Temby v. William Brunt Pottery Co.

82 N.E. 336, 229 Ill. 540
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 82 N.E. 336 (Temby v. William Brunt Pottery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Temby v. William Brunt Pottery Co., 82 N.E. 336, 229 Ill. 540 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Gwynne M. Temby, plaintiff in error, commenced a suit in assumpsit in the circuit court of Cook county against the William Brunt Pottery Company, defendant in error, a corporation engaged in the manufacture of pottery at East Liverpool, Ohio, and the summons was returned by the sheriff with an endorsement thereon of service on said company “by delivering a copy thereof to Courtland A. Saunders, agent of said corporation, this 29th day of August, 1903, the president of said corporation not found in my county.” Saunders was not an agent of the pottery company. He took orders for goods for it in Indian Territory, Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas, for which he received commissions. He had no authority to fix prices, collect accounts or transact any other business for the company, and at the time of the alleged service was in Chicago during his vacation, on a pleasure trip, at the invitation of Temby. When the deputy sheriff offered him a copy of the summons he refused to receive it and told the officer that he had nothing to do with the William Brunt Pottery Company. A week afterward he went back to Kansas and never notified the company of the suit. The company had no knowledge of the suit from any other source, and was defaulted and judgment was entered against it on September 29, 1903, for $1859.75 and costs. An execution was issued, and no property being found, it was returned accordingly. A proceeding in garnishment was begun against varioús persons and corporations for the purpose of collecting the judgment. The company then learned of the existence of the judgment and filed its bill in the superior court of Cook county to enjoin the prosecution of the garnishment suit and the collection of the judgment, on the grounds that Saunders was not the agent of the company, and that it was not indebted to Temby. in any manner or to any amount, at the time of the judgment or afterward. Temby and the sheriff were made defendants and answered the bill, denying the averments that Saunders was not an agent of the company and that it was not indebted to Temby. There was a hearing, at which the superior court entered an interlocutory decree finding that the return of the summons was false; that Saunders was not an agent of the company and that it had no knowledge of the pendency of the suit, and referring the cause to a master in chancery to take proof whether there was anything due Temby and to report his conclusions. The master reported that there was nothing due, and the cause was then heard on exceptions to the master’s report, which were overruled and a decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill. Temby sued out a writ of error from the Appellate Court for the First District, and the decree was affirmed by the branch of that court. Temby then sued out a writ of error from this court to review the judgment of the Appellate Court.

At the hearing before the master the defendant Temby objected to the admission in evidence of depositions taken on behalf of the complainant on the grounds that they contained no evidence that the witnesses were examined under oath, and that they were certified to by George E. Davidson as a commissioner purporting to act as a notary public of Columbiana county, Ohio, but the certificate was not under his notarial seal and he failed to return with the depositions a certificate of his official character as a notary public. The depositions were received in evidence and the court sustained the master in considering them. They were taken by virtue of a commission issued out of the superior court to George E. Davidson, who was described as a notary public and was thereby authorized to take and return them to the court. He derived his authority from the commission, and it is immaterial that he was also described as a notary public. It is not necessary that a commissioner should hold any office, and a commission may be directed to any competent and disinterested person. The person to whom a commission to take depositions is issued need only be designated by his name or he may be designated by the office which he holds, and in either case he obtains his authority from the commission. (Brown v. Luehrs, 79 Ill. 575.) The addition of the description to the name of the commissioner did not add to or detract from his authority and no certificate was necessary. (Kendall v. Limberg, 69 Ill. 355.) The certificate showed that the witnesses were sworn and examined under oath, and the objections were properly overruled.

Temby was employed by the complainant under a written contract signed by the parties, which fixed the prices of certain packages or assortments of pottery and the commissions for the sales, and it contained these provisions: “Commissions paid on the first of each month for all orders shipped. No commissions paid on orders not shipped or on uncollectible accounts. All orders guaranteed genuine, and acceptance of orders at the discretion of the William Brunt Pottery Company.” The goods were to be sold in Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Kansas and Texas, and Temby operated under the contract, taking orders through himself and other agents, for about six months, when he was notified by the complainant that the relation was terminated. The grounds alleged were, that the complainant received complaints of misrepresentations to customers and unfair means to secure orders, and was not satisfied with the credit of many persons from whom orders were taken. The complainant received orders that it did not accept or ship because dissatisfied with the credit of the parties ordering the goods, and some orders were repudiated by the persons giving the orders and some accounts were uncollectible. Temby was paid all that was due him for commissions on orders which were accepted and shipped and which proved to be collectible. There is nothing tending to prove bad faith on the part of complainant, and if the true construction of the contract is that the acceptance of orders was to be at'the discretion of complainant, there was nothing .due Temby. We do not see how there can be any doubt that under the terms of the contract complainant was authorized to reject, in its discretion, any order, whether the credit of the party ordering would have satisfied some other person or not. Surely it was not the intention of the complainant in making the contract that it should pay commissions on orders not accepted or shipped, upon proof that some one else would have taken the risk and shipped the goods. There was no rule of law which would prevent Temby from making a contract leaving the acceptance of orders to the discretion of the complainant if he saw fit to do so, and the proper function of courts is to enforce contracts as made if they do not conflict with some rule of law. The contract fixes no standard, other than the discretion of the complainant, for acceptance of orders, from which a court or jury or any one else would be authorized to say that the complainant ought to have been satisfied with any order which it rejected.

In the case of Goodrich v. VanNortwick, 43 Ill. 445, it was held that the question whether a fanning mill suited VanNortwick did not depend upon the opinion or judgment of other persons, and that having reserved, by his contract, the right to return -the mill if it did not suit him, he could not be prevented from exercising such right according to the contract. The same doctrine was held in Kendall v. West, 196 Ill. 221.

In the case of Keeler v. Clifford, 165 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 336, 229 Ill. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temby-v-william-brunt-pottery-co-ill-1907.