Court Opinion

ID: 4935674
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:14:50.78616+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:40.286316
License: Public Domain

Emery, J.
The jury has found that the defendant (living in Boston, but owning ice on the Kennebec river) employed the plaintiff, an ice broker at Gardiner, to sell his ice, 5,000 tons *367more or less, for one dollar and twenty-five cents per ton, at a five per cent commission : and that the plaintiff sent to the defendant a customer, who bought the ice directly from the defendant at that price. Nothing more appearing, the plaintiff would be entitled to retain the verdict in his favor for the amount of his commissions. But the defendant contends that the evidence also shows that the plaintiff failed in one important particular to fulfill the obligations due from a broker to his principal. If any such omission of his duty as a broker does appear, then he is not entitled to any commissions, however much he may have labored in the premises.
The evidence, especially the plaintiff’s testimony, letters and telegrams, establish the following facts, even against the verdict of a jury. The employment was August 19, 1892. The minimum price fixed by the principal was one dollar and twenty-five cents per ton. The plaintiff, as broker, undertook to sell the ice at that, or a better price. August 23rd, four days after his employment, he wrote to his principal that he did not know of any ice being sold for more than one dollar per ton, — that it would be hard to get more than one dollar, that the principal would lose a sale if he asked more. August 29, he wired his principal offering one dollar per ton, and advised him to sell at that price. August 30, he wrote a letter to the same effect. August 31, having received from his principal a telegram declining to sell at one dollar, he wrote that he had just bought four thousand tons at one dollar, and asked for defendant’s lowest price. In the meantime, he had been buying ice for Morse & Co., ice dealers, and expected they would eventually take this ice. September 2, he ascertained definitely that Morse & Co. wanted and would take the ice at one dollar and twenty-five cents per ton, if they could not get it for less. On that day, with his knowledge and concurrence, Morse & Co. wired their Boston partner to get from the defendant a refusal of this ice for twenty-four hours, at the lowest possible price. This Boston partner of Morse & Co. interviewed the defendant in Boston, and, after vainly trying to get the ice at a less price, finally bought it at the original price, one dollar a nd twenty-five cents. The plaintiff, *368in sending Morse & Co. to his principal, did not apprise his principal of what he kneAv, viz : that Morse & Co. Avere going to the principal direct, resolved and prepared to pay the one dollar and twenty-five cents if they could not get it for less.
To leave his principal in ignorance of this important fact, after so persistently assuring him that the ice would not sell for ewer a dollar, was the patent omission of a plain duty. It was a manifest breach of that entire good faith and loyalty due from a broker to his principal, and by that breach the plaintiff has forfeited all right to any commissions. It does not relieve the plaintiff that the defendant finally got his price. He got it by his own persistence and in spite of the disloyalty of his broker. That the plaintiff has forfeited his commissions needs no argument. The mere statement of the facts should be enough. If authorities are desired, see Pratt v. Patterson, 112 Pa. St. 475; Martin v. Bliss, 57 Hun, 157; Henderson v. Vincent, 84 Ala. 99,

Motion sustained. Verdict set aside.