Whiting v. Wm. H. Crawford Co.

49 A. 615, 93 Md. 390, 1901 Md. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 49 A. 615 (Whiting v. Wm. H. Crawford Co.) 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
Whiting v. Wm. H. Crawford Co., 49 A. 615, 93 Md. 390, 1901 Md. LEXIS 43 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant sued the appellee for the price of two carloads of the Michigan Alkali Company soda ash, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony the Court below instructed the jury that the plaintiff had offered no evidence legally sufficient to show any contract, either express or implied, between the plaintiff and the defendant or to show any-contract upon which the plaintiff can maintain the suit in his. own name against the defendant. The jury accordingly rendered a verdict for the defendant and the action of the Court in giving that instruction is the only question presented to us. for review. The appellant, who is a general merchandise broker in Baltimore, was. requested by the appellee to obtain a contract for the sale of from three to six carloads a month of light soda ash for a period of twelve months, beginning in July, 1899, for which it was willing to pay seventy cents per hundred pounds. He communicated with Edward Hill’s Son 8l Co., the general agents of the Michigan Alkali Company, which was a large manufacturer of soda ash. On March 24th,. 1899, they wrote to the appellant that they would not have-the William H. Crawford & Company on their books or have-anything to do with them whatever, but added, “We will,, however, make a contract with you for say three to six cars a month, beginning in July next,” and after stating prices, etc.,, said, “We will allow you *4 per cent brokerage on this price. You will therefore see by figuring this out that our offer to-you is really ^4 per' cent better than if we sold to you at 67 ]4 cents delivered and allow one per cent brokerage ; you can bill Crawford 67^ cents delivered for your account.”' The offer was accepted by the appellant who, on March 28th,. *398 1899, wrote to the appellee stating, “I have this day sold you for account of the Michigan Alkali Co., Wyandotte, Michigan,” and giving in substance the same terms of contract as were included in the letter from the general agents to the appellant, including “terms cash in ten days, less one per cent.” That was accepted by the appellee. Nothing further was ■done and no order given by the defendant until the latter part of September, when it ordered one car of soda ash which was .shipped by the Michigan Alkali Company and delivered by the appellant to the appellee in November, 1899, and was paid for by it to the appellant. On November 6th, the appellee gave the appellant an order for six carloads to be shipped by the •8th of December. They were shipped in December and the appellant delivered the first two to the appellee, which it accepted and this suit was brought to recover the price of those two carloads, after demand had been made and refused. On November 18th the appellee wrote to the agents of the Michigan ■Company, referring to the contract and the order of November 6th, and stating that they had been informed by the appellant that the delivery had been refused. The general agents replied, “We beg to inform you that there is no contract between you and the Michigan Alkali Co., and you have not their accepted contract or ours, who are their agents, and nobody has had authority to sell you goods for account ■of the Michigan Alkali Co.” The plaintiff testified that before the two cars were delivered he showed the letter of March 24th, 1899,to the president of the appellee and that he had paid the general agents for the two carloads. The theory of the defense was that the appellee had made the contract with the Michigan Company through the appellant and therefore they owed him nothing and he could not recover.

Some of the letters offered in evidence indicate that both parties to this proceeding assumed positions towards each other contrary to what they now respectively contend for. On November 27th, 1899, the appellee wrote to the appellant, “We herewith give you notice that we wish (6) six cars of the 58 per cent light Soda Ash delivered in January, 1900, on *399 account of our contract with you of March 28th, i8gg’f and again on December ist, it wrote to him “we expect you to carry out your obligations under our existing contract with you.” Several other letters are to the same effect and on December 14th, the appellant wrote one to the appellee which is as follows: “Answering your favor of the 13th instant, I can only state that when as your broker, I bought for you the contract for the Michigan Alkali Co., for soda ash, I assumed no responsibility for their acts. Your orders have been promptly forwarded to Messrs. Edward Hill’s Son & Co., and will no doubt be attended to in conformity with the terms of the contract, which I made for you." If the latter letter was the only evidence of the relations between the appellant and the appellee, it might well be contended that there was no contract between them, but the letters of the appellee are to the effect that it looked to the appellant to carry out the contract. On November 21st, 1899, which was a month or more before it received the two cars involved in this controversy, and indeed before it received the one ordered in September, the appellee had received the letter from Edward Hill’s Son & Co., which is above set out, and on that date wrote to the appellant quoting that letter and concluded by saying “If the above statement is correct, we will, of course, have to hold you responsible for compliance with the existing contract.” The appellant testified that upon its receipt he showed the letter of March 24th, 1899, from Edward Hill’s Son & Co. to the president of the defendant company, and had not told him of it before because “it was a disagreeable thing to tell him what Edward Hill’s Son & Co. had said about him.” The‘freight bills for the two cars, which were paid by the appellee, were made out against the appellant.

As the case is presented by the record there was no contract between the appellee and the Alkali Company, as the latter had positively refused to sell to it.. The fact that the appellant wrote on March 28th, 1899, that “I have this day sold you for account of the Michigan Alkali Co.,” etc., could in no wise bind that company unless he had authority to do *400 so. When the appellee communicated with them Edward Hill’s Son & Co. promptly informed it that no one had been authorized to make the contract; and then the appellant showed the president the letter of March 24th, 1899, which not only stated that they would not have anything to do with the appellee, but that they would make the contract with the appellant and he could deliver to the appellee for his own account. That was not until after the letter of November 21st, 1899, was received by the appellee from the general agents,

■ but from that time they could not have misunderstood the position of the Alkali Company. What then were the relations between the appellant and the appellee ? The appellant in his later correspondence took the position that he had acted for the appellee, and was not responsible to it for defaults of the Alkali Company. In his letter of December 13th, he spoke of his understanding “of the contract made for you with the Michigan Alkali Company” and in that of December 14th, he said “I can only state that when as your broker I bought for you the contract from the Michigan Alkali Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 615, 93 Md. 390, 1901 Md. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiting-v-wm-h-crawford-co-md-1901.