The Canadian owner of a British ship of a Canadian port made a
contract in New York with W, a citizen of that state, authorizing
him to offer the vessel for a specified price and agreeing to pay
him a specified commission for securing a purchaser. W introduced
purchasers with whom the owner agreed for a charter and sale at
that price, the ship to be delivered and the price paid at New
York, but, it subsequently appearing that the owner was bound by
contract with, and regulations of, the British government not to
sell without that government's consent, which could not be
obtained, the contract of sale was rescinded.
Held, that
W's contract, made without reference to nationality or location of
the ship or to foreign law, was governed by, and valid under, the
law of New York, and that the owner's disability to consummate the
transaction was not a defense to W's action for his commission,
even if, under the British law, the contract of sale was void. P.
260 U. S.
203.
272 F. 56 affirmed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the circuit court of appeals which
affirmed a recovery by the respondent in his action against the
petitioner for commission on the sale of a ship.
Page 260 U. S. 202
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
The parties to this action on December 11, 1916, in New York
City, entered into a contract, the essential terms of which appear
in the following letter from petitioner to respondent:
"Referring to our conversation this afternoon, I beg to advise
that you are authorized to offer the steamer
Eskasoni for
sale for four hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars,
$475,000."
"Details as to terms of payment, transfer of steamer, etc., can
be talked over when you have purchasers."
Respondent was a citizen of the State of New York and a resident
of New York City. Petitioner was a foreign corporation, organized
and existing under the laws of the Dominion of Canada. The
steamship referred to was a British steamship of St. Johns,
Newfoundland, owned by the petitioner. It was agreed that the
respondent should receive 2 1/2 percent commission for securing a
purchaser for the ship. Respondent undertook the employment and
subsequently introduced to petitioner two prospective purchasers,
with whom petitioner entered into a written contract for the
charter and sale of the ship for the sum mentioned. Five thousand
dollars was paid down on account, out of which respondent received
2 1/2 percent, or $125.
Subsequently it appeared that the petitioner was bound by a
contract with the British government to comply with the
instructions and rules of that government in the operation of its
vessels, and whereby it agreed not to charter any vessel to anyone
to whom that government should object. Among the governmental
regulations then in force was one which provided that:
"A person shall not, without permission in writing from the
shipping comptroller directly or indirectly and
Page 260 U. S. 203
whether on his own behalf or on behalf of or in conjunction with
any other person, purchase or enter into or offer to enter into any
agreement or any negotiations with a view to an agreement for the
purchase of any ship or vessel."
Any act in contravention of this regulation was declared to be
an offense.
Permission to make the sale in question was never obtained, and
the petitioner was notified by its consul that such permission
would be withheld by the British government. The petitioner
thereupon refused to consummate the sale, and returned to the
purchasers the $5,000 which they had paid.
The respondent brought an action against petitioner in the
District Court of the United States, Southern District of New York,
to recover the balance of his commission, which resulted in a
judgment in his favor. On error to the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit, that court affirmed the judgment of the lower
court, and the petitioner brings the case here on writ of
certiorari.
The district court declined to charge, as requested by
petitioner, that, if the jury believed the evidence to the effect
that the contract under British law was illegal and void, that this
would constitute a good defense to the action. On the contrary,
that court instructed the jury in effect that the invalidity of the
contract under British law would constitute no defense to the
action, and directed a verdict for the respondent, which was
returned in the sum of $11,750, and judgment was entered
accordingly.
The contract, as stated, was made in New York, and it does not
appear that the contracting parties in making it had in view any
other law than that of the place where it was made. It is therefore
to be governed as to its validity and operation by the law of the
State of New York.
Bulkley v.
Honold, 19 How. 390, 392;
Scudder
v.
Page 260 U. S. 204
Union National Bank, 91 U. S. 406,
91 U. S. 412.
Tested by that law, the contract is valid. By the terms of the
contract, respondent was "authorized to offer the steamer
Eskasoni for sale for $475,000." Nothing was said as to
where the ship then was, what flag she carried, nor what law was to
govern the transaction. The contract of charter and sale provided
for the payment of the consideration in several installments in New
York City and for the delivery of the ship to the purchasers at
that port.
When, in pursuance of this contract, respondent procured
purchasers for the ship at the stated sum, with whom petitioner
entered into contract, the transaction, so far as the respondent
was concerned, was completed, and he became entitled to the payment
of the stipulated commission. The fact that the contract of charter
and sale was subsequently cancelled because petitioner was unable
to secure the consent of the British government to the sale could
have no effect upon the respondent's rights. The contract with
respondent, as well as the contract of charter and sale, was made
and was to be performed within the State of New York, and, being
valid under the law of that state, the respondent is not to be
deprived of his compensation simply because petitioner found itself
unable to consummate the latter contract by reason of its inability
to perform a condition made necessary by the provisions of the law
of another country.
See Aber v. Pennsylvania Co., etc.,
269 Pa. 384.
Even if the contract of sale was void by British law, all other
questions aside, respondent's connection with it was not such as to
deprive him of his commission. His action was not to enforce that
contract, but his own.
Irwin v. Williar, 110 U.
S. 499,
110 U. S.
509-510.
We find no error in the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals, and it is
Affirmed.