Philips v. Gress Mfg. Co.

274 F. 294, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1343
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 1921
DocketNo. 3621
StatusPublished

This text of 274 F. 294 (Philips v. Gress Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philips v. Gress Mfg. Co., 274 F. 294, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1343 (5th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellant filed his bill to compel appellee to account to him for profits arising out of the sales of lumber and cross-ties. In the year 1913 appellant and appellee entered into a profit-sharing contract. Appellant, a man thoroughly acquainted with the lumber industry, had recently failed in business. Appellee, a Florida corporation, with headquarters at Jacksonville and a branch office in New York, was a manufacturer, and also acted as broker in the purchase and sale, of lumber and cross-ties. The contract provided for the establishment and maintenance of a separate office in Philadelphia for the sale of lumber, and for the equal division of net profits. Appellant was entitled to a drawing account of $500 per month, to be deducted from his share of the profits. The contract, which was evidenced by a letter from appellee to appellant, also provided:

“It is understood that you are to perform any services not outlined above, which may be in the general interest of the Gress Manufacturing Com[295]*295pany, such as looking after the sales of cross-ties, etc.; but the tie business is expressly excepted from any division of profit. * ® * You are not to sell any one in the New England states, or in the state of Virginia,” etc.

The Philadelphia office was conducted in the name of the appellee company, and appellant was designated one of its vice presidents, although he never owned any shares of its capital stock. In 1914, while the contract was in force, there came a very great depression in the lumber trade on account of the war. Appellant agreed that his drawing account should be reduced temporarily to $350 per month. During this period of depression, M. W. Mercereau, president of the Valley Tie & Dumber Company, a Virginia corporation, received an invitation to go to London, with the end in view of furnishing lumber and cross-ties to the Great Eastern Railway Company of England. Mercereau was desirous of arranging to-purchase for the railway company on a commission basis. He dealt in oak cross-ties, but, being unfamiliar with business dealings in either pine lumber or pine cross-ties, he requested M. V. Gress, appellee’s president, to accompany him to London, after having acquainted him with the purpose of the trip. Being unable to comply, Gress sent the following telegram, dated October 3, 1914, to Philips, the appellant:

“Would you bo agreeable to going to London Tuesday sixth with Mercereau cross tie proposition.”

Philips agreed and accompanied Mercereau. Philips claims Gress agreed that the profit-sharing contract should apply to any business which might result out of, or because of, this trip. On the other hand, Gress claims that Philips agreed to take the trip without financial interest in it and merely for his drawing account. While in England, Mercereau was successful in securing for the Valley Tie & Lumber Company a commission from the Great Eastern Railway Company of England to purchase approximately 4,000,000 feet of lumber and 250,000 cross-ties. Appellant promptly notified appellee of this fact, and wrote to it a letter stating that Mercereau would purchase both the lumber and cross-ties from appellee, and named prices which he stated had been agreed upon. A few days later, and on December 3, 1914, Mercereau, for the Valley Tie & Lumber Company, and appellant, for the appellee company, executed in England an agreement which contained the following paragraph;

“It is understood and agreed that on the contract entered into by the Valley Tie & Lumber Company with the Great Eastern Kailway Company of England for sleepers (cross-ties) and pilch pine timbers that the Gress Manufacturing Company is to furnish and does hereby agree to furnish the material called for in said contract at prices which it is now prepared to name, but which the Valley Tie & Lumber Company prefer shall be agreed upon on our return to New York and said Valley Tie & Tumber Company have had opportunity to satisfy themselves that prices named by the Gress Manufacturing Company are as low as is consistent with good material and responsible and satisfactory furnishing of this supply.”

December 30, 1914, Philips and Gress met Mercereau by appointment at Staunton, Va., and there entered into a contract for the fur[296]*296nishing by appellee to the Valley Tie & Lumber Company of the materials referred to in the earlier contract signed in England, at the prices there agreed upon. Appellant testified that the prices were not inserted in the contract of December 3d, although agreed upon and thoroughly understood, for the reason that Mercereau wanted to go through the form of taking competitive bids after he returned to the United States. At the time testimony was taken, M. W. Mercereau had died; but appellant is corroborated in this statement by E. K. Mercereau, the vice president of the Valley Tie & Lumber Company. When the parties gathered at Staunton, Gress at first named higher -prices than had been agreed upon in England; but Mercereau insisted upon those prices, and intimated that Gress was undertaking to repudiate the agreement already made. Thereafter the bid of appellee company was reduced to conform substantially to the prices agreed upon at the time the contract of December 3d was drawn up and executed. Within a few days, appellant had secured the acceptance by responsible lumber and cross-tie dealers of orders for both lumber and cross-ties, which were afterwards filled at a considerable profit to appellee.

M. V. Gress, appellee’s president, gave testimony, which was contradicted by appellant, to the effect that appellant on December 29, 1914, agreed, in the language of the answer, “that the contract for the opening and conduct of the said Philadelphia office, the transactions had in the said office of this defendant and the losses, failures and obligations in connection therewith, be blotted out of the memory of the parties and be mutually and entirely canceled and satisfied,” and that appellant should enter the service of appellee at a salary of $5,000 per annum, and in addition should receive at the end of two years stock therein to the amount of $10,000.

[1] The evidence was taken before an examiner and, upon final hearing, the District Court dismissed the bill for the reasons stated in the opinion, as follows:

“It was contended on behalf of the defendant that it intended by such telegram under the circumstances to have the complainant go for his drawing account and expenses, while the complainant contends that his understanding was that he was to go on account of the profit-sharing arrangement. It seems to me that in the light of the surrounding circumstances; the fact that the contract under which profits were to be divided specifically excluded cross-tie business from that arrangement, the contention of the defendant is the most reasonable, unless the testimony shows by a preponderance, as the complainant contends, that a,clear and definite understanding was reached in New York City by the complainant and Gress, the president of the defendant, that the business obtained as a result of such trip should be on the profit-sharing account. To establish this understanding the complainant relies upon his testimony and certain communications. This understanding is denied by Gress and by certain other persons to whom the complainant claimed to have stated such understanding. I do not find that the testimony shows such Understanding by a preponderance, and therefore must find for the defendant on this issue.

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Bluebook (online)
274 F. 294, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philips-v-gress-mfg-co-ca5-1921.