Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. Johnston & Harder, Inc.

35 A.2d 721, 348 Pa. 512, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 534
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1943
DocketAppeals, 172 and 183
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 35 A.2d 721 (Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. Johnston & Harder, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. Johnston & Harder, Inc., 35 A.2d 721, 348 Pa. 512, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 534 (Pa. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Chief Justice Maxey,

This case has previously been, before this court three times. This appeal is from the decree of the court below dated July 23, 1943, based on findings that the plaintiff company’s summary cancellation of its contract with defendant, on February 3,1936, was a breach of its agreement, and that this breach destroyed tangible and intangible assets of Johnston & Harder, Inc., and that the latter was thereby damaged in the sum of $27,500. and is entitled to judgment against the plaintiff in that sum with interest thereon from February 3,1936, to date.

In the first appeal (330 Pa. 336) we decided that in a proceeding in equity instituted by plaintiff for an accounting by its agent, and the collector 1 of premiums for the agent, in which the defendant agent filed an answer containing, as ancillary to its principal defense, a complaint under new matter and a request for affirmative relief, stating that plaintiff had breached the contract of agency and practiced fraud, and that defendant was entitled to withhold the funds until the damages could be assessed and compensation made for the unlawful cancellation etc. such an answer was proper and responsive to the bill.

In the second appeal (340 Pa. 253), in which the Chancellor made certain findings of fact and conclusions of law, approved by the court en banc, to the effect that the plaintiff was justified under its agency agreement in *514 cancelling the contract summarily, we reversed the decree of the court below because there were no formal findings of fact to support the decree, and we remitted the record to the court below for further proceedings.

In the third appeal (343 Pa. 270), in which the court below held that the contract in question was illegally breached and awarded damages to the defendant, Johnston & Harder, Inc., in the sum of $35,000. on its claim for affirmative relief, we reversed the action of the court below because of the inadequacy of the findings of fact and we remitted the record to the court below for further proceedings in accordance with our opinion.

In our opinion filed in 343 Pa. we made it clear that the two issues as to which adequate findings of fact had to be made were these:

(1) Did the plaintiff justify its summary termination of its agency contract with the defendant?
(2) If it did not, what damages did the defendant sustain as shown “with a. fair degree of probability” by the evidence offered?

The burden of proving justification for terminating the agency contract without notice was on the plaintiff. The court below held that this burden was not met. Among the pertinent findings of fact are the following: “11. The plaintiff company never made any written complaint that Johnston and Harder, Inc. was not complying with the contract.” “12. On February 3, 1936, at 5:30 P.M. the plaintiff company without any prior notice whatsoever or without stating any reason, notified Johnston & Harder, Inc. that its general agency contract was cancelled.” “13. The cancellation notice referred to the defendant’s ‘violation of your obligations thereunder’, i.e. under the contract, but gave no specifications of the alleged violation.” In its 36th finding of fact the Chancellor said, inter alia: “There is no claim of any active wrongdoing on the part of Johnston and Harder, Inc. as an entity. The plaintiff company undertakes to justify the summary cancellation because the best interests *515 of the plaintiff company were not being conserved due to Johnston’s dissatisfaction with the Affiliated Insurance Agencies, Inc. contract and the limitation of his income; that the premiums for October, 1935, writings had not been remitted before February 3, 1936; that Johnston and Harder, Inc. were permitting contra accounts ; that it also was threatening to obtain a general agency with another surety and insurance company; that there was no prospect that the dissatisfaction of Johnston, as President of Johnston and Harder, Inc., would be corrected. The evidence offered to support these alleged reasons are not sufficient to find as a fact that the plaintiff company was justified in its summary cancellation of the agreement.” In his third conclusion of law the Chancellor said: “Johnston and Harder, Inc., in a legal manner and with good faith, substantially carried out and performed all the duties and obligations placed upon it by its general agency contract with the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company from February, 1924 to and including February 3,1936.”

The Court below properly found that there was no design on the part of the plaintiff to seize and confiscate the business of the defendant, and “that J-H, as a corporate entity, never had any difficulties nor was it charged with any variations of its obligations to the plaintiff company.”

We do not find in the record any evidence which meets the burden which rested upon the plaintiff of justifying its summary termination of the contract.. It is of significance that the plaintiff company “never made any written complaint” of the defendant’s non-compliance with the contract and that the notice of the termination of this nineteen year old contract specified no violation of its obligations.

The burden of proving justification for the summary termination of this long-existing and valuable agency contract was not met.

The next question is: Did the defendant sufficiently prove the damages the Court awarded it. In the opinion *516 filed in this case in 343 Pa. we cited Weinglass v. Gibson, 304 Pa. 203, 207, 155 A. 439, to the effect that “Where there is a basis in the evidence for a reasonable computation of the damages suffered considering the nature of the transaction, a verdict may be based thereon, though there may be involved some uncertainty about it”, citing numerous cases. We also quoted Williston on Contracts, Revised Edition, Vol. 5, Sec. 1345, p. 3776, as follows: “But though there must be evidence of substantial damage in order to justify recovery of more than a nominhl sum, the exact amount need not be shown. Where substantial damage has been suffered, the impossibility of proving its precise limits is no reason for denying substantial damages altogether.” Williston in Section 1346A, p. 3781, says: “Various methods are used in proving prospective profits. The evidence of experts if based on anything more than individual opinion or conjecture has also been admitted.” Williston also says, Section 1346, p. 3781: “Where a breach of contract involves deprivation of a chance which has value in a business sense, a just reluctance will be felt by most courts to deny altogether the recovery of substantial damages.”

F. A. Hewitt, called as an expert witness by the defendant to testify as to its damages, was asked: “What is your opinion as to the value of the business of Johnston and Harder, Inc.

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35 A.2d 721, 348 Pa. 512, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-bonding-insurance-v-johnston-harder-inc-pa-1943.