Jones v. Sherwood Distilling Co.

132 A. 278, 150 Md. 24, 1926 Md. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 132 A. 278 (Jones v. Sherwood Distilling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Sherwood Distilling Co., 132 A. 278, 150 Md. 24, 1926 Md. LEXIS 5 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The chief cpiestions to be determined in this case are whether an exorbitant sum of money paid by the agent of the appellant to secure the release of two hundred barrels of whiskey, stored in the warehouse of the appellee, was paid voluntarily, or was paid under such circumstances as would render it a compulsory payment, land thus, entitle the appellant to recover the excess over and above the proper warehouse charges, and, further, whether or not this excess can be recovered from the appellee, even if the payment was compulsory.

Herbert K. Jones, of Boston, Mass., the appellant, being the owner of two hundred barrels of Sherwood whiskey stored in the warehouse of the Sherwood Distilling 'Company at ’Cockeysville, Baltimore County, Maryland, employed Michael Garvey, of Melrose, Mass., an experienced custom house broker, to arrange for the export of the whiskey to Scotland on board the steamship City of Flint, which vessel was owned by the Oriole Steamship Company and w’as scheduled to leave Baltimore on or about January 1st, 1928. Garvey arrived in Baltimore on December 26th, 1922, and on December 28th, 1922, in company with Mr. Gochnauer, an employee of the steamship company, he went to the distillery at Cockeysville, some ten or fifteen miles from Baltimore, and there delivered the certificates for the whiskey to a Mr. Haim, the general manager and treasurer of the distilling company, 'and asked him for a statement of the charges against the whiskey. He also advised him that the whiskey was to be loaded on the steamship City of Flint, which was about to leave Baltimore, and asked him when the whiskey could be delivered. Haim promised to furnish a statement of the charges and to advise Garvey later, through the steam *28 ship company, of the date on which the whiskey would be delivered.

On December 29th, 1922, Garvey was told, at the steamship company’s office, to call a: certain telephone number, and. upon his doing so was asked to go to apartment 513 of the Hopkins Apartments, where hé met a man who introduced himself as Mr. Aylward. This man had been present in the distilling company’s office when Garvey and Goehnauer were talking to Haim the day before, and, though he took no part in the conversation, he “appeared to be interested therein.” At the Hopkins Apartment he told Garvey that the cost of releasing the whiskey would be $7,500 to $8,000, and that this sum must be obtained at once or the whiskey would not be released. He also told him that neither a cashier’s check nor a certified check would be accepted, but that the payment must be made in cash, and that Garvey would “have to do business with him.” Garvey thereupon wired his principal for $8,000 cash, and this sum was transferred to him at the Continental Trust Company, Baltimore, on December 30th, 1922. At 10 A. M. on that day Garvey met Aylward by appointment at the comer of Baltimore and Calvert Streets, and paid him $1,000 on account. In the afternoon •of January 2nd, 1923, Aylward and Garvey went to the Hopkins Apartments and after a half hour wait Haim joined them. Haim then told Garvey, “You pay this money over to Aylward and you will get the release of that whiskey tomorrow, but you won’t get it unless you do.” Garvey paid the $7,000 in cash to Aylward, in the presence of Haim, and Haim then produced a statement showing that the •charges against the Whiskey amounted to $3,161.30, which •statement he offered to receipt. Garvey declined to accept this receipt on the ground that a receipt for such a* sum would be of no use to him in settling with his principal, and Haim assured him that if he had any difficulty with his principal he (Haim) was ia witness to the money being paid. On the following day the whiskey was released by the Sherwood Distilling Company, was loaded on the Steamship City *29 ■of Flint on January 4th, 1923, and on the afternoon of that ■day the boat sailed. Garvey also testified that he thought the $8,000 charge unjust because it was $3,000 more than Jones, the appellant, estimated the charges would be, but he was not sure of its being unjust until he saw the bill, and he also said he protested about the payment.

On January 7th, 1924, the appellant entered suit against the appellee and Robert J. Aylward, alleging that the difference between the $8,000 paid and the $3,161.30 actually due was procured from the appellant’s agent by reason of the unlawful demand of the agents and servants of the Sherwood distilling Company, made on its behalf, and their refusal to surrender the appellant’s goods to him unless such excess was paid. A demurrer was interposed to the declaration, but overruled by the learned court below, and then, after an amendment by which Haim was alleged to be treasurer ■of the Sherwood Distilling Company instead of Aylward, as set out in the original declaration, a demurrer was again filed and again overruled. No mention of the court’s action on these demurrers is made in the briefs, and we will not discuss this action further than to say that in our opinion the amended declaration, which is the only one properly before us, sets out a good cause of action, and there was, therefore, no error in the court’s ruling in this regard.

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the court instructed the jury “that the plaintiff ha's, offered no evidence legally sufficient in this case to entitle the plaintiff to recover against the Sherwood Distilling Company, and the verdict must be for the said the Sherwood Distilling Company, one of tho defendants in this case,” and because, of this action, and a ruling on evidence made during the course of the trial, the plaintiff has appealed.

It does not appear from either the record or briefs what disposition, if any, was made of this case so far as Aylward is concerned, so that the only party to be considered on this appeal is the Sherwood Distilling Company, which will hereafter be referred to as the appellee.

*30 The appellee contends that the evidence was legally insufficient to prove that Haim was its agent, or that he was acting within the scope of his authority so far 'as the transaction here involved is concerned, and it further contends that the payment made by Garvey was made voluntarily and cannot' be recovered.

On the question of agency the testimony shows that on October 3rd, 1922, Irving Haim was elected general manager, treasurer and a director of the Sherwood Distilling-Company, and resigned as treasurer land general manager on January 30th, 1921, that the .1923 report of the company, filed with the State Tax Commission of Maryland on March' 6th, 1923, was signed by Irving Haim as treasurer, that' when the agent of the Oriole' Steamship Company first called the appellee’s office at Cockeysville about the appellant’s whiskey he was advised “he would have to see Mr. Haim, who was the manager.” It further appeared that when Garvey and the steamship company’s agent went to the appellee’s office they transacted their business -with a Mr.. Haim, who was there in the office, that this was the same-Mr. Llaim who directed Garvey to pay- the $7,000 to Ayl~ ward and was present when he did so, that it was also the same Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 278, 150 Md. 24, 1926 Md. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-sherwood-distilling-co-md-1926.