H. Liebes & Co. v. Klengenberg

23 F.2d 611, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3220, 1928 A.M.C. 314
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1928
DocketNo. 5200
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 F.2d 611 (H. Liebes & Co. v. Klengenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. Liebes & Co. v. Klengenberg, 23 F.2d 611, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3220, 1928 A.M.C. 314 (9th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

RUDKIN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a final decree in admiralty. In view of the two appeals, we will refer to the parties as they were designated in the court below.

The libel contains two causes of action: The first for failure on the part of the respondent to deliver certain merchandise and supplies at a point on the Wollaston Peninsula in the Arctic Ocean, about 1,260 miles from the North Pole; and the second for failure on the part of the respondent to transport certain furs from the point on the Wollaston Peninsula to San Francisco. The facts and surrounding circumstances are about as follows:

The libelant has been a trapper and fur trader in the Arctic regions since 1896. For about four years prior to 1920 he was located [612]*612on the Coppermine river, but in- the latter year he moved his camp to the point now in question on Wollaston Peninsula. Prior to 1919 he traded almost exclusively with the Hudson Bay Company, but in 1919 he traded with Capt. Pederson, representing the respondent; and with others, and in 1920 withPederson and the Northern Trading Company. Por a great many years last, past the respondent has been engaged in the fur business at San Francisco, It has maintained a number of trading stations along the Alaska coast, and each spring dispatched one or more vessels from San Francisco-, to carry supplies to the different trading stations, to trade for furs between stations, and to-, bring out, the furs thus acquired on the return trip in the fall.- The general eourse pursued by the vessels thus employed was to stop at Point Hope and trade along'the coast until the ice broke up-,'so that the vessels could proceed to Point Barrow.' The vessels would then trade east from .Point Barrow to Hersehel Island; thence to the mouth of the McKenzie river, and thence to Baillie Island, about 300 miles southwest of the Wollaston Peninsula. If the vessels had no business farther east, the crews would then hunt for whales off Bail-lie Island before starting on the return trip to San Francisco-. Prior to 19-21 none of the vessels thus employed had proceeded as far east as the camp established by the libelant on the Wollaston Peninsula. Capt. Pederson, above referred to, was in the employ of the respondent as master and trader from 1914 to May, 1923, except during the year 1915, and made eight trips to the Arctic regions, such as we have described.

In the summer of 1921 Pederson picked up upwards of 500 white fox skins belonging to the libelant at Shingle Point and brought them on board his vessel to Baillie Island. At Baillie Island the libelant came on board and was desirous of trading the fox skins for merchandise; but he and Pederson could not,agree on a price for the skins. It was finally agreed that Pederson would sell and deliver the merchandise to the libel-ant and take the fox skins out, to be sold to the highest, bidder, but in no event to the respondent, and that the proceeds of the sale would be applied by Pederson in payment of the account due/the respondent, the balance to be used to pay the purchase- price of certain supplies then ordered by the libelant, which were to be brought in' and delivered' in the following year, ice conditions permitting, or as soon thereafter as iee¡ conditions would permit. Practically all that wasi said by either party about transporting skins out in the following year was that the libelant told Pederson that, when he brought in the supplies in the following year, he would make it worth his while; that he wanted to save his furs; that he would either sell them to PedersOn, or if they could not agree upon a price that Pederson could take them out and handle them as in the other ease; that Pederson told him that he would take the furs out under the respondent’s insurance policy, charging the libelant $1 per 'skin for so doing-. In the course of the conversation, a list of the supplies to be brought in during the ensuing year was prepared by Pederson, and the list was agreed upon, as well as the time and place of delivery.

There is, therefore, ho- doubt that there was a valid contract for the transportation and delivery o-f the supplies at Wollaston Peninsula in 1922, or as soon thereafter as ice conditions would permit;' but we think it is equally clear that there was no valid contract for the transportation of furs from the Wollaston Peninsula to San Francisco in 1922, or thereafter.

“A contract is an agreement creating an obligation. There must be competent parties, a subject-matter, a legal consideration, mutuality of agreement^ mutuality of obligation, and the agreement must not be so vague or uncertain that its terms are not ascertainable.” Vick v. Henry Ford & Son, 17 F.(2d) 919.

The number of skins to be transported was neither mentioned nor agreed upon; nor was there anything in the brief conversation between the parties from which the number could be' definitely fixed or ascertained. If it be claimed that the agreement covered all skins that might be purchased or otherwise acquired by the libelant during the long, indefinite period that might elapse between the date of the conversation and the arrival of the vessel at Wollaston Peninsula, it is a sufficient answer to say that the parties did not so agree, and that the conduct of the libelant himself was utterly inconsistent with any such claim, for it is admitted that he sold 100 skins to a third party before the respondent’s vessel could possibly have arrived at the peninsula in 1923, and this of itself would constitute a breach of his contract to transport all such skins by the respondent’s vessel, if there was in fact any such contract. And if the contract did not include all skins, but only such as the libelant might elect to send Out, it was necessarily void for uncertainty.

Agáin, Pbderson, the former agent o-f the [613]*613respondent, arrived at Baillie Island in 1923, before the respondent, and, according to his log, was on the lookout for the- libelant for several days to obtain skins from him. Pederson testified that his log was in error in that regard, but admitted that he was on the lookout for him on at least one occasion, and that his purpose was to obtain skins from him. In so doing it is hardly to- be presumed that Pederson intended to- induce the libelant to breach a contract made with respondent, through himself as agent, some two years before, yet, if there was a contract, such would have been the necessary effect of his act. In any event, we think it clearly appears from the record that tho libelant was at all times at libery to sell or dispose of his furs to Pederson or to any one else, and that, had he done so, he would liavo breached no contract with the respondent.

Again, the agreement was that the libel-ant would sell the skins to Pederson if they could agree upon a price, and if not the skins would be handled in the same manner as the skins were handled in 1921. There was no likelihood that a sale would be made or that the parties would agree upon a priee, because the libelant himself testified repeatedly that he would have no dealings with the- respondent, and furthermore no claim is made that there was any broach of a contract to sell. The testimony shows quite plainly, too, that the agreement of 1921 between the libelant and Pederson in reference to taking out and selling the skins that year was purely a personal one with Pederson, and not an agreement with the respondent at all. Pederson testified that tho libelant had asked him if he would take the skins out and sell them personally

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 611, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3220, 1928 A.M.C. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-liebes-co-v-klengenberg-ca9-1928.