Shaw v. Stone

55 Mass. 228
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 Mass. 228 (Shaw v. Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Stone, 55 Mass. 228 (Mass. 1848).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This is a bill in equity, commenced by Shaw, [240]*240Blake and Seaver, assignees of the Hampshire Manufacturing Company, against Leonard Stone and others, assignees of Grant, Seaver and company, formerly merchants, and agents and factors of the Hampshire Manufacturing Company.

In April, 1837, the parties were in failing circumstances. On the 22d, Grant, Seaver and company made an assignment to Stone and others, of the balance of account due to them, as such agents and factors, from the Hampshire Manufacturing Company, and, on the 27th of the same April, the latter made an assignment of their property, generally, in trust for their creditors.

Some time after this last assignment, and after many claims made upon the assignees by persons claiming to be creditors of the Hampshire Manufacturing Company, their assignees filed this bill against the assignees of Grant, Seaver and company, calling upon them to prove and establish their claims, setting forth some of them specifically, and denying their validity, and claiming that if not so established, they might be debarred and precluded from asserting such claims, so as to enable them to distribute the proceeds of the assigned property amongst the creditors entitled to them. After answers, an amended bill and additional answers, two issues were directed to try two contested questions, hereafter stated. Various matters were also referred to a master, who has made a report.

Upon the issues thus directed and found by the jury, and a report of the judge before whom these issues were tried, and upon the report of the master, taken as a statement of facts, several questions arose, which have been argued and considered by the court.

The first issue was directed to try whether Grant, Seaver and company were entitled to charge the Hampshire Manufacturing Company with the sum of $ 20,000,' or any other sum, for the cost and expense of raising money for their use. This charge was made on the 27th of April, 1837, after Grant, Seaver and company had stopped payment, and made an assignment to Stone and others of the balance due to them [241]*241from the Hampshire Manufacturing Company. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, thereby deciding that Grant, Seaver and company had no right to make the said charge against the Hampshire Manufacturing Company; and this verdict must stand, unless the objections taken by the defendants to the admission of evidence are well founded.

The agents, Grant, Seaver and company, kept their accounts regularly with the Hampshire Manufacturing Company, charging and crediting interest, and rendered those accounts quarterly to the manufacturing company. The charge in question was not founded on items, but on an estimate of the expense, which Grant, Seaver and company had previously incurred, by discounts at a greater rate than six per cent, or otherwise, in raising money to meet the wants of the Hampshire Manufacturing Company. No express contract was offered to sustain this charge; but it was placed on an implied liability, arising from the relations, in which the parties stood to each other, as principals and factors and general agents, and the exigency which they were under, as such factors and agents, to raise money for the company, at high rates of interest, beyond the regular interest charged in their quarterly accounts. They then proposed to show that money was so raised for the use of the manufacturing company, and thus to establish an implied promise on the part of the latter, to pay the expense of the operation. This being a charge made by the respondents, the assignees of Grant, Seaver and company, the burden was on them to establish it; and they took the affirmative and opened the case.

Much evidence was offered on both sides, which is not stated in the report, and upon which no question arises. It appeared, that Grant, Seaver and company were themselves large stockholders in the Hampshire Manufacturing Company, and owned a majority of the shares. It became a question between the parties, whether or not, at the time when Grant, Seaver and company were appointed factors and general agents of the Hampshire Manufacturing Company, these agents undertook, in general terms, to advance money and accept drafts, [242]*242and thus by their cash and credit to afford means to the company, when not afforded, and beyond those afforded, by their sales of manufactured goods, and the proceeds of them, to carry on the business of the company, in making repairs^ and improvements at the factory, paying operatives, purchasing stock, &c. It was insisted by the company, that it was understood and agreed, that the agents would thus afford means by their own money and credit to carry on the business, not for any certain length of time, nor to any particular amount, but as a general course of business; but this was denied on the other side. The assignors, having been discharged, were competent witnesses, and three of them, Grant, Dinsmore and Barnett, were called by the defendants, as witnesses, to maintain the issue on their part. They were severally inquired of, whether, when they took the agency, they agreed to advance, at their own costs, capital for the use of the Hampshire Manufacturing Company; to which they testified that they did not. Subsequently, and after Shaw and others, the plaintiffs, had entered on their defence to this charge of $20,000, they offered parol evidence of conversations between Dixon, on the part of the company, and Grant, on the part of Grant, Seaver and company, before the 20th of November, 1834, the date of the vote by which the latter were appointed agents, and also between that day and the day of the acceptance of the report of the committee, December 4th following, to maintain the issue on their part, and to prove that Grant, Seaver and company; as such agents, undertook and agreed to furnish said company with capital or funds, from their own resources, at six per cent. The plaintiffs also offered in evidence, for the same purpose, a letter addressed by Parks, Wright and company, to George Seaver, clerk of the Hampshire Manufacturing Company, requesting information as to the terms, on which Grant, Seaver and company held the agency of the former, together with a verbal reply of Seaver thereto.

I. This evidence was objected to, on the part of Stone and others, but was admitted by the court, and this is the subject [243]*243of the first objection. This objection is placed on the ground) that by the vote of November 20th, 1834, and the subsequent acceptance of the report of the committee on the compensation of the agents, a contract in writing was made between the parties, which ought not to be enlarged or altered by paro evidence.

To this objection, there are several answers:

1. As the rules of evidence are made for the security and benefit of parties, all exceptions may be waived by mutual consent; and, in each particular case, an objection may be waived by the party, who has a right to except. Now, when this species of evidence was offered by Stone and others, in order to prove what was the agreement and understanding of the parties, even though it might have been open to the exception stated, the defendants waived their exception by offering it, and the other party waived theirs by not excepting to its admission.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Mass. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-stone-mass-1848.