DocketNumber: No. 5,273
Judges: Robinsow
Filed Date: 5/23/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
Suit for goods sold and delivered to appellee. Overruling a demurrer to the third paragraph of appellee’s answer, the first and second paragraphs having been withdrawn, and sustaining a demurrer to appellant’s reply, are assigned as errors.
The third paragraph of answer avers that appellee was a broker engaged in buying and selling handles,for others; that the contract out of which the cause of action arises is in writing, and evidenced by letters between the- parties, which letters are made exhibits; that appellee did not purchase of appellant any goods, but sold for it, to a New York firm, the goods sued for, at the price stated in such letters, appellee to receive five per cent.'commission for his services as a broker in making the sale; and that appellant is indebted to appellee in a sum named for such commission. In the first of these letters, written by appellee November 15, 1901, he asks if appellant can furnish “750 doz. No. 3-36 pick handles,” and, if so, to quote “best price f. o. b. New York.” Appellant answered November 18, by saying they could furnish the handles and put them in New York for appellee at fifty cents per dozen, sixty days, less two per cent, off for cash. Appellee replied November 21, that the price quoted is “the figure we get for them, and we would not care- to handle the business unless we could make a little something out of it. If you can see- your way clear to allow us a commission of five per cent., you may go to work at once and finish the handles, crate them ready to ship, and we will send you shipping instructions.” On November 23 appellant wrote: “We will ship the car of No. 3 pick at fifty cents per dozen, f. o. b. New York, and allow you five
The letters forming the contract between the parties must be construed in connection with the allegation in the answer, which the demurrer admits to be true, that appellee was a broker engaged in buying and selling handles for other parties. The letters contain some evidences of a sale of tire goods to appellee, but, construing the pleading with the exhibits, it appears that appellee was an agent for the sale of the goods. Appellee’s first inquiry asks for quotation of prices delivered at New York City, not at appellee’s place of business at Charleston, West Virginia. Appellant’s answer gives a price and terms of payment. It would seem that appellee, even if he had thought of buying the handles when he first wrote, abandoned that intention when he received the prices, as he then wrote that the price named was all he could get out of them, and he then states “if you can see your way clear to allow us a commission of five per cent., you may go to work at once and finish the handles.” A sale to appellee does not seem to have been contemplated by appellant when it wrote, in answer to this proposition,
Correspondence between the parties subsequent to the shipment of the goods, and set out in the reply, contains some evidence that at that time the parties construed the contract as one of sale; but this correspondence contains some evidence also that appellant was looking to the parties to whom the goods were shipped for pay for the goods. And, tailing this subsequent correspondence as a whole, we do not think it can be said that it qualified the terms of the original contract under which the goods were shipped, which the original correspondence shows to be a brokerage contract, and not a contract of sale. It is quite time that where all the elements of a sale exist it can not be made anything else by calling it a different name, but the intention of the parties must be determined from the language used at the time they made the contract. As the construction given the eon-
Judgment affirmed.