Middendorf, Williams & Co. v. Alexander Milburn Co.

107 A. 7, 134 Md. 385, 1919 Md. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 23, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 107 A. 7 (Middendorf, Williams & Co. v. Alexander Milburn Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Middendorf, Williams & Co. v. Alexander Milburn Co., 107 A. 7, 134 Md. 385, 1919 Md. LEXIS 84 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

The appeal in this case is from a. judgment recovered in the Superior Court of Baltimore by the appellee, The Alexander Milburn Co., a corporation engaged in the business, of manufacturing searchlights used by contractors and others and generators for producing oxygen and acetylene gases, for welding purposes, against the appellant, a brokerage corporation. Both plaintiff and defendant are located and doing business in the City of Baltimore.

The declaration upon which the suit was. brought contains the usual common counts; and one special count. A demurrer to the special count was overruled and the pleas, of never promised and never indebted as alleged were filed to the declaration.

In the course of the trial, twenty-eight exceptions were taken to the rulings of the Court. Twenty-seven of these were upon the admission or rejection of evidence and one upon the prayers.

We will first dispose of the demurrer to the special count of the declaration. It is claimed by the appellants; that said count does not state a good cause of action in that it is “too vague, indefinite, and uncertain to amount to a legally binding contract.”

“Courts very reluctantly reject an agreement regularly and fairly made as unintelligible or insensible. It will be sustained if the meaning of the parties, can be ascertained, either from the express terms of the instrument or by fair implication.” Elliott on Contracts, Vol. 1, sec. 170. “The law does not favor, but leans against the destruction of contracts be *388 cause of uncertainty. Therefore the courts will, if possible, so construe the contract as to carry into effect the reasonable intention of the parties if that can be ascertained.” 6 R. O. L. 645.

The rule of law upon this subject is nowhere better stated or more clearly defined than in Thomson v. Gortner, 73 Md. 482, where it is said: “The law is too well settled to admit of doubt, that in order to constitute a valid verbal or written agreement, the parties must express themselves' in such terms that it can be ascertained to a reasonable degree of certainty what they mean. And if an agreement be so vague and indefinite that it is not possible to collect from it the full intention of the parties, it is void; for neither the Court nor the jury can make an agreement for the parties. Such a contract can neither be enforced in equity nor sued upon at law.” Delashmutt, Ex’r, v. Thomas, 45 Md. 140; Gelston and Meyenberg v. Sigmund, 27 Md. 334; Myers v. Forbes, 24 Md. 598, and Howard, et al. v. Carpenter, 11 Md. 259.

The rule of law by which the courts are to be governed in these cases is well and clearly established, but the drffieulty is in applying it to the facts of each particular case.

By the agreement set out in the declaration, the defendant was to set in motion the facilities available to it for the sale of $46,000 of 7% preferred stock of the plaintiff corporation and that it would make a bona fide effort to sell said stock, utilizing all the facilities available to it, giving to the plaintiff the benefit of the financial standing, the financial connections, and the experience of the defendant in financing enterprises and selling! stock and other securities, for which service it was to receive as and for its compensation the sum of $5,000. This obligation, however, was assumed by the defendant upon the condition that the plaintiff corporation should promptly cause its charter to¡ be amended by increasing its capital stock from $62,000 to $200,000 and by providing for the issuance of $46,000 of 7% preferred stock, with convertible privileges, and amend its by-laws by providing for two additional directors.

*389 In addition to these requirements it was to acquire ownership of certain domestic, Canadian, and foreign letters, patent and patent rights then owned by Alexander F. Jenkins, president of the plaintiff corporation, and it was also to enter into a contract of employment with said Jenkins for a period of three years.

The declaration alleges that such amendments to the charter and by-laws were promptly made, that said letters patent and patent rights were promptly acquired by purchase, and that a contract of employment was entered into with said Jenkins, pursuant to said agreement. When this had been done, the defendant was notified of the same by the plaintiff and was called upon “to set in motion the defendant’s facilities for selling said stock,” but “the defendant refused and does still refuse to make any effort whatever to sell said stock and has refused and still refuses to perform its part of said agreement, notwithstanding repeated demands made upon it by the plaintiff.”

The declaration further alleges: “That the aforesaid issue of 7% preferred stock, with convertible privileges, would have been sold at and for the value of said shares if the defendant had performed its, part of said agreement.”

It is then alleged that the plaintiff in performing its part of said agreement “incurred and paid a large amount of expense and assumed obligations it would not otherwise have incurred, paid or assumed; that incurring and paying such expense and assuming such obligations, the plaintiff suffered and sustained a loss which it would not have suffered or sustained hut for the undertaking on the part of the defendant to do and perform the acts and things hereinbefore recited to be done and performed on the part of the defendant and the defendant’s breach of said undertaking.”

There should, we think, be no, difficulty in, ascertaining the meaning of the parties as expressed by the agreement. The defendant, as alleged in the declaration,. was at the time of making said agreement and prior thereto, established in the private hanking and brokerage business; possessing extensive *390 facilities and financial connections for the financing of enterprises similar to that in which the plaintiff was at the time engaged.

The. defendant was not to purchase the stock mentioned, nor did it guarantee its sale, hut 'it was to set in motion.all of its available facilities and use all its financial connections, as well as its knowledge acquired by long experience, in a reasonable and bona. fide effort to> sell said stock. That such was the meaning of the parties to the agreement can be ascertained to a reasonable degree of certainty from its express terms as set out in the declaration.

The agreement does not state with particularity every thing ’ that the defendant was to do, or name every facility that was to be employed by it, or state the length of time it was to continue its efforts in an attempt to sell the stock, nor was it essential to its validity, that it should have so stated.

The agreement states with sufficient definiteness not only what the plaintiff was to do, but also, what was to be done by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
107 A. 7, 134 Md. 385, 1919 Md. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middendorf-williams-co-v-alexander-milburn-co-md-1919.