Holmes v. Montauk Steamboat Co.
Opinion of the Court
On January 14,1896, a written charter party, drawn up by plaintiff, was executed by defendant and the Key West & Miami Steamship Company, by which defendant agreed to let, and the Key West Company agreed to hire, the steamboat Shelter Island for four months from February 1,1896, to be employed between Key West and Biscayne Bay, for $100 a day. The charter party further provided that the Key West Company should redeliver the steamboat to the defendant; at the termination of said agreement, in the same good condition as received, ordinary wear and tear excepted; that the charterers should have the option at any time during the charter to purchase the steamboat for the sum of $60,000; that, if charterers should exercise such option and purchase said steamboat, all charter money paid should be applied on purchase; that charterers should give a “New York banker's guaranty for the full amount of all charter, charter moneys to be paid during the period of this charter, to insure payments when due, and for the faithful performance of all other conditions of this charter party”; that the charterers should “cause insurance to cover value of said steamboat herein expressed to be effected, in a company satisfactory to the owners of said steamboat, against fire and all marine risks, including collision and damage done to other vessels or received by said steamboat other than by collision, in the name of, and for the benefit of, the owners of said steamboat, and shall pay the premium therefor.” The charter party also contained the following clause:
“Commission of five per cent, on tlie full amount of charter, also on sale of steamer, when sold, is due, on signment hereof, to Samuel Holmes, 06 & 68 Broad street, New York, ship lost or not lost, by whom the vessel is to be reported.”
Holmes, the plaintiff, was the broker through whose intervention the charter was made.
On the signing of the agreement the Key West Company paid to defendant $8,000 in cash and $9,000 in notes. It also effected insurance in conformity with the terms of the charter party, and paid the premiums therefor. The plaintiff duly received $600, being 5 per
After setting out briefly the negotiations of plaintiff and the terms of the charter party, including the one last above quoted, as to payment of commission to the plaintiff, the complaint avers that:
“Defendant further promised and agreed, in consideration of the services rendered by plaintiff as hereinbefore set forth, that if the steamboat should be lost before the option to purchase the same was exercised by the Key West & Miami Steamship Company, or before a purchase of the same was actually made by said Key West & Miami Steamship Company, the defendant would pay to the plaintiff 5 per cent, on the insurance money which it might collect and receive under policies of insurance taken out under said agreement; and said services were rendered by plaintiff on the faith of said promise, and in full reliance thereon.”
This averment is specifically denied by the answer, and is the only issue in the cause. Plaintiff and another witness gave testimony tending to show such an agreement to pay 5 per cent, on insurance moneys, and were contradicted by three witnesses called hy defendant. A number of letters and telegrams passing between the parties to the suit or to the charter party were put in evidence, but none of them contained any reference to the particular subject of controversy. The case was sent to the jury, to find, from these letters and telegrams, from the charter party itself, and from the testimony of the witnesses as to the oral conversation, whether any agreement such as the complainant declared upon was in fact made.
The first assignment of error is to the court’s refusal to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Plaintiff contends that, although the charter party was not a contract between plaintiff and defendant, it was conclusive evidence of a contract between them, by the terms of which plaintiff was entitled to commission on the insurance money paid upon loss. The clause relied upon is, “Commission of five per cent, on the full amount of charter, also on sale of steamer, when sold, is due, on signment hereof, to Samuel Holmes, * * ship lost or not lost;” and the theory of plaintiff is that, “in all fairness,” the phrase “amount of charter” means all that is obtained by the owner under the charter. But, although the premiums of insurance which the charterers agreed to pay may perhaps be said to be obtained by the owner under the charter, the moneys paid by the insurance companies upon loss’of the vessel were obtained under a different and independent contract with the companies themselves. Indeed, it might he very doubtful whether, if the Key West Company had exercised its option, and subsequently bought the steamboat, the purchase money could be held to be “amount of charter,” since an additional contract was necessary to its production. All such doubt, however, was resolved by the addition of the clause, “also on sale of steamer, when sold.” It is argued that the “narrow construction given * excludes the broker from all remuneration for his important services, except for the amount paid on account of the contract.” The important services rendered were twofold: First,
2. It is next contended that the “charter was at least ambiguous, and it was for the. jury to construe it in the light of all the evidence.” This assignment of error is based upon several exceptions to the charge, which, in one way or another, instructed the jury that the charter party did not contain any provision for the payment of commissions on insurance moneys. A single excerpt will be sufficient. The court, in response to a question by a juror, charged as follows:
“Suppose the plaintiff had come here, and put this charter party alone in evidence. That would not have sustained the plaintiff’s case. The plaintiff must have an agreement, outside of this charter party, providing for the payment of the five per cent, on the insurance money which he claims. While you are determining whether such an outside agreement was made, you will consider the charter party. You. may take into consideration what is recited in the charter party with reference to his commission, either for the plaintiff or against him, only you will put upon these words the interpretation that the court has, so far as this: That the court says those words mean that the plaintiff should have five per cent, on the amount of the charter and five per cent, on the amount received if the sale were consummated, and that they did not in any way imply or signify that he was to have five per cent, on insurance money.”
To this instruction plaintiff duly excepted.
We find no error here. There was no ambiguity or obscurity in the charter party; no such doubt as to its meaning as would require a resort to facts aliunde to insure a correct interpretation. The charter party was not a contract between the parties to this suit. It bound neither of them. Each side was entirely free to introduce evidence contradicting its express provisions, or supplementing them, or showing that it incorrectly expressed the true intention of the signers, or of either of them. Both sides availed of such privilege, and did examine witnesses who testified pro and con as to a contract to pay Holmes commission on the insurance money. The court submitted the question whether or not there was such a contract to the jury, instructing them that they had three classes of evidence which they should consider:
“First, the letters which passed between Mr. French, or other officers of the defendant, and this plaintiff; second, this charter party; third, the parol or oral conversation which happened at the office of the plaintiff on January 15, 1896, when this charter party was passed.”
The jury were left entirely free to find that there was an agreement to pay commission on the insurance money, although the charter party
“Where the effect of a written agreement collaterally introduced as evidence depends, not merely on the construction and meaning of the instrument, hut upon extrinsic facts and circumstances, the inferences of fact to be drawn from it must be left to the jury.”
In the case at bar the court construed the instrument, and instructed the jury as to its meaning, and then left it to them to find the inferences of fact to he drawn from the making and signing of that instrument, considered in connection with all the other evidence in the case.
3. It will not he necessary to review at length all the exceptions to refusals to charge as requested. They but present the question already discussed in different forms.
4. The exceptions to the charge may next be considered.
The court, charged:
“As the plaintiff must produce the greater weight of evidence, if your minds happen to be just even, that would show the evidence did not preponderate either way. TTnder those circumstances, it would he your duty, if you did not go beyond that point, to bring in a verdict for the defendant.”
Plaintiff duly excepted. He contends that (he burden was not upon the plaintiff, after it appeared he had rendered services and they had been accepted, to establish by a preponderance of evidence that he was to be paid for his services. No one, however, disputed an obligation to pay him 5 per cent, on the full amount of the charter, mid 5 per cent, on sale, when made. The point is too trivial to merit consideration. It is further contended that the jury were thus instructed that, if they stood six to six, they should bring in a verdict for defendant. The language used is open to that construction, although it is more likely to be understood as expressing the meaning intended to be conveyed, viz. that, if their minds reached no conclusion either way, their votes should be for defendant. The attention of the court should have been called to this particular ambiguity of expression, which would have been at once made clear. Probably this was not done because such delect was not then apparent to the mind of the exceptant. An exception to the entire clause was no doubt taken as claiming error in charging that plaintiff had the burden of proof. The second and eleventh exceptions cover a question of measure of damages, which need not he considered. The third covers that portion of the charge (quoted ante) as to the meaning of the charter party, which has been already discussed. The fourth exception is to so much of the charge as instructed the jury that they will find nothing in the correspondence that defendant agreed to pay 5 per cent, on the insurance money. As matter of fact, the correspondence contains
5. A few exceptions to the exclusion of evidence remain to be considered. Plaintiff had testified that after the loss of the vessel he had a conversation respecting his commission with' Mr. Cook, the president of the defendant. He was then asked, “What took place between you?” Upon objection, the court, stating .that the question was whether-a conversation with the president of the company after the loss occurred would be binding on the company, excluded the evidence “for the present.” At the time this ruling was made, it did not appear how long after the loss the conversation took place, nor that the president was present at the conversation at which it is contended the payment of the commission was assented to, nor that he had any express authority to make admissions as to past transactions, nor that it was any part of his duty so to do. In this state of the evidence, the broad question, calling for any and all statements made by the president in reference to plaintiff’s claim' for commissions, was properly excluded. Examination of the record on appeal in Hoag v. Lamont, 60 N. Y. 96, cited by plaintiff to sustain his exception, shows that the cases are in no respect parallel. Lamont, Waldridge, and Andrews were parties to a contract with plaintiff’s assignors whereby the latter were to sell the former’s product on commission, which commissions were guarantied to reach a fixed sum. Lamont, Waldridge, and Andrews subsequently formed a company (of which they became directors; Waldridge, president) to continue the manufacture. Plaintiff’s assignors called on Waldridge to ask, if their contract was assumed by the new corporation, and he told them it was, and that they should go on with the business as agents of the company, whereupon they rendered the services for which the action was brought. Exception was taken to the exclusion of a letter sent by the firm of Smith & Hicks to the president of the charterers, dated January 8, 1896, which stated that Smith was a director of defendant, and that the price of the Shelter Island was $50,000; also, some conversation in regard to the same which took place at the time the charter was executed. Neither had any bearing on the question whether or not there was an agreement to pay plaintiff commission on insurance moneys. Some evidence was also excluded as to a conversation between the president of the Key West Company and the captain of the Shelter Island while on her way South, indicative- of a desire to exercise the option to purchase. It was immaterial. The option never was exercised, nor the sale effected, and the state of mind of the Key West Company subsequent to the execution of the charter party could throw no possible light upon the agreement entered into between plaintiff and- defendant at or prior to such execution. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Reference
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- HOLMES v. MONTAUK STEAMBOAT CO., Limited
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