Robinson v. Silver

87 A. 699, 120 Md. 41, 1913 Md. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 A. 699 (Robinson v. Silver) 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
Robinson v. Silver, 87 A. 699, 120 Md. 41, 1913 Md. LEXIS 113 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William E. Robinson and others, Trustees in Bankruptcy of the Continental Commercial Company brought suit against the firm of Silver Brothers & Co., and the individual members of that firm, upon the common counts, adding thereto a special count on a promissory note dated November 15th, 1905, for $1,115.15, with interest, payable sixty days after-date. To this suit the defendants filed the general issue pleas in assumpsit, a plea of payment, a plea in set-off, and having-been required to file a bill of particulars of their set-off claim, the plaintiffs replied as to one of the items, setting-up the statute of limitations, and to this the defendants for rejoinder set up a new promise. TTpon pleadings thus made up the case went to trial. Eor the purpose of this decision *43 it is not necessary to go at any considerable length into the facts with regard to which evidence was given upon one side and the other, or any further than may be necessary to show the foundation for the prayers, the rulings of the trial Court on which constitute the sole bill of exceptions in the case.

In a general way the case arose as follows: in the year 1903 the defendants began the operation of a canning establishment at Claremont, Virginia, having had an understanding with the Continental Commercial Company through its president, Isaac Robinson, that that company would act as the financial backer of the enterprise, to the extent of advancing the money necessary for tbe conduct of the business. In pursuance of this arrangement the Continental Commercial Company bought for the defendants certain canning machinery which was billed to them at $1,097.71, and advanced other moneys for various purposes.

The business of the year 1903 was not a success; it was in fact operated at a loss, and by a statement of account dated May 26-th, 1901, there was a balance shown to be due the Continental Company of $3,070.63, a portion of which was for the machinery previously purchased, and in addition to this amount as shown by the account, there was due to the Continental Company a fertilizer note of $661.65. There seems to have been practically a running account between the Continental Company and the defendants, and on the 30th July, 1901, Isaac Robinson, president of the company, visited the home of David H. Silver, one of the defendants, where the subject-matter of the accounts between them and future business relations were taken up and were the occasion of a very protracted interview. According to the evidence of the defendants the account which had been previously submitted on the 26th May was admitted to have been correct, except as to the question of the cost of the machinery. The defendants now claim that such machinery was to have been furnished them at actual cost, which is denied on the part of the plaintiffs, and the defendants further say, that the machinery item in the account of the 26th *44 Hay was to have been held in abeyance for the production of the original machinery bills, but that at the urgent solicitation of Hr. Robinson, three accommodation notes were made and given to him for the sums of $1,033.33, $1,033.34 and $1,033.33, respectively, or a total of $3,100.00, and it further appears that a credit as of the same date was entered upon the books of the Continental Company of $243.40, which Mr. Robinson says was allowed by way of a compromise, a statement which is denied by the defendants. On the same date a filling agreement was entered into between the parties for the season of 1904, and the business of this year proved more profitable than that of the preceding, resulting in a profit to the defendants over and above all advances which had been made by the Continental Company for that year’s business. The three notes given on July 30th, according to their terms, matured respectively, November 1st, 1904, December 1st, 1904, and January 5th, 1905; and apparently a statement was prepared by the Continental Company of the 1904 business, under the date of November 11th of that year. On the 27th January, 1905, there appears to have been another settlement of accounts between the parties by which the unpaid balances on the three notes of July, 1904, and the business of the season of 1904 were balanced off one against the other, and the amount determined to be due was $1,590.03; for which the defendants gave two promissory notes, dated January 5th, 1905, with interest, one for $1,060.03, payable November 15th, 1905, and the other for $530, payable October 15th, 1905. These notes it was testified to were not paid at maturity. In November, 1905, the, note for $1,060.03 not having been paid, the interest amounting to $55.12 was added to it, and a new note given therefor, being the note for $1,115.15, upon which this suit is brought. Subsequently the defendants abandoned the business at Claremont and placed the selling of the machinery which had been used there, in the hands of the Continental Company, such sales to be made for the *45 account of the defendants by the company, and a considerable amount of the testimony relates to the sales of this machinery and the collection from the Southern Railroad Company of a sum, as damages for the delay in shipment and delivery of certain portions of the machinery. Certain of the items of the bill of particulars of the defendants in support of their plea of set-off are easily eliminated; thus the last item was shown to have been included in the fourth item, and with regard to the second and fourth items the replication of limitations was sufficient to eliminate those. With regard to the fifth item, it was a matter properly to be submitted to the jury to determine Whether or not the balance there set up had not been included and allowed for in the settlement of accounts of January 27th, 1905; while the third item was undoubtedly an item proper to be credited upon one of the notes, and apparently was in fact credited upon the smaller note. Without reciting them in full, it is sufficient to say that no prejudicial error appears in the rulings of the trial Court in regard to the plaintiffs’ prayers.

The defendants’ first prayer was properly refused, for the reason that it was based upon the theory that the defendants were induced by the Continental Commercial Company to engage in the business at Claremont, and there was no b evidence whatever to support this theory.

The second prayer of the defendants’ was as follows: “If the jury shall find that the plaintiffs entered into an agreement with the defendants in the spring of 1903 to furnish them at cost certain machinery for the canning business of that season at Claremont, Virginia; and that upon receipt of the bill of June 26, 1903, defendants objected to the price charged for the machinery as being in excess of the cost price, and demanded of the plaintiff to see the bills, and I. Robinson, president of the plaintiff company put them off from time to time saying he would make it all right. And if they find that on the afternoon of Saturday, July 30th, 1904, said Robinson went to the home of D: H. Silver, one of the defendants, and there met the other two defendants, *46

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 A. 699, 120 Md. 41, 1913 Md. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-silver-md-1913.