WORTHINGTON v. BEEMAN. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit. January 8, 1899.) No. 496.
1. TRY.
OF JUDGMENT .:.... SEPARATE JuDGMENTS IN SAME EN-
Where there are two or more counts In a, declaratlonalleging distinctly dUferent causes of actlon, there maY be more than one final judgment on w,rlts of error may be taken, and the fact that. such distinct judgmellts are contained In the same entry, and that one In favor of the plaintiff on one count has been satisfied, w1ll not prevent his maintaining a . writ of error to review another In favor of defendant 'on differeet counts to which demurrers were sustained. '. Sl. SAME-WAIVER OF RWlIT-SATISFACTrONOF JUDGMENT.
A; plaintiff, by receiving payment and satisfaction' of a judgment In his favor on. one count of his declaration, doeS not waive his right to review on error a:' separate judgment against him, though contained In the same entry and rendered In the same case, but on different counts of the declaratlonplellding a separate and distinct :cause of action. A. though too uncertain In its terms to be specifically enforced In eqUity, may still be'tl:1.e basis of a remedy at law in favor of a party who has performed either Wholly or partially.
I.
CONTftAqT-UtmERTAINTy-SUFFICIENCYTO SUPPORT ACTION.
"
SAME.
A written contract by which defendant gave plaintiff the exclusive sale ofl'j. manufactured In a certain territory during a specified term, and which provided that In case plaintiff succ('!eded In doing such a business as defendant· might "reasonably expect" it should be renewed for a further term, Is not so indefinite or uncertain In its terms that it w1ll not suppo!:'t an action for damages for a refusal Of defendant to renew at the of the first term, the amount of business which defendant could reasonably expect being a matter which may pl"Qperly and with sufficlentcertalnty be determined bya jury, to which tribunal the parties by their contract In effect referred It In case of .thelr disagreement.
. In E:rror to the Circuit Oourt of the United States for the Northern Districfof TIlinois, Northern Division.. This action was brought by Edward E. Worthington, the plaintiff In error, against E. llJ...Beeman, the defendant In error, and others not served with process, Who, it Is alleged, had been partners In business. at Cleveland, Ohio, under the firm name Beeman Chemical Company, in the manufacture and sale of pepsin gum, and on November 18, 1890, had made to the plalntifr In error /l written proposition, which he accepted, to give him the exclusive sale of their products In. Chicago, on conditions stated, with a stipulation for renewal in the following words: "This agreement to continue to January 1,1892, It being understood that you are to push the sale of these goods and do all you can to further our Interests, and, should you succeed In doing stich a business as we may reasonably expect, then this agreement shall be renewed for two years more." On December 29, 1800, a second agreement was made, Whereby the plaIntiff In error was given a 1Il,e agency. for one year In territory outside of Chicago. The plaintiff was denied a renewal of the contract of November 18, 1890, and brought the action to recover damages on that account, and also to recover commissions earned and expenses incurred under both contracts while In force. The declaration contains common counts, on which the plaintiff recovered judgment for $700 for .commlsslons and expenses, and special counts for damages on account of the refusal to renew. To these counts demurrers on the general ground of insufficiency were filed, Which. the court sustained. This ruling was made on NovembE'r 2, 1896, and on the ensuing 13th by a written stipulation of the parties a jury was waived. and the cause . was "submltted to the court to be tried on the undisposed-of counts in the
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plaintiff's declaration, being the common counts and the general Issue by defendant." On the same day a trIal was had, and the following entry made of the finding and judgment: "Now, on tbis day come again the plaintiff and the defendant, E. E. Beeman, by their respective attorneys, and a jury is waived and the cause submitted to the court by their stipulation In writing, to be tried upon the common counts, and the court, upon the Issue raised as to wbat amount, if any, the plaIntiff is entitled to recover against said defendant under said common counts, nnds the Issue for the plaintiff, and assesses hIs damages at seven hundred dollars, for which sum judgment is entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, E. E. Beeman, which judgment, having been paid in open court, is now satisfied; and the court, upon the demurrers to the amended counts of plaintiff's declaration, which demurrers have been heretofore sustained, doth give judgment thereon in favor of the defendant, together with his costs, to whIch judgment In favor of said defendant and against the said plaintiff upon the said demurrers the plaintiff excepts." Error has been assigned upon the sustaining of the demurrers to the special counts of the declaration, and to the entering of judgment In favor of the defendant against the plaIntiff upon the demurrer to the special counts of the declaration. A motion has been made to dismiss the writ of error on the two grounds that an inspection of the record shows that the judgment for which the writ Is prosecuted has been satisfied of record, and that the plaintiff In error, by electing to take the benefit of the judgment by receiving the sum adjudged In his favor, released any error In the rendition of the judgment. On the question whether the stipUlation for the renewal of the contract was binding or was too indefinite to be enforced, the discussion has been elaborate, and numerous authorities have been cited. By the plaintiff In error: Fry, Spec. Perf. (3d Ed.) § 361; Joy v. City of St. Louis, 138 U. S. 1, 11 Sup. Ct 243; Parker v. Pettit. 43 N'. .T. Law, 512; Hawkins v. Graham, 149 :\1ass. 284, 21 N. E. 312; Manufacturing Co. v. Brush, 43 Vt. 528; Daggett v. Johnson. 49 Vt. 345; Folliard v. Wallace, 2 Johns. 396; Boller Co. v. Garden. 101 N. Y. 387, 4 N. E. 749; Doll v. Noble (N. Y. App.) 22 N. E. 406; Railroad Co. v. Brydon, 65 Md. 198, 3 Atl. 306; Lynn v. Railroad Co., 60 Md. 404; Ex parte White, 14 Q. B. Dlv. 600; Ex parte Mortimore, 3 De Gex, F. & J. 599; Edgeworth v. Edgeworth. Beat. 328. By the defendant In error: Bish. Cont. p. 120, § 316; 1 Hil. Cont. p. 312, § 11; Pray v. Clark, 113 Mass. 283; Taylor v. Portington, 7 De Gex, M. & G. 328; Davie v. Mining Co., 93 Mich. 492, 53 N. W. 625; Cnmmer v. Butts, 40 Mich. 322; Cooper v. Hood, 26 Beav. 293; Ta3,lor v. Brewer, 1 Maule & S. 290; Gray v. Wulff, 68 Ill. App. 376-
John S. Cooper, for plaintiff in error. I. K. Boyesen, for defendant in error. Before WOODS, JENKINS, and SHOWALTER, Circuit Judges. WOODS, Circuit Judge, after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court. It is urged in behalf of the defendant in error that a judgmept at law is an entirety, and therefore a release or satisfaction of record extinguishes every cause of action embraced within it. N() case showing an application of the doctrine has been cited. Evidently it is not applicable here. When there are two or more counts in a declaration, alleging distinctly different causes of action, it is apparent that there may be, if the court so pleases, and in conceivable cases perhaps inevitably, more than one final judgment on which a writ of error may be taken. When in fact such distinct judgments are rendered, it cannot be material whether they are shown by separate entries, or one after the other in a single entry. The action in this case was up()n two causes, to one ofwhich the common counts were appropriate, and to the other only special counts. The demurrers to the special counts having been sustained, a trial, limited by express agreement to
234
91 FEDERAL REPORTER.
issue joined on the common counts, was had before the court without a jury. On that issue the court made a finding, and gave in favor of the plaintiff a judgment for the amount found due him, but without costs,-which, though not assigned, is manifest error. That judgment, as the entry shows, having been paid in open court, was declared satisfied, and thereupon the court proceeded· to give judgment on the special counts "in favor of the defendant, together with his costs,"that is to say, if there was but a single or entire judgment, his costs in the entire case,-which also would be manifest error. But the judgment of the plaintiff having been satisfied of record before the entry of that for the defendant, if it must be said that the entry shows but one judgment it is that in favor of the defendant, as if none had been given for the plaintiff. To say, however, that the entry contains only a single judgment, is simply to confuse terms. If the judgment in favor of the plaintiff, though at once satisfied of record, should nevertheless be deemed to have remained in force as an adjudication of the issue upon which it was rendered, it was plainly a separate and distinct judgment from the one in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff, rendered upon different isslies and for a different cause of action. If the court had postponed to another day or to another term the entry of the second judgment, the distinction would not be more clear. This disposes of the second ground of the motion, and it follows that the first ground is not tenable. By receiving satisfaction of the judgment in his favor the plaintiff did not waive the right to seek a review of the later separate and independent judgment against him. The rule is not questioned that a party who has taken advantage of a judgment or decree may not afterwards question its validity, but a party cannot on principle be estopped from seeking to be relieved of a part of a decree or judgment at law because he has taken advantage of another independent part, which in no manner affects or is affected by the part which he would question. The reversal of the.judgment on the demurrers in this case could in no manner affect the right of the plaintiff in error to retain the money received in satisfaction of the judgment on the common counts, and his receipt of that money should be no obstacle to his bringing the judgment on demurrer under review. In considering whether the ruling on the demurrer was right, it is to be remembered that a contract too uncertain to be specifically enforced in equity may be the basis for a remedy at law in favor of a party who has wholly or partially performed the contract. It is shown by specific allegations in each of the special counts of the declaration that the plaintiff had performed every obligation or undertaking on his part, "and had succeeded in doing such a business in that behalf as said defendants might or could reasonably expect," or, as it is stated in one of the counts, "such a business as said defendants then and there reasonably expected said plaintiff to have done in that behalf." If these are good averments (and the contrary has not been suggested), the defendants by demurring admitted that the business done by the plaintiff was such as they could Qr might and did reasonably expect. With this admission there is no reason for indulging in doubt or speculation how, if issue were joined, proof could be made of the performance of such an agreement. It can hardly be conceded,
WORTHlNGTON V. BEEMAN.
235
however, that on such an issue there ought to be sufficient evidence to enable the court or jury to determine "definitely" what was a reasonable expectation. The use of the word "reasonable" indicates an intention that if a dispute on the point should arise it should be determined by a standard outside of the minds of the contracting parties, according to the judgment of a court and jury upon the facts and circumstances proved. If upon that issue when joined the plaintiff, having the burden of proof, cannot produce the evidence necessary to enable the jury to find a verdict in his favor, he must fail as do others who bring actions without evidence to sustain them. In two of the paragraphs of this declaration it is alleged that the refusal of the defendants to renew the contract was for the dishon· est and fraudulent purpose of depriving the plaintiff of the large commissions and profits which would have come to him during the additional time stipulated; and in another count it is also alleged that the defendants had frequently acknowledged by letter their satisfaction with the business done by the plaintiff. These averments perhaps add nothing to the essential force of the declaration, but they afford ground for the suggestion that the proof of the plaiptiff's case might be satisfactorily and conclusively made by the production of such let· . ters or by other evidence of admissions. If it can be shown, by admissions or otherwise, that the business done by the plaintiff was not only equal to reasonable expectation, but so much greater than was expected that the defendant and his associates were unwilling that the plaintiff should have the profits of a renewal of the contract, is it nevertheless to be said that the contract is invalid because so indefinite that the court cannot find on its face what the parties meant by "reasonable expectation"? A contract, equally indefinite, to sell all the rye straw which the vendor "had to spare," not exceeding three tons, was held in Parker v. Pettit, 43 N. J. Law, 512, not to be void for uncertainty, the court saying that, "if there WIUl no other satisfactory evidence on the subject, the quantity of straw the defendant had sold (to third after the contract with the plaintiff was made was competent evidence of the quantity he had to spare." But, if the contract was void when made, the subsequent sale of straw by the vendor could not have given it validity. There is, of course, no enforceable obligation when by the terms of a writing, in the form of a contract, either party is not to be bound unless or until he is satisfied, and he alone is to be the judge of his satisfaction; but there are cases where, upon the entire instrument and in view of the circumstances, the courts have said the word "satisfactory" should be construed to mean reasonably satisfactory, and so have held the contract binding, on the ground, manifestly, that what is reasonable may determined by a jury, and is not referable to the whim or judgment of an 'interested party. In Hawkins v. Graham, 149 Mass. 284, 21 N. E. 312, the contract was for a system of heating in a mill, and it was stipulated that, "in the event of the system proving satisfactory, and conforming with all the requirements" of the contract, payment should be made; and payment was adjudged, the court saying: "When the consideration furnished is of such a nature that its value will be lost to the plaintiff either wholly or in great part unless paid for, a just
91 ;FEDERAL' REPORTER.
hesitation,miust be' felt, and clear 'language rel1uired, before deciding that payment is left to the, will, 01' even to the idiosyncrasies, of the interested party. In doubtful cases courts have been inclined to con· strue agreements of this class as agreements to do the thing in such a way as reasonably ought to satisfy the defendant." And so, in Daggett v..Johnson, 49 Vt. 345, the defendants had agreed to pay for milk pans ordered, "if satisfied with the pans," and it was held "that the defendant had no right to say, arbitrarily and without cause, that he was dissatisfied, and would not pay for the pans. * *. * He must act honestly, and in accordance with the reasonable expectation of the seller, as implied from the contract, its subject-matter, and surrounding circumstances." The word "reasonable," which in these cases the courts imported for the purpose of expressing the intent of the parties to the contracts there considered, was not left to implicati<in in this instance, but was written in the contract, presumably upon the deliberate choice of the parties for the purpose of expressing more clearly their intention. In Joy v.City of St. Lonis, ,138 U. S. 1, 11 Sup. Ct. 243, the suit was to compel' specific performance of a contract of which the ninth clause was as follows: "Said party of the . second part shall permit, under such reasonable regulations and terms as'may be agreed upon,' other railroads to use its right of way through the park and up to the terminus 'of its road in the city of St. Louis, upon such terms and for such fair and equitable compensation to be paid to it therefor as may be agreed upon by such companies." In the course of the opinion (page 43, 138 U. S., and page 255, 11 Sup. Ct.) it is said: "although the statement is that the compensation is to be such 'as maybe a'gI'eed upon by such companies,t yet the statement that it is to be 'fair and equitable' plainly brings in the element of its determination by a court of equity. If the parties agree' to it, very well; but if they do not,still the right of way is to be enjoj7ed upon making compensation, and the only way to ascertain what isa 'fair and equicompensation therefor is to determine it by It court of equity. Snch is, in substance, the agreement of the' parties." If by such an agreement it was brought within the determination o,f the court to say what was fair and equitable, this contract brings it within the province of a jury, if the issue of fact be joined, to determine what was such a business as the defendant in error and his associates could and did reasonably·· expect. ·The courts are constantly' engaged in determining what under the circumstances was reasonable, what was rea· sonablecare, reasonable diligence, reasonable certainty, reasonable notice, reasonable cause,reasonable doubt, reasonable time, and the like, and no convincing reason is perceived why under a contract like this the courts Should refuse to inquire or shrink from determining what was a reasonable expectation. That that might be done was, in substance, the contract of the parties, and by enforcing the agre'ement on that basis, however difficult the inquiry may prove to be, the court does not make for them a contract which they did p.ot make for them· selves. The judgment is reversed, with direction to overrule the demurrer to each of the special counts of the declaration. SHOWALTER, Circuit Judge, did not participate in this decision.
LEA V. GEORGE M. WEST CO.
237
LEA et aI. v. GEORGE M. WEST CO. (District Court, E. D. Virginia. January 10, 1899.)
1.
BANKRUPTCy-AcTS OF BA:lrKRUPTCy-ASSIONMENT FOR CREDITORS.
Under Bankruptcy Act 18gS, § 3, providing that it shall be an aet of bankruptcy if a person shall have "made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors," it is no defense to an involuntary petition, alleging . such an assignment as an act of bankruptcy, that the debtor was solvent at the time of the assignment. Where a corporation has made a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors, and a state court, on a bill in equity, has appointed the assignee a.s receiver to take charge of the assigned estate and wind up the affairs of the assignor, and the corporation is afterwards adjudged bankrupt, jurisdiction to administer and distribute the entire estate of the bankrupt belongs to the court of bankruptcy, to tb,e exclusion of the state court, and the former court may enjoin all parties from further proceedings in the latter court.
2.
SAMlI-PROPERTY IN POSSESSION OF RECEIVER OF STATE COURT.
In Bankruptcy. On the 12th day of December, 1898, the defendant company caused to be admitted to record in the chancery court of the city of Richmond a general deed' of assignment to Joseph V. Bidgood, trustee, conveying to him all its property, estate, and effects for the payment of its creditors, without preference, except as allowed under the laws of the state of Virginia. On the same day certain creditors, secured in said general assignment, filed a bill In equity In the law and equity court of the city of Richmond to administer the trust, and the said court appointed the trustee named in the said assignment as receiver to take charge of and wind up the affairs of the said company. On this same day, also, a petition for adjudication in bankruptcy was filed in the clerk's office of the district court of the United States for the Eastern district of. Virginia, and process duly awarded against the said George M. West Company and said trustee to show cause why the said company should not be adjudged bankrupt. The process was duly executed, returnable on the 17th 0:1' December, 1898. The said George M. West Company appeared and filed Its plea, alleging its solvency, which plea the petitioners moved to reject; and the petitioners filed a further p'etition, alleging the' prosecution of. said suit in the law and equity court of Richmond, and asking that the s3.id parties be enjoined from further proceeding in the sillte court, and that the fund in the cause be brought into the bankrupt court. The defendant company answered this last-named petition, and insisted that the bankrupt court was without power. to interrupt the law and equity court of Richmond in the due administration of the trust fund, notWithstanding the adjudication of bankruptcy, and that the state, and not the federal, court alone had power to administer the trust.
Dawson & Seaton, for petitioners. William Wirt Henry and E. Randolph Williams, for defendant. WA.DDILL, District Judge (after stating the facts as above). The pleadings in this case present two questions for the consideration of the court: First. Whether a general assignment for the benefit of creditors constitutes an act of bankruptcy; and, second, if an act of bankruptcy, what effect the action of the state court appointing a receiver to administer the trust under the deed of assignment should have in the administration of the trust estate,-that is to say, whether. the state or bankrupt court should, after the adjudication of bankruptcy, . administer the trust estate.