Seymour Manufacturing Co. v. Derby Manufacturing Co.

109 A. 395, 94 Conn. 311, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 109 A. 395 (Seymour Manufacturing Co. v. Derby Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seymour Manufacturing Co. v. Derby Manufacturing Co., 109 A. 395, 94 Conn. 311, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 7 (Colo. 1920).

Opinions

Beach, J.

First. Whether the contract, Exhibit A, is illegal on its face or because it was entered into for the purpose of restraining competition.

Exhibit A purports to be a contract to cooperate in *322 the construction of copper chiving bands, on the basis of the Seymour Company providing the copper and the Derby Company manufacturing the bands therefrom. Each party engaged to fully inform the other of any impending business, and, if it is proposed to bid for or accept any such business, and if the Seymour Company can furnish the copper, and if the parties agree on the market price of the copper and on the contract price for the bands, then the Seymour Company is to make the bid or acceptance in its own name, and turn over one' half of the tonnage of orders so taken to the defendant for production. The defendant agrees to take the plaintiff’s copper, to convert it into bands, and to account for the scrap. The difference between the market price of copper per pound and the contract price 'of bands per pound is called, in Exhibit A, the "toll,” and is to be divided in the proportion of eleven parts to the Derby Company and four parts to the Seymour Company.

The defendant claims that the contract restrained competition because the parties proposed to agree on the price of bands. The contract contains no present agreement on prices for any purpose. It does contain an agreement to agree on the price at which some bands shall be sold. This is not, however, for the purpose of preventing one party from underselling the other in the open market. It relates only to orders or contracts brought within the contract, Exhibit A, by the specific agreement of the parties in each case; and therefore applies only to orders which must be or may be, according as the contract is construed, turned over in part to the defendant for production. Of course, the defendant cannot bid against the plaintiff for any contract and at the same time agree to act as plaintiff’s bailee for hire in assisting to fill it. But this does not make the bailment, or the agree *323 ment as to the terms on which such bailments will thereafter be undertaken, illegal, either at common law or under the Sherman Act.

It is also claimed that the contract is illegal because the defendant agrees not to make any bid or take any order for bands. We find no prohibition in the contract against the defendant accepting business on its own account. The contract goes no further than to provide that so far as the parties may be able to agree on prices the defendant is to cooperate in production by acting as plaintiff’s bailee, and the bid or acceptance is to be in the Seymour Company’s name. It must follow that if they cannot agree on the price at which any order will be accepted for cooperative production, either party may compete for it on its own account. The court finds that such was the intention of the parties in formulating Exhibit A, and the defendant’s brief- accepts that construction of the com tract when it contends that the Chase 8" contract was not brought under Exhibit A, because it was taken in defendant’s name and because prices were not agreed on-in advance.

The claim that the contract was entered into for the purpose of restraining competition between the parties is refuted by the findings.

Its origin and basis are sufficiently explained by the findings of the court that the plaintiff did not have productive capacity to fill its orders, and that the defendant had surplus capacity for production, but did not have funds or credit enough to carry on business on its own account.

Second. On what basis is the plaintiff required to pay for 650,000 pounds of copper taken over under paragraph 12?

In partial execution of the provisions of paragraph 12, plaintiff took over 650,980 pounds of copper, which *324 the defendant billed to the plaintiff at the average contract price to the defendant of the entire supply of 850,000 pounds; to wit, 30.8 cents per pound. The plaintiff credited the defendant with the amounts of bills thus rendered, in the aggregate sum of $200,501.84. In the course of the trial the plaintiff found out that the particular shipments of copper so delivered to it had cost the defendant only $194,588.10, less a discount of one half of one per cent for cash leaving the net cost to the defendant of these particular shipments of copper $193,615.16, or $6,886.68 less than the amounts billed and credits given. In stating the account the trial court allowed the plaintiff to reduce this credit by the amount last named, and the question now presented is whether under the terms of paragraph 12 the plaintiff is to take over this copper at the prices paid for the particular shipments delivered to it, or at the average price of the whole supply. The relevant portion of paragraph 12 is as follows: “It is agreed that for the first contract taken thereunder for 9.2", the Seymour Company is to take over this supply in the same manner as though it were being purchased from refinery for such contract as to such part thereof as may be required at the Derby Company’s purchase price therefor, and as to any part not yet specified, the same may be specified by the Seymour Company for other sizes.”

The manifest intention is to put the plaintiff in the position of taking over all this copper as though it were being bought by plaintiff from refinery at the Derby Company’s purchase price. The parties might have undertaken to do this by agreeing that the average price of all shipments should be applied to each delivery. But they preferred to agree that the Derby Company’s purchase price should be applied to “such part thereof as may be required,” for the first 9.2" con *325 tract, and that the balance might be specified for other sizes. This 650,980 pounds is in fact the part thereof which was required for the first 9.2" Morgan contract, and by the express terms of Exhibit A the plaintiff is entitled to take this particular part of the supply over at the Derby Company’s purchase price.

It is urged that the Seymour Company would never have agreed that the Derby Company might unload the highest priced shipments on it, and retain the rest. But if the contract had been carried out according to the intention of the parties, the entire supply would have been taken over, and then it would make no difference to either party in what order the shipments had been taken over, or whether credit had been given for each shipment at the purchase price of each, or at the average price of all. It is only because the complete performance of paragraph 12 was interrupted, for reasons which will appear hereafter, that it becomes material to inquire whether each particular shipment should be charged at its purchase price or at the average price of the whole supply.

We think, however, that the plaintiff is not entitled to the benefit of the one half of one per cent discount for cash. Although the findings indicate that the defendant used money borrowed from the plaintiff, or owed to the plaintiff, to pay for the several shipments of this copper, it has been charged with interest on these sums, and it was compelled to carry the copper until taken over. The result is that $972.94 should be deducted from reduction of credit allowed by the court.

Third.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Driscoll v. Jewell Belting Co.
114 A. 109 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 A. 395, 94 Conn. 311, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-manufacturing-co-v-derby-manufacturing-co-conn-1920.