Daniel v. Sandusky Portland Cement Co.

Minnesota Supreme Court
Daniel v. Sandusky Portland Cement Co., 116 Minn. 82 (Minn. 1911)
133 N.W. 162; 1911 Minn. LEXIS 934
Simpson

Daniel v. Sandusky Portland Cement Co.

Opinion of the Court

Simpson, I.

This is an appeal from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

Upon the trial of the case, at the close of the testimony, the court, upon the motion of the plaintiff, directed a verdict in his favor for the sum of $651. The evidence submitted on the trial was not conflicting. It appeared that Dwyer-Field Company, a copartnership engaged in the brokerage business, negotiated a contract between the defendant company and Butler Bros.-Hoff Company for the sale of fifty thousand barrels of cement. In negotiating such contract the Dwyer-Field Company was acting under authority from the defendant, and it was agreed that they should receive for their services a certain sum per barrel, which sum was finally definitely fixed upon as four cents per barrel. It was agreed that the remittance of commission by the defendants should regularly be made on receipt of remittances for cement from the Butler Bros.-Hoff Company. Under the contract fifteen thousand three hundred twenty barrels of *84cement were delivered by tbe defendants, accepted and paid for by Butler Bros.-Hoff Company, and tbe agreed commission thereon remitted to Dwyer-Field Company. Butler Bros.-Hoff Company declined to accept the balance of tbe cement.

By tbe terms of tbe contract of sale of tbe cement it was provided that: “Cement furnished guaranteed to pass tbe standard specifications of tbe American Society for Testing Materials, and to meet tbe approval of the chief engineer of tbe Detroit Kiver Tunnel Com■pany.”

It was further provided: “Failure on tbe part of the buyer to carry out any of tbe provisions of .this contract, or to pay when due any indebtedness to tbe Cement Co., shall authorize tbe Cement Co., •at its option, to cancel by notice any portion of this contract remaining unfulfilled, or tbe Cement Co. may sell to other parties the unshipped balance of cement on this contract, and tbe buyer shall pay to tbe Cement Co. any deficiency in price obtained for tbe same.”

Tbe chief engineer referred to in tbe contract, after tbe delivery of tbe amount of cement stated, refused to approve tbe cement offered by the defendant company to complete its contract. The defendant company, claiming that its cement would pass tbe standard specifications of tbe American Society for Testing Materials, and that tbe action of tbe chief engineer in rejecting it was arbitrary and not taken in good faith, notified tbe buyer that it held fifteen thousand barrels of tested cement in storage to apply on the contract, and stated that, unless shipping instructions are given, “we will sell at market price and charge your company tbe difference between what we obtain for tbe cement at this time and what our contract' with you calls for. In other words, any loss we sustain in marketing this cement will be charged to your company’s account.”

Some twenty days thereafter tbe defendant wrote Dwyer-Field Company: “We have sold on contract the cement, which we were bolding on Butler Bros, contract, with a view of charging tbe Butler Co. in suit tbe difference between what we obtain for tbe cement and what tbe contract price calls for.”

Tbe plaintiff, by assignment, succeeded to tbe rights of DwyerField Company.

*85The trial court based its direction of a verdict in the case on the ground that the defendant company had sold this fifteen thousand barrels of cement referred to in the above letters under and in pursuance of the terms of the contract neg'otiated by Dwyer-Field Company, and that upon the cement so sold the agreed commission of four cents per barrel was earned. The statement contained in defendant’s letters clearly tended to establish that the defendant company had sold fifteen thousand barrels of cement under the Butler Bros.-Hoff Company contract. The defendant offered no evidence tending to show that such sale had not in fact been consummated, or that it had not received payment for the cement thereunder.

In view of the positive statement in its letters that the sale had been made, the court was warranted in determining that such was the fact. While the contract provided that commissions were to be remitted to Dwyer-Field Company when payment for the cement was made by Butler Bros.-Hoff Company, the defendant having elected to sell the cement to other parties in pursuance of the clause in the sales contract with Butler Bros.-Hoff Company, payment for the cement would not be received from the latter company. The defendant, having to this extent changed the course of dealing under the contract, cannot thereby escape paying the agreed commission. Under the circtimstances shown, the commission on the fifteen thousand barrels was due and payable. The contract of salé had been fully executed as to such cement by the disposal thereof in accordance with the terms of the contract.

The order appealed from is affirmed.

[Note] As to right of broker to commissions where sale fails because of inaccuracy of owner’s representations, see note in 15 L.R.A.(N.S.) 1262.

Reference

Full Case Name
BENJAMIN A. DANIEL v. SANDUSKY PORTLAND CEMENT COMPANY
Status
Published