McEwen v. B. P. Shannon & Co.

64 Vt. 583
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 64 Vt. 583 (McEwen v. B. P. Shannon & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McEwen v. B. P. Shannon & Co., 64 Vt. 583 (Vt. 1892).

Opinion

[585]*585The opinion of the court was delivered by

ROSS, Ch. J.

From the report of the referee and auditor,, it appears, that, in the spring of 1888, the defendant, B. P. Shannon and others were interested in having a creamery established in the town of Craftsbury. For its establishment it was necessary to induce the farmers in the vicinity to adopt uniform regulations for producing pure cream, by the use of the Cooley Creamers ; and to patronize a creamery for its manufacture into butter. It could not be expected that one patron would pay 'more than another for gathering and manufacturing cream into butter. Hence a uniform charge for this work was essential. The plaintiff was an influential dairyman in the vicinity. The defendant, B. P. Shannon, desired to put in the creamery, gather and manufacture the cream into butter. The promoters of the scheme, among whom was the defendant, B. P. Shannon, established the price of four cents per pound for gathering the cream and manufacturing it into butter. To secure the influence of the plaintiff and to induce him to sign the common agreement to furnish cream from his dairy to the creamery to be established by the defendant, B. P. Shannon, to be gathered and manufactured into butter at four cents a pound, a secret agreement was entered into, that, while the plaintiff should enter the association, and sign the common agreement, and to appearance pay four cents per pound for gathering and manufacturing his cream into butter, he was to be paid back three cents per pound, or have his cream gathered and manufactured for one cent per pound. This was the agreement bétween the plaintiff and B. P. Shannon for 1888. During that summer Arthur Shannon, the son of B. P. Shannon, became interested in operating the creamery, but was not informed of the secret agreement between his father and the plaintiff. During all that year the plaintiff in the sectlements from time to time, made through the association of which he was an officer, allowed the defendants four cents per per pound for gathering and manufacturing his cream. In [586]*586December of that year B. P. Shannon without the knowledge 'of his son and partner, to induce the plaintiff to sign the common-agreement and to influence others to sign, to patronize the creamery for the year 1889, and to pay for gathering and manufacturing the cream into butter four cents per pound, entered into a secret agreement to purchase the plaintiff’s butter for that year for twenty-five cents per pound. The plaintiff signed the common agreement and in the settlements received his proportionate share of the money received, deducting for gathering and manufacturing the cream into butter four cents per pound. By the common agreement the butter resulting from the manufacture of the cream furnished by the plaintiff remained his property. It is found that the son would not have become a party to the last secret agreement if he had been consulted in regard to it. It was signed by the name of the partnership. The defendants purchased of the plaintiff some butter in the winter of 1889 which did not fall.within either of the common agreements. The plaintiff’ had also had property of the defendant which did not fall within the common agreements. In October, 1889, the plaintiff and defendant, B. P. Shannon, undertook to settle for the winter butter, and the draw-back of three cents per pound on the butter manufactured for the plaintiff in the season of 1888, and certain charges which the defendants had against the plaintiff. They went so far as to find a balance of $29.53 due the plaintiff. Eor this balance the wife of B. P. Shannon wrote and delivered to the plaintiff his. exhibit B, which reads:

“Craftsbuby, Oct. 28, 1889.
To balance due on winter butter, $29.53 (twenty-nine dollars and fifty three cents), to James McEwin from B. P. Shannon & :Son.”

It is found that there were $6 more due the defendants than was embraced in this settlement, on one of the items included in the settlement. These are the controlling facts found.

The plaintiff seeks to recover the sum embraced in the due [587]*587bill, reduced by the $6, and the amount which he. claims is due him by the secret agreement for the cream furnished by him the second year. . '

The defendants claim to recover on their action in set-off the $6 and what was allowed by B. P. Shannon in the settlement of October, 1889, on the secret agreement for the first year.

1. It is apparent that the secret agreements between the plaintiff and B. P. Shannon, if enforced, would be a fraud upon the other patrons of the creamery. The establishment of the creamery was a quasi joint enterprise. In that vicinity it could not be established unless the dairymen could be indnced to patronize it pretty generally. This was recognized by the agent of the Cooley system, by B. P. Shannon and by the plaintiff. They assumed that the plaintiff’s standing was such that liis signature to the common agreements would induce others to sign. It is to be presumed it did induce others to sign. If the secret agreements with him had been known they would have had the opposite effect. By them he was securing an advantage over the other common patrons, while apparently he was sharing the burdens of the enterprise equally with them. When such is the case courts will not enforce the secret agreements, nor help either party in regard to them. It will leave the parties where they have placed themselves. It treats all such secret agreements which work a fraud upon the rights of others as illegal and refuseses to enforce them. White Mts. R. R. v. Eastman, 34 N. H. 142 and cases cited; Paddock v. Fletcher, 42 Vt. 389.

In general an action cannot be maintained on an illegal contract, either to enforce it directly, or to recover money paid on it after its execution. Webb v. Fulchire, 3 Ired. 485, (40 Am. Dec. 419); note to Boyd v. Barclay, 34 Am. Dec. 762.

A contract is illegal when it violates good morals, or is opposed to public policy, or is infected with fraud, or violates the provisions of a public statute. Ohio L. I. & T. Co. v. M. I. & T. Co. 11 Humph. 1, (53 Am. Dec. 742, and note); Bank of [588]*588New Haven v. Perkins, 86 Am. Dec. 332. Schmidt v. Barker, 17 La. Ann. 261, 87 (Am. Dec. 527); Bowman v. Gonegal, 19 La. Ann. 328, (92 Am. Dec. 537); Tatum v. Kelley, 25 Ark. 209, (94 Am. Dec. 717.)

The common law, unless modified by statute, when applicable, is the law of this State by Statute R. L. 689.

Conveyances of property in fraud of creditors were void by common law, as well as by statute, and courts would not interfere to relieve either party. Martin v. Martin, 1 Vt. 91; Roberts’ Digest, 345; placitum 19. Having received what was due him under the common agreement for cream furnished the second year, this Court will not aid the plaintiff to recover, what would be due him on the second year’s business under the secret agreement, which if enforced would give him an advantage over the other patrons of the creamery, and for that reason was fraudulent as to them.

2. Eor like reason this Court will not aid B. P. Shannon to recover back what he paid the plaintiff on the secret agreement of the first year’s business.

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

Related

Jackson v. Bryant
169 N.E. 823 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1929)
Moe v. Lowry
194 P. 363 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1921)
Western Nat. Life Ins. v. Williamson-Halsell-Frasier Co.
1913 OK 235 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)
Noble v. Fox
1912 OK 767 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Vt. 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcewen-v-b-p-shannon-co-vt-1892.