Portland Co. v. Searle

169 F. 968, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5496
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedMay 10, 1909
DocketNo. 41
StatusPublished

This text of 169 F. 968 (Portland Co. v. Searle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portland Co. v. Searle, 169 F. 968, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5496 (circtdme 1909).

Opinion

HALE, District Judge.

In this action at law plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendant the contract price for the building of 50 log bunks and 6 sets of snow-plow irons, and also to recover damages by reason of the failure of Calvin Putnam, the defendant’s testator, to carry out the provisions of the contract alleged to have been made by him with the plaintiff for the building of 25 flat cars. The plaintiff corporation is engaged in the building of cars and locomotives. At the time of the making of the alleged contract, Calvin Putnam was the owner of Redington township in Franklin county, Me. The evidence shows that in November, 1902, Mr. Putnam, who was then 87 years old, had contracted with the Berlin Mills Company to sell them certain timber upon Redington township; to build a railroad into that township to a point designated to the Berlin Mills Company by Fletcher Pope, and shown on a preliminary survey; to finish the road by December, 1903; to furnish a sufficient number of cars for hauling, during the logging season, the logs that might be cut under the terms of the contract with the Berlin Mills Company; and to haul all the logs cut under contract with the Berlin Mills Company to the place designated by the company. The Berlin Mills Company agreed, among other things, to cut, in the fall of 1903, and annually thereafter, from five to ten million feet of timber until the same had been removed in accordance with the contract, and to pay Mr. Putnam at a certain agreed price per thousand for the lumber. • The company further agreed to loan Mr. Putnam, from time to.time, an amount in money not to exceed $100,000, at-5 per cent, interest; of which $25,000 was to be páid at the execution of the contract, and the balance as the building of the road progressed. For the purposes of this case it is not essential to enter into further details of this contract. Another contract was made in the same month by Mr. Putnam'with one Fíétcher Pope, which recited that the contract had been made with-the Berlin Mills Company, and that Mr. Putnam had agreed to engage and em[970]*970ploy Mr. Pope as his agent, general manager, and superintendent “in the execution of all things to be done, and work to be performed, by said Calvin Putnam in his said agreement with said Berlin Mills Company; and to represent him and act for him in dealing with said Berlin Mills Company, and in the superintendence and management of all things to be done and observed by said Berlin Mills Company under their agreement with said Calvin Putnam in said contract.” That contract further provided that Mr. Pope was to act under the direction and control, and conform to the wishes, of Mr. Putnam, the latter having the power during his lifetime to terminate the contract with Mr. Pope by 30 days’ written notice. The contract undertook further to provide that, at the death of said Calvin Putnam, or in the event of his incapacity, from any cause, to manage his business, Pope should be empowered to manage all the property described in the contract with the Berlin Mills Company, “and to carry out and perform all the duties and obligations entered into and assumed by him therein and thereunder until such contract should have been fully performed by the respective parties”; and “to do and perform in his name, or in the name of the estate, all things necessary to be done to carry out and perform so much of said contract as should remain unexecuted in the event of such incapacity or at his decease.” The contract also authorized Pope to “provide any and all material that from time to time might be necessary to meet the requirements of said contract and carry out its provisions, and to do any and all things necessary to be done to carry out said contract as fully and effectually as said Putnam could or should do if living.” In this contract, Fletcher Pope agreed to act as the agent and general manager of Calvin Putnam, and to assume and execute all powers given in the contract, and to perform all work and services necessary and proper for him to perform as such agent and manager. Within a year from making this contract, the railroad, known as the “Eustis Railroad,” was built, under the superintendence of Mr. Pope, from a point on the line of the Phillips & Rangeley Railroad into Redington plantation; and on January 13, 1903, Mr. Pope contracted with the Portland Company for 25 flat cars at the contract price of $6,875, These cars were afterwards paid for by Mr. Pope’s checks- on a deposit of moneys received from Mr. Putnam in connection with the building of the road. The Berlin Mills Company, under its contract with Mr. Putnam, advanced for the building of the road more than $100,000, all of which was paid to Mr. Pope by Mr. Putnam’s order. The money so received was deposited by Mr. Pope in his own name in certain banks. The indebtedness incurred for the construction of the road was paid, so far as payments were made, by the personal checks of Mr. Pope on these banks.

In August, 1903, Mr. Pope contracted with the Portland Company for 25 more flat cars and 50 log bunks; the latter being for the express purpose of hauling out the lumber cut by the Berlin Mills Company on the Redington plantation. The 50 log bunks were built by the Portland Company, and $2,500 has been paid to the plaintiff company on this account by checks of Mr. Pope.

[971]*971On November 19, 1903, Mr. Pope wrote the Portland Company:

“On the last order for flats you were not to begin until the first of December. Now we have been called upon to build six more miles of railroad and it is going to take more money than we had planned for and we would like to hold up the order for the 25 ears you now have a little while. We shall want the cars all right, but must make arrangements for the money first. We have been forced by circumstances to make these other extensions much sooner than we expected and have put the money into them which we intended to put into flats.”

Neither Mr. Pope, nor the defendant, ever subsequently called for the cars; they were never ready to carry out that part of the contract ; while the plaintiff says that it was always ready to perform its part of the contract.

On January 15, 1904, Mr. Putnam had a fall, and later the same year died in consequence of it.

After the death of Mr. Putnam there is no suggestion that Mr. Searle, as the executor of Mr. Putnam’s will, ever offered in any manner to carry out the contract with the Portland Company relating to the flat cars; but, on the contrary, he refused to even recognize that part of the contract which relates to the log bunks which had been delivered and used during Mr. Putnam’s lifetime in hauling out the timber cut by the Berlin Mills Company under its contract with Mr. Putnam. The plaintiff company offers testimony that the material which it had acquired in order to carry out the contract for flat cars was of comparatively little value in its partially manufactured state, owing to the fact that such material was for narrow-gauge cars, and that the patterns were of a class used on only one of the other narrow-gauge roads in this state.

This action is brought to recover the balance due on the log bunks, the value of the snow-plow irons which were intended for and used by the railroad constructed by Mr. Pope, and also to recover the damages sustained by the Portland Company in consequence of Mr. Putnam’s failure to carry out the contract for the construction of the flat cars intended for that road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 F. 968, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portland-co-v-searle-circtdme-1909.