Marshall v. Canadian Cordage & Manufacturing Co.

160 Ill. App. 114, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 844
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 16, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,493
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 160 Ill. App. 114 (Marshall v. Canadian Cordage & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Canadian Cordage & Manufacturing Co., 160 Ill. App. 114, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 844 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee filed a hill in the Superior Court of Cook county, setting out an agreement entered into with appellant November 21, 1905, whereby appellee was made general agent and sales manager of appellant, with headquarters at Chicago, for one year from December 1, 1905, for the sale of binder twine on a commission basis, “covering the States of Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Manitoba and the North West Canadian Provinces.”

The contract provided: “The said second party” (appellee) “shall on December 1, 1905, open an office at Chicago and conduct the business in the name of the first party” (appellant) “and all sales of the first party” (appellant) “in said territory shall be handled through the said office at Chicago.” The appellee was to bear all the expenses in maintaining said agency and selling twine and was to keep in stock at Chicago a small quantity of twine to fill small orders, but the greater portion sold was to be shipped in carload lots direct from appellant’s factory at Peterborough in the Province of Ontario. The bill alleges that the appellant had sold large quantities of twine in his said exclusive territory and had not reported same to or paid appellee his commission on same, and prayed an accounting. The appellant answered, denying it had sold twine directly or through other agencies in the territory covered by said contract. Replication was filed and on a hearing by the chancellor there was a finding and a decree that there was due appellee the sum of $583.80, with interest at the rate of five per centum per annum from May 20, 1907.

Two cross-errors have been assigned by appellee. The first is that the court erred in finding that the commission due appellee on a sale of a large order of twine to Montgomery Ward & Co. was not within the said contract, but controlled by a special contract entered into by the parties pertaining to said sale. It appears to us that the chancellor was correct in holding that the greater weight of the testimony showed that the parties subsequently entered into a special contract and agreed upon a certain commission to be paid appellee on the sale to Montgomery Ward & Co., and accordingly allowed the proper amount on the accounting. The second cross-error is that there was an improper credit given appellant, for twine sold, hut after-wards returned, hut if credit be given on same the computation was wrong. On the hearing reference was made to conditional sales where the parties reserved the right to return the twine, and the computation was made at the rate of five per cent commission on the total amount of twine returned. It is claimed by the appellee that if any allowance is to be made on twine returned, a portion thereof should be figured on a three per cent commission instead of five per cent, which would make a difference of $80.79 in favor of the appellee. Although counsel have indulged in an abundance of abstracts in this case, we are unable, after a careful examination of all three abstracts, to discover which sales, if any, were conditional, or which shipments of twine were returned on which the appellee was not allowed a commission. In such a state of the record we are not able to determine this question.

The main controversy in this case was over the Massey-Harris Company contract. The. essential facts pertaining to said contract were not in controversy. The Massey-Harris Company was a corporation manufacturing implements located in Toronto, Province of Ontario, with branch houses and agencies in said Province, the Canadian Northwest, Europe and Australia. Massey-Harris Company did not make twine, but had done a binding twine business since 1885 by buying from some manufacturer and selling the same as Massey-Harris Company twine through its various branches and agencies, and had purchased twine from the appellant for three seasons prior to 1905-6, but not for the season of 1904-5. The appellant began negotiations with the Massey-Harris Company in September, 1905, which culminated in a contract with said company January 19, 1906, for a large amount of twine to "be tagged and shipped by appellant from its factory as directed by Massey-Harris Company. The Province of Ontario was not within the territory specified in appellee’s contract. The principal place of business of both of said companies was in said Province; their contract of January 19,1906, was made therein; the directions by Massey-Harris Co. pertaining to shipments under said contract were given therein, and the shipments on said directions were made by appellant from their factory in said Province; at the time of entering into said contract appellant had no information where the twine so purchased would he shipped; appellant did tag and ship under the directions of Massey-Harris Company, about three hundred and sixty tons of twine into the territory specified in the contract with appellee.

Appellee had sold twine for about sixteen years and had a large personal acquaintance with dealers and jobbers throughout the territory covered by his contract, which was substantially the great wheat growing territory of North America. Immediately on entering into the contract, appellee had opened an office in Chicago, engaged office help, traveling men, and industriously prosecuted the business of selling appellant’s twine. Appellee called upon the Massey-Harris Company agent at Winnipeg early in January, 1906, and learned that negotiations were then pending between appellant and Massey-Harris Company, and recommended appellant’s twine and so notified appellant by letter, hut never made further mention of same until after he filed his hill. The court found, and we think properly, that appellee had nothing to do with making the sale to Massey-Harris Company.

The season for selling twine begins in January and continues until June. April 9, 1906, appellant wrote appellee in part: “There is no use of your spending a lot of money traveling around the country and our being unable to fill the orders when they come in here.” April 18, 1906, “in part owing to onr output being fully sold up, we are considering the matter of calling you in. * * * We feel that this is going to crowd us very much to fill the orders we now have on hand. ’ ’

Appellant also claims that the appellee converted two certain collections to his own use and filed the bill,not in good faith, but to gain time. While it may be that the conduct of appellee was not in all respects commendable, yet in the accounting the two collections so made were charged to appellee, and the question is: Was the learned chancellor right in holding that under all the circumstances the appellant should pay to the appellee the commissions on the twine shipped under the Massey-Harris Company contract into the territory specified in the contract with appellee? The question is not, by any means, free from difficulty. The appellant made some sales within appellee’s territory, and each time gave appellee credit for his commissions thereon. "It seems clear that from the contract and the construction of it by the parties, the territory was exclusive,''and counsel for appellant in their brief state that the clear intent of the parties was that appellee should have a commission on all sales made in said territory, whether made by him or the company direct.

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160 Ill. App. 114, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-canadian-cordage-manufacturing-co-illappct-1911.