 29th: * * * Have permanent exclusive arrangement.” There was in fact, nothing in the way of such an agreement existing at the time. Creighton was still unsatisfied and he cabled on the 1st of December directly to Campbell asking for a message that he was “authorized to contract east bound shipments” in connection with the respondent.

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Related

Graham v. Oregon R. & Nav. Co.
134 F. 454 (S.D. New York, 1904)
Graham v. Oregon R. & Nav. Co.
134 F. 692 (S.D. New York, 1905)
Graham v. Oregon R. & Navigation Co.
135 F. 608 (S.D. New York, 1905)
Graham v. Beavur Hill Coal Co.
135 F. 611 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 F. 718, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-oregon-r-nav-co-nysd-1906.