Judges: Burke
Filed Date: 4/10/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The amended declaration upon which this case was tried alleged that since the year 1886 the plaintiff had been a dealer in imported and domestic bottles, demijohns, etc.; that the defendant, the Cumberland Glass Manufacturing Company, a foreign corporation, was engaged in the manufacture of glass bottles, window glass, etc., and conducted its factory at Bridgton, in the State of New Jersey; that it complied with the requirements of the laws of this State which permit foreign corporations to transact business here, and that it was in fact doing business here. It further *Page 386 alleged that on February 8th, 1906, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the Mallard Distilling Company of New York to supply them with one thousand gross of half-pint lettered gin flasks, eight ounce capacity, at the price of two dollars and forty cents per gross, and that on or about the same date did verbally enter into an additional contract with said company for another one thousand gross of bottles at two dollars and forty cents per gross, which bottles were to be made identical in every respect with those specified in the written contract. It then alleged "that the Cumberland Glass Manufacturing Company did, with knowledge of the existing contract, on or about the 15th day of February, 1906, by and through the medium of their agents, visit the said Mallard Distilling Company, and maliciously and without just cause, with the intent to injure the plaintiff and to derive a benefit for itself, cause, induce and procure the said Mallard Distilling Company to rescind, break and violate their contracts" with the plaintiff. It further alleged that at the time the Mallard Distilling Company broke its contracts the plaintiff charged the defendant with having interfered with and caused the Mallard Company to break the contracts; that the defendant denied that it had in any way interfered with the contracts, or had procured, or caused the same to be broken; that the plaintiff was unable to procure sufficient proof against the defendant of its violation of duty, and that the proof of the facts was not known or exhibited to him until the latter part of the year 1909, but was fraudulently concealed and withheld by the defendant.
The defendant interposed three pleas — first, that it did not commit the wrong alleged; secondly, limitations; thirdly, resadjudicata, based upon certain proceedings had in the United States District Court for Maryland, and particularly set out in the pleas. The plaintiff joined issue upon the first plea, and demurred to the second and third. The demurrer was overruled as to the second plea — limitations *Page 387 — and sustained as to the third plea — res adjudicata. The plaintiff replied to the plea of limitations, and, upon demurrer, the replication was held bad. He then filed an amended replication in these words: "That the said cause of action did accrue within three years prior to the filing of the said suit, inasmuch as the said Cumberland Glass Manufacturing Company, the defendant in the said cause, did fraudulently keep the plaintiff in ignorance of the said cause of action by fraudulently, deceitfully and dishonestly denying that it had in any way been guilty of any of the acts alleged in the said cause of action as set out in the amended declaration of the plaintiff, although the plaintiff did charge the defendant with the same upon the first of March, in the year 1906; and the said facts did not come to the knowledge of the said plaintiff until the latter part of the year 1909, although he had used ordinary diligence to discover the same." The defendant demurred to this replication and its demurrer being overruled, filed a rejoinder upon which issue was joined. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.
The first question presented for consideration is the legal sufficiency of the declaration. This question is raised by the plaintiff's demurrer to the second and third pleas to the amendednarr. and by the defendant's second prayer, which refers to the pleadings, presented at the close of the case. The declaration is said to be bad for three reasons — first, because it contains no allegation that the plaintiff was able and willing to carry out his contracts with the Mallard Distilling Company; secondly, for duplicity, since it contains two complete, separate and independent causes of action in one count; thirdly, because one of the contracts was unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds, and the declaration does not allege that but for the defendant's interference the Mallard Company would have carried out this contract, and would not have relied upon the defense of the statute. *Page 388
The first and second grounds of objection rest upon the doctrine declared in Dimmick v. Hendley,
We also hold that the amended replication to the plea of limitations was good. It is provided by Article 57, § 14, Code of 1912, that in "all actions where a party has a cause of action of which he has been kept in ignorance by the fraud of the adverse party, the right to bring suit shall be deemed to have first accrued at the time at which such fraud shall or with usual and ordinary diligence might have been known or discovered." The language of the replication sets out facts which avoid the plea. If the defendant did in 1906 wrongfully cause the Mallard Company to break its contracts, and the plaintiff was kept in ignorance of his rights by the false statements of the defendant, as the replication alleges, there would seem to be no doubt that he is entitled to rely upon the statute to defeat the plea of limitations. This brings us to a consideration of the exceptions. The first exception presents no question for decision. Rule 25 of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, in which this case was tried, provides that: "Exceptions to the execution and return of a commission shall be made before the jury is sworn in the case, otherwise it shall be considered as waived." The record shows that the counsel for the defendant stated to the Court before the jury was sworn that he wanted to give notice to the plaintiff that the defendant would "at the proper time object to the depositions of a certain witness, Frist, which had been taken in the case;" but he filed no exceptions until after the jury was sworn and after the plaintiff had been examined, and, therefore, under the rule quoted exceptions as to the execution and return of the commission were waived. In the second exception it appears that the plaintiff's counsel offered to show the counsel for the defendant a letter written by the plaintiff to the Mallard Distilling Company. The defendant's counsel objected, but the letter was not offered in evidence. It is difficult to see how the defendant could have been injured by this ruling. The third and fourth exceptions may be considered together. On the 8th of February, 1906, the *Page 390 plaintiff sent to the Mallard Distilling Company the following letter:
"February 8th, 1906 Mallard Distilling Co., New York.
Gentlemen:
We have entered your order for (1000) one thousand gross half-pint lettered gin flasks, eight ounce weight and eight ounce capacity, same as before.
We are to make these flasks at once, and you are to take two (2) cars not later than July 31st, 1906, and you are to take two remaining cars not later than July 31st, 1907.
Price to be $2.40 per gross f.o.b. New York, packed in crates of one gross each. Terms 30 days or 2% for cash in ten days. Guaranteed first-class flint ware. Breakage not to exceed 2%.
Yours truly, CHAS. DeWITT Co.
Accepted:
Mallard Distilling Co. (rubber-stamped) Chas. M. Kohn, (written in ink) Sec'y. Treas. (rubber stamped)"
It is shown that Charles M. Kohn was the secretary, treasurer and manager of the Mallard Distilling Company. The third exception was taken to the introduction in evidence of an admission of Mr. Kohn that he had signed the acceptance endorsed on the above letter, and the fourth exception was to the admission of the contract in evidence. This contract was alleged in the narr., and is one of the contracts which it is alleged was caused to be broken by the Mallard Company by reason of the unlawful interference of the defendant, and the plaintiff had a right to prove the existence of this contract. There was no error in these rulings. What we have just said also applies to the fifth exception. There is nothing to show what testimony was objected to, or what questions the Court passed upon in the sixth and seventh exceptions, and, therefore, we can not review its action. The eighth exception *Page 391 relates to the refusal of the Court to strike out an answer of the plaintiff. Part of this answer was proper, bearing upon the issue of limitations, and the motion being to strike out the whole answer, it was properly overruled. There was no error in the ruling on the ninth exception. This exception was taken to the ruling of the Court in permitting oral proof of the contents of a letter, which had been destroyed, written by John F. Perry, the sales-manager of the defendant company, to Robert B. Frist, one of its salesmen. This letter will presently be referred to. Sufficient foundation was laid for the admission of oral testimony to prove its contents. The Court in the tenth exception refused to allow the plaintiff to answer a question as to whether he had made any defense to a petition filed against him in bankruptcy. This was a wholly immaterial inquiry. But subsequently the proceedings in bankruptcy were put in evidence, and must have shown what, if any defense, the plaintiff made. There was no error in the 11th exception. The exception was made too late under the rules of Court above referred to. The twelfth to the fortieth exceptions inclusive all relate to certain questions propounded to Robert B. Frist and his answers thereto appearing in his deposition taken under a commission. Without discussing these exceptions separately, our conclusion is that we find no reversible error in any of the rulings.
At the conclusion of the whole case the plaintiff submitted two prayers which were granted. The Court also granted the defendant's fifth and sixth prayers. The Reporter will set out the granted prayers in the report of the case. The defendant's first and second prayers ask the Court to direct a verdict for the defendant: first, because the plaintiff had offered no legally sufficient proof to entitle him to recover; and secondly, because under the pleadings there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to entitle him to recover; and the defendant's third and fourth prayers ask that the case be withdrawn from the jury; first, because, there was no legally sufficient evidence to support the plaintiff's replication *Page 392 to the defendant's plea of limitation; and secondly, because under the pleadings there was no legally sufficient evidence to establish the allegations of that replication.
Since the decisions of this Court in Knickerbocker IceCompany v. Gardiner Dairy Co.,
It has been affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States in Angle v. Chicago, etc., R.R. Co.,
Malice in this form of action does not mean actual malice, or ill will, but consists in the intentional doing of a wrongful act without legal justification or excuse. In South Wales Miners'Federation v. Glamorgan Coal Company, supra, LORD LINDLEY said: "Bearing in mind that malice may or may not be used to denote ill will, and that in legal language presumptive or implied malice is distinguishable from express malice, it conduces to clearness in discussing such cases as these to drop the word "malice" altogether, and to substitute for it the meaning which is really intended to be conveyed by it. Its use may be necessary in drawing indictments, but when all that is meant by malice is an intention to commit an unlawful act without reference to spite or ill *Page 393 will, it is better to drop the word malice and so avoid all misunderstanding." The same principle was announced inKnickerbocker Ice Company Case, supra, in which JUDGE BOYD said: "Although many of the cases speak of the act as being maliciously done, it would seem to be clear that express malice is not necessary if the act is wrongful and unjustifiable."
Turning now to an examination of the facts appearing in the record, we find evidence tending to establish the contracts between the plaintiff and the Mallard Distilling Company. Did the defendant know of these contracts, and did it intentionally cause the Mallard Company to break them? These are questions of fact. It is not the province of this Court to decide these questions. We are merely to determine whether the plaintiff offered evidence from which the jury might have reasonably found that the defendant had this knowledge and that it intentionally procured their cancellation. In our opinion the evidence of the plaintiff and that of Robert B. Frist and Charles M. Kohn was abundantly sufficient to have carried the case to the jury upon these questions. This evidence is uncontradicted, and tends to show that the defendant acquired knowledge of these contracts through Arthur MacLellan, its agent in Baltimore, and that it intentionally deprived the plaintiff of the fruits of the contracts by offering the Mallard Company lower prices on the flasks. This was done by John F. Perry acting through the agency of Robert B. Frist one of the defendant's salesmen. The flask which the defendant was to furnish under his contracts was a special proprietary mold, half pint bottle, with this lettering: "Mallard Distilling Company, Baltimore and New York, patent applied for". On the eighth or ninth of February, 1906, Arthur MacLellan, the local agent of the defendant in Baltimore, came into the plaintiff's office. One of these bottles was laying upon the desk in the office. MacLellan picked up the flask, and was told by the plaintiff of his contract for two thousand gross. MacLellan *Page 394 asked that the defendant might be permitted to submit a price, and requested the plaintiff to mail the flask to the defendant, and that he would write, saying that he could get a good price. The plaintiff did mail the flask to the defendant and it was received by it, and four days after the flask had been sent the Mallard Company cancelled the contract.
John F. Perry wrote to Frist as follows: "DeWitt, Baltimore, mails us a Mallard Distilling Company flask. Go and take the business away from them. You have the price." The flask which the plaintiff had mailed was delivered by Perry to Frist at Bridgton on February 10th, 1906, with directions from Perry to get the order from the Mallard Company, "and if possible to procure it, using a lower price than he thought DeWitt would be able to quote and make a profit." When the flask was delivered to Frist by Perry the name of the Mallard Company, which had been blown into the bottle, was concealed by a paper label pasted upon it which stated that the bottle had been filled with gin at sometime by the Mallard Company. Unless, therefore, the defendant had a legal excuse or justification for its act, the plaintiff was entitled to recover; provided, the evidence supported the allegation of the replication to the plea of limitations.
Now, what is the justification upon which the defendant relies to exonerate itself from responsibility? It is the right of competition in trade. It asserts this proposition that the right of competition justifies a defendant in knowingly and deliberately, for its own benefit or advantage, inducing the breach of a contract by offering lower prices. No case has been cited to support this contention. Counsel for appellant have cited a number of cases bearing upon the right of competition in trade or business. But this is altogether different from the right which one has to be protected from interference with his rights under existing contracts. There is a wide distinction between the two classes of cases, and they are governed by distinct rules of law. The principles applicable to the first class are stated in Klingle's Pharmacy *Page 395
v. Sharp Dohme,
In the last cited case it was said "that the procuring of people to break their contracts" is an unlawful act. In his opinion in that case LORD MORRIS said: "All the acts done, and the means used, by the defendant were acts of competition for trade. There was nothing in the defendants acts to disturb any existing contract of the plaintiffs, or to induce any one to break such." In discussing the right of competition in Walker
v. Cronin,
We, therefore, hold that the right to compete furnished no justification to the defendant in this case.
We also hold that the evidence was legally sufficient to be considered by the jury on the issue raised upon the plea of limitation. The plaintiff suspected that the contracts with the Mallard Company had been cancelled through the act of the defendant, and it made an effort to ascertain that fact. The Mallard Company declined to give him any information, and John F. Perry deliberately misled him, and except for the information derived from Frist in the fall of 1909 it is doubtful if he ever would have been able to connect the defendant with the violation of his contracts. The defendant got the full benefit under the general issue plea of all the facts set out in its third plea, and no harm resulted to it in sustaining the demurrer to that plea.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, the appellant to pay the costs above andbelow. *Page 396
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