Stoddart v. Warren
This text of 23 F. Cas. 130 (Stoddart v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
(charging jury). After a careful study of the contract, I am of the opinion that this undertaking was entered upon, probably, by the parties with the expectation that it would continue during the time that the book was to be in the process of issue, that is, during the time the entire issue was coming out; and it was also expected that during. that time the defendant would continue his canvass for the work within the territory assigned, or at least that his canvass would be continued until such time as he had made a thorough and complete canvass of the field assigned to him.
The question is: Had the defendant the right to obtain a cancellation of the orders he had secured for the plaintiff’s book, and substitute orders for the Hall book, and charge the expense of so doing to the plaintiff? Upon this question I am very clear that he had no such right. The orders in question had been oh-[131]*131turned by tbe defendant as tlie plaintiff’s agent. Both parties, we may say, had an interest in them. The defendant could not, without the consent of the plaintiff, secure the cancellation of those orders, and charge the plaintiff with the expenses he incurred in so doing. This would be a wrong toward the plaintiff, who had the right to the benefit of these orders to the extent to which they had been taken. The defendant contends that he was obliged to do this in order to protect himself from the contracts he had made with his subscribers, and which he was unable to fill by reason of the plaintiff’s refusal to sell him books on credit to fill them with. It seems to me, however, that two courses lay open to the defendant in this emergency: first, to have paid the -plaintiff cash for the books required to fill the orders which he had taken, for I do not think the plaintiff was bound to give the defendant credit for stock after the defendant had broken the contract; or, secondly, to have turned these orders over to the plaintiff and allowed him to fill them on proper terms of equity between them. I do not agree with the defendant that he was in such peril from the contracts which he had made with these subscribers as to justify the course he took in cancelling this large number of them. The contracts with the subscribers are, in my opinion, binding contracts upon the plaintiff himself, made by the plaintiff’s duly authorized agent, the defendant, and it is at least doubtful to my mind whether the defendant is personally liable on them at all. In any event, he is only liable in the nature of a guarantor, or where bad faith is shown. It seems to me it would be a sufficient answer by Mr. Warren to any subscriber who demanded books according to the terms of the subscription to refer the subscriber to the plaintiff, and demand of the plaintiff, in behalf of such subscriber, that he should fulfil the contract which Mr. Warren had made with the subscriber as Stoddart’s agent. It would follow, then, that the defendant had no right to take back from the subscriber's the reprint volumes which he had delivered on orders, and to charge the plaintiff with the difference between what he paid the plaintiff for those volumes and what-he could sell them to Hall, or Scribner, Armstrong & Co. for, making $t>,012 of the item of $12,206.45 damages claimed. And with regard to the four hundred and eighty subscriptions still outstanding, I am equally clear that the defendant has no right to charge as damages in this case the profits he might have made on the filling of those subscriptions if the plaintiff had sold him the books on credit to fill them. First, because those profits are uncertain. The subscribers may not take the books when tendered to them. There is no proof that they have ever demanded a fulfilment of the orders by the defendant, and, as has been frankly suggested by defendant’s counsel, a large percentage of these orders may prove wholly woidliless; the parties may have died, or become insolvent, or positively refuse to take the books, although they have subscribed and agreed to do so, and also that they may have removed from the country, and be beyond the reach of the defendant. Secondly, because the defendant might have obtained the books to fill these orders by payment of the cash to the plaintiff as he needed the stock. Thirdly, the defendant can relieve himself of all responsibility in regard to these orders by requesting the plaintiff to fill them in accordance with the terms of the contract with the subscribers.
It is urged that the defendant was not required to turn these orders over to the plaintiff, because he had an interest in them, but I am not prepared to say that the defendant would lose his interest in these orders by requesting the plaintiff to fill them. Probably a court of equity, if not a court of law, would protect the defendant so far as his interest in the profit of filling these orders was concerned; but that is not a material question to this case, but an important question is: Was the plaintiff obliged, after the defendant had terminated his contract, to intrust the defendant with the filling of these orders, which the defendant had taken for the plaintiff, and after the defendant had transferred his allegiance from the plaintiff’s book to that of a competing book? The only question here is: Can the defendant set off these damages claimed by him as against the plaintiff’s demand here in suit? I am of the opinion he cannot. When the defendant elected to become the agent of the plaintiff’s competitor, and in effect to assume from that time forward a hostile position to the plaintiff’s interests in the publication of plaintiff’s books, I think the rights of the parties under this contract are so far changed in regard to the completion of orders taken by the defendant, as the plaintiff's agent, as to call for the application of such equitable principles as would .protect both parties, inasmuch as the contract does not provide for that contingency. The plaintiff might justly doubt whether the defendant would in good faith proceed to fill all the orders taken for the plaintiff’s book, and might with propriety, it seems to me, insist that he would only supply the defendant with books to fill those orders on payment of the cash, and he might also, perhaps with equal propriety, demand that the subscriptions which had been obtained should also be turned over to the plaintiff himself, or some third person, in trust, to be filled in good faith, and the profits fairly divided according to the terms of the contract. .1 am clear, that when the defendant saw fit to terminate the contract before it was completed, and while there was no provision for executing such orders as had been taken, that the right of defendant to credit under the contract ceased, and new terms should be made in regard to the manner in which he should be furnished with stock so required.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
23 F. Cas. 130, 7 Reporter, 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoddart-v-warren-circtndil-1879.