Stewart v. Turner
Stewart v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The defendant appeals from the order of the court below making absolute a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. The statement of the plaintiffs averred, in substance, that the plaintiffs were manufacturers of cigars in the City of Reading, that
' The sum to be paid by.the party in default is in the agreement called a penalty, but that is not conclusive. “The question......is to be determined-by the intention of the parties, drawn from the words of the whole con
The contention of the appellant that the failure of the plaintiffs to present their claim for damages in the equity proceeding brought by the present defendant against the plaintiffs, in the Court of Common Pleas No. 1, of Philadelphia County, estops them to now assert this claim, and that the decree in that case, dismissing the bill, without more, is res ad judicata of this controversy, is without merit. That bill in equity was filed by this defendant, he sought to have the present plaintiffs restrained from selling the product of their own factories within the territory embraced by the contract with which we are now dealing, The relief which he prayed for was an injunction restraining the plaintiffs from selling in that territory, and that they be required to account for the sales of cigars made by plaintiffs within that territory and that the court state an account of the damage sustained by this appellant by reason of the sales so made. This was not a bill seeking a general accounting between the parties, the primary purpose of the bill was to restrain the plaintiffs from selling within the territory and, as an incident to the principal purpose of the bill to recover damages resulting from the sales so alleged to have been improperly made. The answer of the plaintiffs did not pray for affirmative relief and the court did not pass upon the question whether they were entitled to have such relief. The facts as found by the' court in that case must be regarded as res adjudicata. Those facts conclusively determine that these plaintiffs had not violated this contract; and that they had only notified this defendant that they, the plaintiffs, would no longer
Tbe judgment is reversed with a procedendo.
Reference
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- Contract — Penalty—Liquidated damages — Evidence—Bes adjudicata. Although the parties to a contract may use the word “penalty” to designate a payment to be made by one to the other in case of default, such designation is not conclusive. The question whether the payment is to be considered as a penalty, or as liquidated damages, is to be determined by the intention of the parties, drawn from the words of the whole contract, examined in the light of its subject-matter and its surroundings; and in this examination the courts will consider the relation which the sum stipulated hears to the extent of the injury which may be caused by the several breaches provided against, the ease or difficulty of measuring a breach in damages, and such other matters as are legally or necessarily inherent in the transaction. Where a contract is for the performance or omission of various acts which are not measurable by any exact pecuniary standard, together with one or more acts in respect of which the damages on a breach of the covenant are certain or readily ascertainable by a jury, and there is a sum stipulated as damages, to be paid by each party to the other, for the breach of any one of the covenants, such sum is to be held to he a penalty merely, and not liquidated damages. Where a manufacturer of. a particular brand of cigars grants to another person the exclusive right to sell the cigars in a particular territory, the sales agent to pay a designated price for the cigars ten days after the receipt of the same, to use his best endeavors to sell the same and to sell no other ten-eent cigars than those of his principal, which were guaranteed to he satisfactory for ■ sixty days from date of shipment, and it is further provided that on default by either party there shall be paid to the other “one thousand dollars as a penalty,” the payment referred to must be considered as a penalty, and not as liquidated damages. In such a case a decree dismissing a bill in equity filed by the sales agent against his principal to restrain the latter from selling their product to others in the territory covered by the contract, and for an accounting for such sales, is not res adjudicata of an action of assumpsit subsequently brought by the manufacturer against the sales agent to recover the sum of one thousand dollars for a failure by the agent to use his best endeavors to sell the cigars in question. The plaintiffs in such action are not estopped because they did not set up their claim for damages in the equity suit,