Mueller v. Bethesda Mineral Spring Co.

50 N.W. 319, 88 Mich. 390, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 557
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 50 N.W. 319 (Mueller v. Bethesda Mineral Spring Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mueller v. Bethesda Mineral Spring Co., 50 N.W. 319, 88 Mich. 390, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 557 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

McGrath, J.

Plaintiffs intestate had been in the drug business in the city of Detroit for some years, and for a year before the making of the alleged contract sued upon had been selling Bethesda Mineral Spring water, purchased from defendant. In October, 1887, defendant wrote to plaintiffs intestate the following letter:

“Waukesha, Wis., Oct. 3, 1887.
“Mr. J. C. Mueller,
“Detroit, Mich.
Dear Sir: Inclosed find bill and B. of L. for water sent to-day. Our traveling man, J. R. Smith, has informed us of your proposition, which we have considered, and have decided to make you the following offer, which we believe is the offer you make us, as we understand it: We will furnish you the plain water in barrels of 42 gallons, f. o. b. cars here, at $5 per barrel; and if from October 1, 1887, to October 1, 1888, our sales to you shall amount to $500, we will credit your account with $40, which amount, it is understood, you have spent for advertising the water; but, if our sales to you for the above-mentioned period shall not amount to $500, then we are to allow .you nothing for advertising, and you are to pay us in full for each and every bill of goods. Of course we will not credit your account with the $40 for’ advertising until the sales shall have reached the necessary $500. We believe, if you spend $40 in judicious advertising, that you will have no trouble in bringing up your sales to $500 a year, and thereby make the Bethesda business a profitable one for you as well as for ourselves. If you accept this offer, please advise us by return mail, and this letter will be our agreement with you, as soon as we receive your acceptance of it. Trusting you will consider the matter favorably, and awaiting your reply, we are,
“Very truly yours, B. M. S. Co.
“Howe.”

[393]*393To which Mueller replied as follows:

“Detroit, Mich., Oct. 10, 1887.
“Bethesda M. Sp. Co.,—
“Gents: Your favor of the 8th inst. received. Your agent’s statement is correct as far as it .goes, but it looks like playing Hamlet with the ghost left out. I am to be, and your agent agreed upon, your sole agent for city and surrounding parts. I am to receive profits and credit on all plain water sold about here, direct or indirect. Please inform me of your approval of this condition, and I consider the contract ratified.
“Yours truly,
“J. C. Mueller."

Defendant, in response, sent the following:

“Waukesha, Wis., Oct. 12, 1887.
“Mr. J. C. Mueller,
120 Woodward Ave.,
“ Detroit, Mich.
“Dear Sir: Yours of the 10th at' hand. Excuse us for leaving out the ‘ghost.’ We will make you the sole agent for Detroit, and for all places within a radius of 25 miles from Detroit; and we will ship no plain water to any o.ne in your territory but yourself. Trusting that this makes our offer all satisfactory and complete, we are,
“Very truly yours, B. M. S. Co.
“M."

No further correspondence was had between the parties until May, 1888, when defendant wrote the following letters to Mueller:

“Waukesha, Wis., May 9, 1888.
“Mr. J. 0. Mueller,
Detroit, Mich.
“Dear Sir: We have just given Bassett & L’Hommedieu, of your city, the sole agency for Detroit. There was about one-tenth of the water being sold in Detroit that there should be, and we felt it but justice to ourselves to establish an agency that would push- the water. We trust you will favor them with your order when in need of Bethesda, and, thanking you for your past patronage, we are,
“Very truly yours, B. M. S. Co.
“ H.”
[394]*394“Waukesha, Wis., May 9.
“Mr. J. C. Mueller,
Detroit, Mich.
“Dear Sir: Tours of the 9th at hand. We will be. unable to fill your order, as we wrote you yesterday that we had made other engagements. Bassett & L’Hommedieu’s report that they are sole agents is true. There is no treachery about it. We were not doing the business in Detroit that we should do, and could not induce you to push the water, or handle our water in one-half gallons, so we thought it for our interest to make a change; and you, as a business man, know that it is for the interest of every concern to do all the business they can.
“Yery truly, B. M. S. Co.
“H.”

Mueller died some time after this suit was commenced.

The defendant contends:

1. That the contract, as modified by defendant’s letter of October 12, 1887, was never accepted by Mueller. This objection is untenable. Mueller entered upon the agency at once, and acted in that capacity until May, 1888, when defendant appointed another sole agent in Mueller’s stead, giving as a reason therefor that Mueller was not pushing the sale of the mineral water.

2. That the contract was void for want of mutuality. Neither is this objection well taken. The company appointed Mueller as its sole agent for Detroit and vicinity, agreeing that, if he would take the agency, it would sell him the water at a certain figure, allow him $40 on his advertising bill in case his purchases reached a named amount, and that it would ship no plain water to any other person within certain territory. Mueller had been handling these goods, and the appointment was made in response to a proposition on Mueller’s part, referred to in defendant’s letter of October 3, 1887, to act as agent of the company. He agreed to act as sole agent of the company for the sale of these goods at Detroit. By the acceptance of that agency he agreed to [395]*395do all that its acceptance implied, viz., to hold out the goods to the public, and to further the interests of his principal. One who receives goods on commission does not usually expressly agree to do anything, but there is in this class of cases an implied agreement, sufficient to support the promise and contract. If the interest of defendant here had been neglected, defendant was entitled to show that upon the trial.

Plaintiff called as a witness, Arthur Bassett, one of the members of the firm to which defendant had transferred the agency, and sought to show by him how much of the water had been disposed of by that firm from May 9, 1888, to October 12, 1888, but the court excluded the testimony. This was error. It was shown that, while this water was sold in bulk by the gallon, yet it was sold largely by the glass from a fountain as an incident of the retail drug business; that the best season for its sale was just opening when the agency was taken away from plaintiff's intestate. The measure of plaintiff's damages was the profits which Mueller might have realized if defendant had performed its contract. Loud v. Campbell, 26 Mich. 239; Leonard v.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.W. 319, 88 Mich. 390, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mueller-v-bethesda-mineral-spring-co-mich-1891.