Linton v. Noonan

130 N.E. 170, 238 Mass. 31, 1921 Mass. LEXIS 932
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 130 N.E. 170 (Linton v. Noonan) 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
Linton v. Noonan, 130 N.E. 170, 238 Mass. 31, 1921 Mass. LEXIS 932 (Mass. 1921).

Opinion

De Courcy, J.

The facts, as found by the master, are as follows: Both parties were dealers in cotton waste, the plaintiffs in Philadelphia, and the defendants in Boston.. On or about October 21, 1916, these two firms by an oral agreement formed a partnership to handle, purchase and sell the by-products of Southern cotton mills, both directly and on commission, under the firm name of the Southern Utilization Company. They were to furnish an equal amount of capital, and share profits and losses equally. In pursuance of their primary object, they acquired a plant at Charlotte, North Carolina, and equipped it to “machine” the waste, making it more merchantable, and, by removing the dirt, effecting a considerable saving in freight charges. The business proved unprofitable, and, after several conferences, on January 23, 1917, the parties executed the dissolution agreement in controversy.

The utilization company then had in hand two classes of contracts with the mills, covering the year 1917. Those for the purchase of the waste outright, known in the trade as “closed contracts,” embraced a group of twenty-seven mills designated the “Goodyear Mills,” a group of seven called the “Erwin Mills,” and a few others. The contracts to sell on commission were made with some thirty-five mills, each thereby constituting the utiliza[37]*37tian company its agent to sell in its behalf certain grades of its waste throughout the year 1917 on a commission of $1.50 a bale, as a rule. Both “closed” and “commission” contracts usually were for whatever the mills might produce during the year, in some instances the quantities being estimated, but never guaranteed.

By the terms of the agreement the plaintiffs were to buy out the interest of the defendants in the utilization company, paying them their investment therein of $5,000 less one half the loss. An inventory was taken of the stock and fixtures, and prices placed thereon by representatives of the parties. A trial balance made from the books showed losses of the business to be $3,571.63; money drawn out by the defendants $284.18; and that the company owed the defendants for merchandise $659.10. On February 9, 1917, the plaintiffs sent to the defendants a statement, with their check for $3,589.11 in satisfaction of their liability under said agreement.

Meanwhile differences arose between the parties. On January 29, 1917, the defendants demanded a modification of the agreement, claiming a half interest in the contracts with the Goodyear Mills and the Erwin Mills. After some correspondence the defendants returned the above check to the plaintiffs, and they never have paid the $1,500 called for by the agreement. In May they brought an action at law against the plaintiffs, which is still pending. They seek therein to recover, in addition to the above $3,589.11, one half of the Goodyear and Erwin contracts and of the good will of the utilization company, aggregating $15,389.11, claiming that they are entitled thereto under said dissolution agreement, and that these amounts were erroneously omitted by the plaintiffs in their tabulation.

This bill in equity is brought to have said agreement confirmed, or for a dissolution and accounting. The plaintiffs seek also to recover for certain omitted items, and a further sum of $1,097.99 alleged to be due by reason of certain independent transactions between the parties; and an injunction to restrain the defendants from prosecuting said action at law. The defendants, on the other hand, seek to recover from the plaintiffs said $15,389.11, which they allege to be due them under the terms of the dissolution agreement, and the further sum of $1,322.69 due them by reason of certain independent transactions.

[38]*38The master, to whom the case was referred, found the agreement in controversy to be of binding force and effect; and that the omitted items, with minor changes, should be considered as liabilities of the utilization company in arriving at the net loss resulting from its business, and hence at the amount payable to the defendants for their interest. He disallowed the claims of the defendants as to the amounts alleged to be due them under the agreement; determined the amounts due each in connection with their independent transactions; and found the balance due the defendants to be $979.06. In the Superior Court motions to recommit and to set aside the master’s report were denied; the exceptions of the defendants to the report were overruled, the report was Confirmed, and a decree was entered in accordance therewith. The unnecessarily large number of exceptions (two hundred and forty-three) taken by the defendants to the master’s report will be considered under the few subjects to which they relate.

1. The main question raised by the exceptions relates to the admission of paroi evidence. The master states in his supplemental report: “At an early stage in the proceedings the defendants objected generally to the introduction of any evidence as to what was said or done by the parties at the several conferences preceding and leading up to the draft and execution of agreement 'A.’

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Donovan v. Travers
188 N.E. 705 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1934)
Moss v. Old Colony Trust Co.
246 Mass. 139 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1923)
Tuttle v. Corey
140 N.E. 249 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1923)
Sudhalter v. Oberstein
138 N.E. 801 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 N.E. 170, 238 Mass. 31, 1921 Mass. LEXIS 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linton-v-noonan-mass-1921.