Perkins v. Barlow-Moore Tobacco Co.
Perkins v. Barlow-Moore Tobacco Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant Perkins sued the appellee, Barlow-Moore Tobacco Company, to recover damages for breach of contract whereby he was engaged by appellee company as general sales agent for it to market its tobacco products throughout the United States. A general demurrer was sustained to the petition and to each paragraph thereof, with time to appellant Perkins to amend. Failing in this his cause was dismissed, and he appeals.
In the first paragraph of the petition it is averred that the Barlow-Moore Tobacco Company is a corporation, and that on the 31st of December, 1920, it entered into a written contract with appellant Perkins by which it was agreed that Perkins should have the exclusive right and power to sell its different lines of tobacco in the United States, and that Perkins was to have for his services a commission of ten per cent of the net amount of all invoices (with trade discount and jobbers’ discount figured off), on all orders from retailers which were accepted by the jobbers (and with jobbers’ discount figured off on jobbers’ stock orders), on all orders from the factory going into the United States of America; further, it was agreed that Mr. Perkins was to have the same commission on all orders from the United States of America that were accepted by the defendant, whether he caused the same to be sold or not; that appellant company agreed to furnish goods which were of good quality and which had as good appearance on the market as any of the closest competitors of the defendant, and at prices which would compare with other concerns manufacturing first class goods. It is then averred that the appellee company breached its contract by failing to supply appellant Perkins with goods of the quality and general market appearance as those of its closest competitors, and failed and refused to furnish appellant manufactured tobacco according to the terms of the contract which terms are set forth in the pleading; that
The second paragraph of the petition sets forth that under the said written contract the appellee company agreed to pay appellant ten per cent on all orders received at and shipped from the factory into any part of the United States, and on all orders accepted and shipped to persons in the United States whether appellant Perkins or his salesmen sold the order or not. He then alleges that the appellee company violated its contract by failing to pay him a commission of ten per cent, as p.er the contract, on 15,000' pounds of tobacco manufactured and sold by it to John D. Moore Tobacco Company, of Louisville, for the net sum of $12,000.00, which sale it is averred was made during the time he was acting as the manager of the sales department and actively engaged in trying to sell the products of the appellee company under the said contract. On this item he claims $1,200.00.
The demurrer admitted the truth of all averments sufficiently pleaded. The contract is made a part of the petition. Its terms support the averments of the peti
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.