Standard Motor Co. v. Shockey

114 A. 869, 139 Md. 127, 1921 Md. LEXIS 139
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 114 A. 869 (Standard Motor Co. v. Shockey) 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
Standard Motor Co. v. Shockey, 114 A. 869, 139 Md. 127, 1921 Md. LEXIS 139 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

*129 Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Standard Motor Company of Baltimore, Maryland, an automobile distributor engaged in the sale of Cadillac automobile in Maryland, on September 1st, 1917, entered into a contract with Ernest Shockey, an automobile dealer in Hagerstown, to sell to Mm Cadillac automobiles.

Ender this agreement the appellant, called the distributor, agreed to sell to the appellee, called the dealer, Cadillac automobiles’, automobile bodies and chassis at “net prices to1 be agreed upon from time to- time * * * at a discount of 15% from list prices,” to replace or repair defective parts- under certain conditions, and at its option to- furnish the dealer pamphlets, circulars, and other written matter descriptive of the automobiles. The dealer agreed to work and develop to the satisfaction of the distributor and manufacturer the territory of Washington County, to advertise there the automobiles, to report monthly to the manufacturer and the distributor all deliveries of Cadillac automobiles, with the details incident thereto, to keep in stock at least one Cadillac automobile, and a stock of automobile parts, to install without charge “such parts as the manufacturer sup-plied gratis” for use on its automobile, to render free ins-pectio-n service for a stated period on all new automobiles sold by the dealer, and “to- pay in par funds for all g’oods ordered, on o-r befo-re delivery to the cander.” It further provided that the dealer should not he entitled to any compensation from the distributor for work done or material used except upon its written order, that all accepted orders should he filled by the distributor as. “rapidly as practicable, consistent with the schedule given by the distributor to the dealer, and consistent with the requirements of the- distributor’s other customers.” The parties also agreed: “That the dealer is not authorized or empowered to- act as agent for the distributor or the manufacturer; nor to- transact business, incur obligations- or bill goods- in the name or for the account of the distributor or manufacturer, nor on behalf *130 of the distributor or of the 'manufacturer to make any promise, ’warranty or representation with respect to goods or any other matter; and that the distributor or manufacturer shall not be bound by the acts or conduct of the dealer/7 and that no alterations of the terms of the contract should be valid unless in writing and signed by the distributor and “that this contract supersedes all previous contracts between the parties hereto and expires by limitation July 1st, 1918, or may be ■terminated at the pleasure of either party, with or without cause or reason, upon thirty days7 written notice given through the usual course of mail, or otherwise; provided, however, that for any violation of the provisions, hereof by either party, ’the other party may terminate the same without notice. The termination of this contract shall cancel all orders for goods which may not have been delivered prior to the date of notice of such termination; but does not release the dealer from the payment of any sum which he may then owe the distributor. After the termination of this agreement, the sale of goods; or the referring of inquiries by the distributor to the dealer, shall not be considered as a renewal hereof; nevertheless; all orders thereafter accepted by the distributor shall be according to the ’provisions hereof.” It also contained other provisions which are not material to the consideration of any question before us and need not be noticed.

On August 6th, 1918, the distributor wrote Shockey that the discount allowed to him on purchases of automobiles -would be increased to eighteen per cent, and the contract extended to July‘1st, 1919.

On October 6th, 1919, Shockey sold a Cadillac automobile to Janies Koleopolis for $4,522.15, and took from the purchaser a deposit of $100, and at once mailed the contract with his own check for $100 to the appellant, and ordered from it an automobile to be delivered to Koleopolis in accordance with his contract with the latter. This order was not filled but, on December 26th, 1919, he received a letter from the Standard Motor Company notifying him that, on January 1st, 1920, it *131 would “'sever all agency connection” with him. In this letter the company among other things said: “We have taken into consideration many things before arriving at this decision, and in fact have let the matter run along since the expiration of your contract until the present time, as we wanted to he sure of the best course to pursue, and did not wish to do you an injustice in any way.” Shockey never received the automobile he ordered from the appellant, and consequently did not deliver to Koleopolis the automobile he agreed to sell him, but later Koleopolis purchased and received an automobile, from the Elay Motor & Tire Company, which succeeded Shockey as a dealer in Cadillac automobiles in Washington County, and on March 5th, 1920, the appellant wrote Shockey as follows;: “We recently delivered to Mr. James Koleopolis, the Victoria for which you gave us $100.00 deposit several months ago. We have credited your account with 5% of list price of Victoria, feeling that you should he compensated for your effort in making sale. This; credit is mad© notwithstanding the fact that your contract expired sometime before fhis transaction was completed. The amount of credit was $217.00. We have also credited your account with deposit of $250.00, which has been held by us for some time. After applying these two credits, there is a balance in your favor of $63.33, check for which is attached.”

The arrangement proposed in this letter not being satisfactory to him, on March 30th, 1920, he sued the appellant under the Practice Act of 1886 in the Superior Court of Baltimore City. The declaration contained the six common counts; and two special counts, and to it was attached t-he contract referred to- and an account in the following form:

“March 29th, 1920.
“Standard Motor Company to Ernest Shockey:
“Amount on deposit with Standard Motor Company........................... $250.00
“Amount due for sale of car to James Koliopules, 18 per cent, of $4,140.00....... 745.20
*132 “Amount due for sale to Dr. J. Hubert Wade, 18 per cent, of $4,450.00........ 801.00
$1,796.20
“Less amount due to Standard Motor Company............................... 403.67
$1,392.53,”'

and an affidavit as required by the Act of 1886. The defendant filed the general issue pleas and an affidavit in which it admitted $66.33 of the claim to he due and owing, hut disputed the balance. The trial of the issues thus presented resulted in á judgment for the plaintiff, and from that judgment this appeal is taken. The record contains ten exceptions, of which nine relate to questions of evidence and one to the court’s ruling on the prayers. The plaintiff offered no prayers. The defendant offered eight, of which one was granted and the others refused. These rulings are the subject of the tenth exception, which we will now consider.

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Bluebook (online)
114 A. 869, 139 Md. 127, 1921 Md. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-motor-co-v-shockey-md-1921.