McNear, Inc. v. American & British Mfg. Co.

115 A. 709, 44 R.I. 190, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 115 A. 709 (McNear, Inc. v. American & British Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNear, Inc. v. American & British Mfg. Co., 115 A. 709, 44 R.I. 190, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 7 (R.I. 1922).

Opinion

Sweetland, C. J.

This is an action of the case in assumpsit to recover damages for the alleged breach by the defendant of two written agreements.

The case was tried in the Superior Court before Mr. Justice Brown sitting with a jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $138,422.63. The defendant duly filed its motion for a new trial which was denied by said justice. The case is before us upon the defendant’s exception to the decision denying its motion for new trial, and upon the following exceptions taken by the defendant in the course of the trial upon which it now relies.

The case has been in this court before upon a bill of exceptions following a previous trial in the Superior Court *193 and in our opinion filed at that time the essential facts are set forth (42 R. I. 302). The evidence in the trial now in review is substantially the same as that presented at the previous trial. By reference to the transcript the following facts appear. Quicksilver, used in making fulminate of mercury, is an essential ingredient in the manufacture of ammunition employed in modern warfare. During the World War there was a shortage of that substance. In 1916 the plaintiff,' doing business in California, as agent of the defendant, entered into two written contracts with one Murray Innes for the purchase of a large quantity of quicksilver; and in its own name the plaintiff became bound for the performance of said contracts. By two written agreements, purporting to be of even date respectively with said contracts between the plaintiff and Innes, the plaintiff assigned said contracts to the ‘ defendant, which assumed all the obligations therein imposed upon the plaintiff. Said Murray Innes however did not assent to these assignments and in no way released the plaintiff from its obligations under the contracts with him. When, in accordance with his undertaking, Innes delivered said quicksilver to the plaintiff the defendant refused to accept or pay for it or any part of it. The plaintiff was then obliged to pay for the quicksilver in accordance with the terms of its contracts with Innes and then sold the same at public auction, upon a falling market, at a loss. That loss with interest the plaintiff in this suit is seeking to recover as damages for the defendant’s breach of its agreements to assume the plaintiff’s obligations under its contracts with Innes.

(1) At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant moved that the justice direct a verdict in its favor for the reason that in the state .of the evidence upon the issues raised by three of its defences it was entitled to a verdict as a matter of law. The first of these defences was that the agreements in suit were not binding upon the defendant because it had failed to furnish to the plaintiff a written guaranty of its performance of its agreements. The second was that the *194 plaintiff had not acted in good faith toward the defendant in its dealings with said Innes leading up to said contracts and the agreements in suit. The third was that the agreements were invalid because in furtherance' of a conspiracy between the plaintiff and defendant. The justice denied defendant’s motion for the direction of a verdict and the defendant excepted to such • action, of the justice. This exception should be overruled. There is no merit in the defendant’s claim that it was not bound by said agreements because it did not procure guarantors in writing of the defendant’s due performance of its obligations under the agreements. Upon the face of these agreements the obligations of the parties are in no degree conditioned upon the furnishing of such guarantors. Such guarantors if furnished would be solely for the benefit and security of the plaintiff and if the plaintiff waived such' a condition in its favor, accepted the agreements without guarantors and acted in reliance upon the defendant’s sole undertaking the defendant can not now be permitted to escape liability because of such waivers on the part of the plaintiff. The contention of the defendant is that the plaintiff should not be permitted to recover in this action because of its lack of good faith towards the defendant in the transactions which it carried on as the defendant’s agent. Particularly it is claimed that in making the contracts in its own name for the purchase of the quicksilver in question it received from Innes a concession or rebate from the price named in the contracts. In our ' former opinion we held that in the record of the previous trial the claim of bad faith was unsupported, because by the uncontradicted evidence full disclosure .regarding such rebates was made by the plaintiff’s agent to the defendant’s agent and acquiesced in by him before said contracts and the assignments of them to the defendant were made. At the last trial the testimony of the plaintiff in regard to such dis- . closure was contradicted by the testimony of Joseph H. Hoadley. It thus became a question properly to be submitted to the jury as to whether such disclosure was *195 made to the defendant before it entered into the agreements in suit. The main issue before the jury was as-to whether the agreements sued upon were made pursuant to a conspiracy on the part of -the plaintiff and the defendant to obtain a monopoly of quicksilver for the purpose of selling it at an artificially advanced and unreasonably , high price in violation of the common law, the statutes of California, in which state the contracts were to be performed, and the act of Congress known as the Sherman Act. If such conspiracy existed the agreements upon which the plaintiff now seeks to hold the defendant in this suit clearly were made in furtherance of it and are not enforceable. The facts and circumstances in evidence relating to the dealings between the parties bearing upon the issue of conspiracy were properly submitted to the jury. Upon that evidence a finding would be warranted that the plaintiff was ignorant of any illegal purpose on the part of the defendant or its agent and that the plaintiff in good faith acted as agent for the defendant who, it believed, had a legitimate purpose in desiring to purchase the quicksilver in question.

After a verdict in favor of the plaintiff upon these issues we will, not overrule the decision of said justice refusing to set such verdict aside.

(2) The defendant offered the testimony of certain witnesses as to statements which they had heard the defendant’s agent, Joseph H. Hoadley, make in the course of what the defendant claims were telephonic conversations between said Hoadley in New York and John W. McNear in San Fran-, cisco. The justice allowed such testimony to be introduced in each instance where there appeared to him to be sufficient evidence of the identity of John W. McNear as the other party to the conversation, and excluded the testimony in the absence of such evidence. The defendant excepted to the court’s rulings excluding the testimony. These exceptions are not well taken. The distinction made by said justice regarding the admissibility of evidence as to statements purporting to be made in conversations through the *196 medium of the telephone was without error, and his ruling as to the insufficiency of the evidence to establish the identity of John W. McNear as the other party to such alleged conversation was justified in each instance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 A. 709, 44 R.I. 190, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnear-inc-v-american-british-mfg-co-ri-1922.