BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Rose & Frank & Co v Crompton & Bros Ltd [1924] UKHL 2 (05 December 1924)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1924/2.html
Cite as: [1925] AC 445, [1924] UKHL 2

[New search] [Buy ICLR report: [1925] AC 445] [Help]


JISCBAILII_CASE_CONTRACT

    Die Veneris, 5° Decembris, 1924.

    sess. 1924.—[h.l.]

    ROSE AND FRANK COMPANY

    v.

    JAS. R. CROMPTON AND BROTHERS, LIMITED, AND
    BRITTAINS, LIMITED, ET E CONTRA.

    Earl of Birkenhead.

    Lord Atkinson.

    Lord Sumner.

    Lord Buckmaster.

    Lord Phillimore.




    Lord Phillimore.

    MY LORDS,

    At the conclusion of the arguments in this case, none of
    your Lordships had, I think, any doubt what our judgment ought
    to be, but as there were several points to be dealt with, your Lordships
    took time to consider how best to express your decision upon them.
    We are all still, I believe, of the same mind, and there is no reason
    for further delay.

    The appellants, Rose and Frank Company, carry on business
    in the United States as dealers in carbonising tissue paper which
    they have been in the habit of buying from England, then treating
    in some manner and selling in the perfected state.

    Their relations with the respondents James R. Crompton and
    Brothers, Limited, began as early as 1905; and there were three
    arrangements, which for the purposes of this Appeal we may assume
    to have been binding contracts, under which Rose and Frank
    Company were to be entitled to have the exclusive or nearly exclusive
    right of selling Crompton and Brothers' carbonising tissues in America,
    subject to 12 months' notice—a notice which was never given.

    In 1913, circumstances led to the relations between the parties
    bring reconsidered; and it was then for the first time brought to the
    notice of Rose and Frank Company that the respondents Brittains,
    Limited, had been interested with Cromptons in supplying the
    carbonising tissue; and thereupon the three parties entered into
    the arrangement which had given rise to the present litigation. It
    is dated the 8th July 1913, and in the earlier part of it appears to
    l)o a binding agreement under which the English companies agree
    to confine the sale of call their carbonising tissue in the U.S. and
    Canada—subject to certain defined exceptions—and Rose and
    Frank Company agree to confine their purchases of the same stuff
    exclusively to the two English companies and to do their best to
    increase their trade. The arrangement was to last for three years
    subject to six months' notice. The other supplementary provisions
    need not be stated; but towards the end of the document appears
    this remarkable clause:

    ' This arrangement is not entered into, nor is this
    ' memorandum written, as a formal or legal agreement and
    ' shall not be subject to legal jurisdiction in the Law
    ' Courts either of the United States or England, but it
    ' is only a definite expression and record of the purpose
    ' and intention of the three parties concerned, to which
    ' they each honourably pledge themselves with the fullest
    ' confidence—based on past business with each other—
    ' that it will be carried through by each of the three parties
    " with mutual loyalty and friendly co-operation."

    There is. no explanation upon the record, and no suggestion was
    made by Counsel at the Bar of any reason for the introduction of
    this remarkable clause. During the progress of the hearing it
    occurred to some of your Lordships that it might have been inserted
    in order to avoid the operation of some American law discouraging
    monopolies. But this was a mere surmise. For whatever reason it
    was introduced the clause is there, and it remains for the Courts
    to give the proper effect to it.

    The terms of this arrangement whatever may be its force or
    effect were continued by correspondence for a second three-yearly
    period and by arrangement in August 1918 till the 31st March 1920.

    During the early part of 1919 differences arose between the
    parties. The respondents thought that the appellants were not
    conducting the business as they should, and that their (the
    respondents') interests were suffering. Accordingly on the 5th May
    they demanded by telegram compliance with certain requirements,
    threatening, if the requirements were not met, to communicate
    direct with the consumers.

    On the same day, the appellants telegraphed back that they
    refused to consent to terminate the agreement and would hold
    the respondents accountable for any violation of contract and they
    demanded immediate shipment of the parcels they had ordered;
    but on the 9th and 10th May, by cable and letter, the respondents
    definitely refused to allow further deliveries to be made.

    During the existence of the arrangement the appellants had
    been giving to the respondents Cromptons, from time to time,
    orders for certain numbers of cases of tissues to be delivered at
    various dates. The documents took this form : an order from the
    appellants to Crompton's : " Please enter our order for the following
    " goods and ship." Then followed either a specific date—usually the
    first of the month—or, if no specific date, then " as soon as possible,"
    and the port to which they were to be shipped, either New York
    or sometimes Toronto, and the nature of the articles required. In
    compliance with these orders the respondents used to ship the goods.
    A few of the orders sent in this way in the early part of 1919 were
    complied with, but the others had hot actually been complied with
    by the time of the quarrel and were not fulfilled afterwards.

    On the 19th November 1919, the appellants brought their
    action, treating the arrangement as a binding contract and claiming
    damages for the breach, alternatively averring that the three earlier
    agreements were still in force and claiming damages for their breach,
    and as a third alternative relying on the several specific orders for
    parcels of goods in the early part of 1919 as having been accepted
    by the respondents Cromptons and constituting specific contracts
    and claiming damages for the non-delivery of these goods. As to
    this part of their claim, they made no case against the respondents
    Brittains Ltd.

    The respondents joined in their defence and contended that the
    arrangement was not a binding contract, that the earlier agreements
    were not binding contracts or had expired by loss of time. They
    also offered an alternative plea that if the respondents Cromptons
    ever made any of the earlier agreements, then " all of such agreements
    " were determined by mutual consent by virtue of or alternatively
    " at the date of the signing of the document referred to in
    " paragraph 8 of the Statement of Claim and/or alternatively the
    " Plaintiffs by signing the said document and acting thereon are
    " stopped from relying on any of the said alleged agreements."

    As to the appellants' claim in respect of the specific orders,
    they denied that these orders gave rise to any contracts, said that
    the requirements of section 4 of the Sale of Goods Act had not been
    complied with, and further that these orders and acceptances, if
    any, were given as part of a specification under the arrangement of
    1913, and that if that arrangement did not constitute any legal
    contract, neither did these orders with provisional acceptances
    constitute contracts.

    They further pleaded misconduct on the part of the appellants
    justifying them in determining the agreement.

    By an order made by McCardie, J., the action was' transferred
    to the commercial list, and it was ordered that the Court should
    try all questions of liability "except the issue as to whether the
    "appellants committed certain acts which were alleged by the
    " respondents to have justified the respondents in determining the
    " agreements (if any) between the parties;" and all questions as to
    damages. The order provided that the Court should construe all the
    agreements.

    These issues were then tried by Bailhache, J. He decided that
    the arrangement of 1913 was a binding contract, and further that
    if the appellants were ultimately held to fail on this ground, they
    had a good case as to the orders and acceptances. He then dealt
    with two comparatively small money questions, directing judgment
    for the plaintiffs for 244l odd with costs up to the date of the
    admission of this claim, and for the respondents Cromptons for
    2,124l. odd with costs up to the date of admission; and he gave the
    appellants the costs of the hearing before him in any event.

    The present respondents appealed from this order, and the Court
    of Appeal came unanimously to a different conclusion to that of
    Bailhache, J., with respect to the arrangement of 1913, and by a
    majority, Bankes, L.J., Scrutton, L.J., and Atkin, L.J., dissenting,
    thought that Bailhache, J. was also wrong on the question of orders
    and acceptances. They declined, however, to determine whether
    the pre-1913 arrangements were still in existence, and whether
    if in existence they were enforceable and said that this matter
    remained to be tried. They gave the respondents costs of the issues
    on which they were successful and the costs of the appeal. Appeal
    and cross-appeal have been preferred from this order and are now
    before your Lordships for decision.

    With regard to the first and most important point, that of the
    legal force or want of force of the arrangement of 1913, your Lordships
    are, I conceive, of one mind with the Court of Appeal. I do not
    propose to repeat their reasoning, with which I venture to concur,
    but I wish to add one observation. I was for a time impressed
    by the suggestion that as complete legal rights had been created
    by the earlier part of the document in question, any subsequent
    clause nullifying those rights ought to be regarded as repugnant
    and ought to be rejected. This is what happens for instance in
    cases where an instrument inter vivos purports to pass the whole
    property in something either real or personal, and there follows a
    provision purporting to forbid the new owner from exercising the
    ordinary rights of ownership. In such cases this restriction is dis-
    regarded. But I think the right answer was made by Scrutton, L. J.
    It is true that when the tribunal has before it for construction an
    instrument which unquestionably creates a legal interest, and the
    dispute is only as to the quality and extent of that interest, then
    later repugnant clauses in the instrument cutting down that interest
    which the earlier part of it has given are to be rejected, this doctrine
    does not apply when the question is whether it is intended to create
    any legal interest at all. Here, I think, the overriding clause in
    the document is that which provides that it is to be a contract of
    honour only and unenforceable at law.

    With regard to the next point, namely, the right of the plaintiffs
    to recover damages for non-delivery of the goods specified in the
    particular orders for the year 1919, it should be stated that the
    defence under the Sale of Goods Act was abandoned at the trial. On
    this point 1 agree with your Lordships in preferring the judgments
    of Bailhache, J. and Atkin, L.J. to that of the majority of the
    Court of Appeal.

    According to the course of business between the parties which
    is narrated in the unenforceable agreement, goods were ordered
    from time to time, shipped, received, and paid for, under an
    established system; but the agreement being unenforceable, there
    was no obligation on the American company to order goods or upon
    the English companies to accept an order. Any actual transaction
    between the parties, however, gave rise to the ordinary legal rights;
    for the fact that it was not of obligation to do the transaction did
    not divest the transaction when done of its ordinary legal significance.
    This, my Lords, will, I think, be plain if we begin at the latter end
    of each transaction.

    Goods were ordered, shipped, and received. Was there no
    legal liability to pay for them? One stage further back. Goods
    were ordered, shipped, and invoiced. Was there no legal liability
    to take delivery? I apprehend that in each of these cases the
    American company would be bound. If the goods were short-
    shipped or inferior in quality, or if the nature of them was such as
    to be deleterious to other cargo on board or illegal for the American
    company to bring into their country, the American company would
    have its usual legal remedies against the English companies or one
    of them. Business usually begins in some mutual understanding
    without a previous bargain.

    However, as to this claim for damages for the unfulfilled
    orders, the respondents have, under the terms of the order of
    McCardie, J., the defence open to them that the conduct of the
    appellants was such as to justify them in determining the agreements
    to deliver.

    There remains the matter of the cross appeal. This, I think,
    succeeds.

    The unenforceable agreement cannot (it is true) be relied upon
    as cancelling the previous agreements, because it was to have no
    legal weight. But the parties who entered into the relations implied
    by the unenforceable agreement must have previously cancelled,
    as they could do by mutual consent, all the earlier agreements.

    Upon the documents which were before the Court—which
    were indeed the only materials before the Court—the proper inference
    to be drawn, was that the arrangement of 1913 was, though
    unenforceable, intended to supersede all previous arrangements or
    agreements whether enforceable or unenforceable.

    The principle laid down in Morris v. Barron (1918 A.C., page 1)
    followed in British and Benningtons v. N. W. Cachas Tea Co.
    (1923 A.C.,-page 48) is the one which, governs the present case.

    It was a pity, I think, that the Court of Appeal determined,
    apparently against the view of Scrutton, L.J., to remit this issue
    for trial instead of deciding it themselves. I think they should
    have decided it and decided it in favour of the respondents and
    cross appellants.

    Upon the whole, I would advise your Lordships to restore the
    judgment of Bailhache, J., except that part of it which declares
    " that the agreement of July 1913 mentioned in paragraph 8 of the
    " Statement of Claim is a legally binding agreement against both
    " defendants," and which directs that the plaintiffs should have the
    costs of the hearing before him as against the defendants Brittains,
    Ltd., and I would advise that the plaintiffs (the present appellants)
    should have the costs of the appeal to the Court of Appeal as
    against the respondents and defendants Cromptons. I presume
    that the respondents and defendants Brittains, Ltd. had no separate
    costs on that appeal. With regard to the costs of the appeal to
    your Lordships' House, the appellants have succeeded in what may
    prove a very substantial part of their case, but on the other hand
    the result of the issue still to be tried may wipe out their claim. The
    respondents Brittains, Ltd. have been successful, but I imagine that
    before your Lordships' House, as in the Court of Appeal, they
    had no separate costs. I think that the right order would be that
    neither side should have any costs of the appeal" but that the cross
    appellants should have the costs of their cross appeal. Any costs
    of the action not disposed of by these orders should be disposed of
    by the Judge who tries the remaining issue. The case should be
    remitted to the High Court of Justice with a declaration that it be
    disposed of accordingly.

    sess. 1924.—[h.l.]

    ROSE AND FRANK COMPANY

    v.

    J. R. CROMPTON AND BROTHERS, LIMITED, AND
    OTHERS, ET E CONTRA.

    Lord Buckmaster.

    MY LORDS,

    I had prepared an independent opinion in this case, but
    I have had an opportunity of reading the judgment which will
    shortly be read by my noble and learned friend Lord Phillimore
    with which I agree, and I think there is no need for any further
    independent judgment on my part; and my noble and learned
    friends Lord Birkenhead and Lord Sumner also desire that I should
    express their agreement in the judgment about to be read.

    Lord Atkinson.


    MY LORDS,

    I also have had an opportunity of reading the judgment
    prepared by my noble and learned friend and I concur with it.

    In the House of Lords.


    ON APPEAL

    FROM HIS MAJESTY'S COURT OF APPEAL (ENGLAND).

    between
    ROSE AND FRAKK COMPANY - - Appellants

    AND

    J. R. CROMPTOST & BROTHERS LIMITED

    and BRITTAIN'S LIMITED - - Respondents

    and between

    J. R. CROMPTON & BROTHERS LIMITED Appellants on

    the Cross-Appeal

    AND

    ROSE AND FRANK COMPANY - - Respondents

    on the
    Cross-Appeal.

    Case

    FOR THE RESPONDENTS ON THE ORIGINAL APPEAL
    AND APPELLANTS ON THE CROSS-APPEAL.

    1. This is an appeal by the Appellants who were Plaintiffs
    in the action, from an order of His Majesty's Court of Appeal
    in England (Lords Justices Bankes, Scrutton, and Atkin) dated
    the 23rd of March 1923 which reversed in part the judgment of
    The Honourable Mr. Justice Bailhache dated the 10th of November
    1922 on the trial of certain preliminary issues which had been
    given in favour of the Appellants; certain further issues (which
    did not affect the Respondents Brittain's Limited) were thereby
    left for further trial and the Respondents J. R. Crompton and
    Brothers Limited by their Cross Appeal claim that those further
    issues could and should have been decided by the Court of Appeal
    in their favour.

    2. The main question in this appeal is whether a document
    signed by the parties in July and August 3913, which set out
    certain arrangements between them as to the supply of paper by
    the Respondents to the Appellants and the agency of the
    Appellants for the sale of such paper did or did not constitute
    a legally binding agreement; and the decision of this question
    turns upon the meaning and legal effect of a clause in the said
    document which is in the following words:—

    " This arrangement is not entered into, nor is this
    Memorandum written, as a formal or Legal Agreement,
    and shall not be subject to legal jurisdiction in the Law
    Courts either of the United States or England, but it is
    only a definite expression and record of the- purpose and
    intention of the three parties concerned, to which they
    each honourably pledge themselves, with the fullest con-
    fidence—based on past business with each other—that it
    will be carried through by each of the three parties with
    mutual loyalty and friendly co-operation. This is herein-
    after referred to as the ' honourable pledge ' clause."

    3. The second question in the appeal is whether certain
    documents which subsequently passed between the Appellants
    and the Respondents Cromptons, and were in some respects in
    the form of orders for and acceptances of orders for such paper,
    constituted binding contracts upon the said Respondents for the
    supply of such paper or were merely requests for goods under, and
    the method by which the parties carried out, the honourable pledge
    set out in the document of August 1913 and were of no higher
    legal validity than the arrangement set out in that document.

    1. The third question in the appeal (and in respect of this
      the Respondents Cromptons bring their cross appeal) is whether
      certain correspondence carried on between the Appellants and the
      Respondents Cromptons prior to the document of August 1913
      constituted legally binding contracts between those two parties,
      and whether, if such contracts were so constituted, those contracts
      continued to be binding upon those parties after the arrangements
      made in August 1913 were entered into. The Court of Appeal
      have declined to decide these points and have left them for trial
      before a Court of First Instance.

    2. The course of the proceedings in the action was as

    follows:—

    (a) The Appellants by their Writ of Summons dated

    the 1.9th of November 1919 sued both of the Respondents
    for (1) damages for breach of contract and (2) damages for
    non-delivery of goods. By their Statement of Claim they
    alleged in the first place (paragraphs 3 to 7) a series of
    agreements made in and between 1907 and 1911 between
    the Appellants and the Respondents Cromptons alone,
    by which those Respondents agreed that the Appellants
    should have the sole sale (with specified exceptions) in
    certain areas of certain kinds of papers manufactured
    and/or sold by the Respondents Cromptons.

    (b) In the second place they alleged (paragraphs 8 and
    9 of the Statement of Claim) an agreement in August 1913
    between the Appellants and both the Respondents under
    which both the Respondents agreed to confine the supply
    for sale and the sale of their papers in certain areas
    exclusively to the Appellants (with, certain specified
    exceptions). This alleged agreement was set out in the
    document which contained the "honourable pledge" clause
    set out in paragraph 2 of this Case.

    (C) In the third place they alleged (paragraphs 12,
    13, 14 and 15 of the Statement of Claim) breaches in the
    autumn of 1918 and in 1919 of the agreement of August
    1913, and that they had suffered damage; and alterna-
    tively (paragraph 16 of the Statement of Claim) that if
    the 1913 agreement was not valid the earlier agreements
    with the Respondents Cromptons were still in force in
    1919 and that the breaches alleged were breaches by the
    Respondents Cromptons of those agreements.

    (d) In the fourth place they alleged (paragraphs 18,
    19 and 20 of the Statement of Claim) that in January,
    February and March 1919 they had given, and the Respon-
    dents Cromptons had accepted, a series of orders for paper;
    and that the Respondents Cromptons had, in breach of
    their agreements so constituted, failed to deliver part of
    the goods so ordered, whereby the Appellants had suffered
    damage.

    (e) There were also two small claims by the Appellants
    (paragraphs 17 and 21 of the Statement of Claim) and a
    Counter-claim by the Respondents in respect of which no
    question now arises.

    (F) By their Defence the Respondents Cromptons
    (in substance and so far as is at present material) denied
    that they had made the alleged pre-1933 agreements and
    both Respondents denied that the August 1913 arrangement
    was a legally binding Contract, denied that the pre-1913
    agreements (if they were legally binding contracts) con-
    tinued in force after the August 1913 arrangement, denied
    that the alleged orders and acceptances constituted legally
    binding contracts, and pleaded (in paragraph 18 of the
    Defence) that both the pre-1913 arrangements and the
    August 1913 arrangement were arrangements made without
    consideration and intended to be of no legally binding
    effect. It was also pleaded (paragraph 19 of the Defence)
    that by virtue of or alternatively at the date, of the signing
    of, the August 1913 document, the pre-1913 agreements
    were determined by mutual consent and that the Appellants
    were stopped from relying upon them.

    (g) It was further pleaded by the Respondents (para-
    graph 20 of the Defence) that the Appellants had by their
    conduct justified the Respondents in summarily determining
    the agreements (if any) between the parties.

    (h) Further the Respondents Cromptons as to the
    alleged pre-1913 agreements relied upon the Statute of
    Frauds.

    (I) By an Order The Honourable Mr. Justice McCardie
    dated the 8th of February 1922 it was ordered that the
    action be transferred to the Commercial List and that the
    Court should try all questions of liability except the issue
    as to whether the Appellants committed certain acts
    which were alleged by the Respondents to have justified
    the Respondents in determining the agreements (if any)
    between the parties; that the Court should construe all
    the agreements; and that all questions as to damages and
    as to the matters alleged in paragraph 20 of the Defence
    (which set out certain alleged terms of the agreements and
    certain alleged breaches of such terms by the Appellants)
    should, if they became material, be referred to an Official
    Referee.

    (J) At the trial of the issues so directed The Honourable
    Mr. Justice Bailhache held that the August 1913 arrange-
    ment was a binding contract and it was accordingly
    unnecessary for him to give any decision as to any further
    issues. He expressed the view, however, that the orders
    and acceptances also constituted legally binding contracts
    and so declared in his judgment. The Court of Appeal
    held on the contrary that neither the August 1913 arrange-
    ment nor the orders and acceptances constituted legally
    binding contracts and left for consideration on a further
    hearing by the Judge the questions whether the alleged
    pre-1913 agreements were contracts legally binding upon
    the Respondents Cromptons and whether if they were they
    continued to be binding upon those Respondents after
    the August 1913 arrangement had been entered into.

    1. The Appellants are an American Company carrying on
      business in New York as dealers in tissue papers which are bought
      by manufacturers Who by coating them with carbon make carbon
      papers for typewriters and other purposes. The Respondents carry
      on business in England as manufacturers of such tissue papers and
      there is and has at all material times been an arrangement between
      the two Respondents under which the Respondents Cromptons
      deal with and sell the whole of the output of such papers of the
      Respondents Brittains.

    2. In 1904 the Appellants were requesting the Respondents
      Cromptons to give to them the exclusive agency in America for
      the sale of the papers manufactured or sold by those Respondents ;
      and they continued to press for this though those Respondents
      were reluctant to grant it, and the result was a series of vague
      and informal arrangements contained in letters passing between
      these two parties.

    3. The first of these arrangements was made with respect
      to a type of paper known as " 7 lbs. ' R and F ' Carbonizing
      Paper " which was manufactured by the Respondents Cromptons
      only and not by the Respondents Brittains. It was at the outset
      a promise by Cromptons " that in the event of your finding this
      paper suitable for your purpose we will confine the sale of it to you
      for the United States and Canada for the twelve months ending
      March 31st 1906. We will do our best also to see that none of
      this paper goes to the United States or Canada except through
      you during the term of the present contract." This was contained
      in a letter of the 7th of March 1905 which purported to confirm
      an oral arrangement and the period was for more than a year.
      There was no consideration for Cromptons' undertaking or, if
      there was consideration, it was not expressed and there was no
      memorandum sufficient to satisfy the Statute of Frauds.

    4. There were, as appears from the correspondence,
      difficulties about getting the paper made to the satisfaction of
      the Appellants' customer or customers (see for instance letters of
      the 4th of December 1905, 26th of January 1906, 27th of July
      1906,10th and 21st of August 1906,19th and 31st of October 1906)
      and for a time the making of the paper was experimental.

    5. Finally in a letter of the 21st of October 1907 the
      Appellants wrote " We think we will be able to work up quite a
      trade on this R and F substance and of course it is understood,
      in accordance with the original agreement, that we are to have
      the sole sale of this paper in this country and Canada " : in a
      letter of the 2nd of December 1907 they wrote " In our letter of
      October 21st we wrote you that we took it for granted that the
      arrangements between us in regard to this grade of paper should
      continue and that we were to have the sole selling agency for this
      paper in this country and Canada. You seem to have overlooked
      this in your reply to our letter and we take it for granted that the
      arrangements on this grade of paper heretofore existing between us
      still exist and will continue to exist until a sufficient notice is given
      by either one of us to the other of determination of the same " ; and
      to this Cromptons replied on the 13th of December 1907 " We
      are sorry we omitted to reply to the remark in your letter of
      October 21st in regard to continuing the sole sale of this paper
      to you for the United States and Canada and this of course we
      agree to until reasonable notice is given by either side to terminate
      the arrangement." There was no consideration for Cromptons'
      undertaking, or if there was consideration it was not expressed.
      The Appellants claimed (paragraph 4 of the Statement of Claim)
      that the reasonable notice referred to was twelve months, and,
      if that was so, there was no sufficient memorandum to satisfy
      the Statute of Frauds.

    In December 1908, Mr. Campbell, a representative of
    the Appellants, was in England, and, as appears from the corres-
    pondence, interviewed the Respondents Cromptons and succeeded
    in persuading them to make an arrangement covering all carbon
    papers. The arrangement appears in letters of the 24th of
    December 1908, the 4th, 18th and 29th of January 1909, and the
    13th of February 1909.

    It was to the effect that Cromptons would " confine for
    the time being their carbon tissue in America to the Appellants;
    would " so long as this arrangement lasts " open no new accounts
    in America for carbon tissues; would in giving quotations for
    such papers in England do their best to ascertain if the paper was
    or was not required for America and would if they found it was
    " bear your interest in mind and so far as we can do so decline
    to quote." It was understood that Cromptons were still to
    be at liberty to supply direct to two Companies in America, the
    F. S. Webster Company and the Columbia and Ribbon & Carbon
    Company for their own use only (i.e., not for re-sale to other
    manufacturers) but certain points raised by the Appellants as
    to the limiting of the supplies to the Columbia Company and as
    to the price to be charged to that Company and to the Webster
    Company were left unsettled. Beyond a vague assurance (in a letter
    of 4th January 1909) by the Appellants that they would do their
    utmost to push Cromptons' goods and discourage those of other
    manufacturers, there was no consideration for Cromptons'
    undertaking, and Cromptons wrote (on the 24th December 1908)
    " We hope the arrangement with you as named herein will enable
    you to give us increased business and providing we are satisfied
    with that increase see no reason now why the present arrangement
    should not continue as between you and ourselves indefinitely,"
    and the Appellants wrote (on the 29th January 1909) " We have
    every confidence in your good faith in protecting our interests
    and appreciate the same and assure you that we will reciprocate
    so far as your interests are concerned." There was no provision
    as to the length of time for which the arrangement was to last.
    The Appellants claimed that it was terminable on one year's
    notice, and if that was so there was no memorandum sufficient to
    satisfy the Statute of Frauds.

    1. The Appellants clearly regarded the arrangement so
      made as being made on mutual confidence only to be ended at
      once if that confidence ceased for on the 28th May 1909 they wrote
      claiming to be informed exactly what shipments were made by
      Cromptons to the Webster Company and the Columbia Company
      and saying " if our present arrangement is to continue you must
      have absolute confidence in us and in our ability to handle the
      situation. If this is lacking kindly let us known at once so that we
      can make such arrangements as to us will seem fit and we must
      have the absolute control of your papers in this Country." And
      on the 24th June 1909 they wrote " It is absolutely necessary
      that you leave matters entirely in our hand and let us work
      according to our last judgment and discretion and you will
      not be a loser by it in any way. If there is any lack of confidence
      either in our integrity or our ability to handle the situation we
      should be very much pleased if you would let us know."

    2. The Appellants also regarded themselves as free to
      insist upon alterations in the arrangement at their own will for
      on the 15th November 1910 they wrote to Cromptons sending a
      draft letter which they required them to sign in which there was
      eliminated the right of Cromptons to sell to the Webster Company,
      and saying " we must therefore withdraw from the attitude
      that we maintained with you on November 3rd (when Mr. Frank
      on their behalf had interviewed Cromptons) and must absolutely
      insist upon one of the conditions of our agreement that you do not
      deliver paper directly to Webster," and the draft which accom-
      panied this letter provided for a grant to the Appellants of the
      sole right of selling the Respondents Cromptons' papers in the
      United States till the 31st December 1913 without any exceptions
      with an obligation upon the Appellants to use not less than £6,000
      worth of paper per annum.

    On the 3rd December 1910 Cromptons declined to cease to
    sell to Webster, but subject to this expressed willingness to make
    a three years' contract if the Appellants would bind themselves
    to buy not less than £6,000 worth of paper per annum. This
    suggestion was not accepted by the Appellants (letter of the
    30th of December 1910).

    1. In December 1910 the Respondents Cromptons cease
      to supply paper direct to the Columbia Company. There was no
      agreement on the matter between Cromptons and the Appellants
      but merely a letter from Cromptons to the Columbia Company
      (letter of the 7th December 1910) asking that Company to pass
      its order in future through the Appellants and a letter of the same
      date from Cromptons to the Appellants enclosing a copy of the
      above letter and saying " as we are not anxious to continue direct
      business with this firm and understanding you would like to do the
      business yourselves we have written them as per enclosed copy."

    2. Between December 1910 and May 1911 there was a
      discussion between the Appellants and Cromptons which further
      indicated how informal and dependent upon the goodwill of
      both was the existing arrangement between them. It may be
      summarised as follows : The Appellants acquiesced for the present
      in Cromptons' claim to sell direct to Webster and to decline to
      bind themselves to take any specific quantity of paper but wanted
      the period of the arrangement to be fixed for two or three years
      (letter of the 30th December 1910) and they said they would do
      their best as hitherto to sell Cromptons' goods and extend the
      business (ibid); for which assurance Cromptons thanked them
      (letter of the 25th of January 1911). They pressed for a letter
      specifying that the arrangement was to continue till the 31st of
      December 1913 unless terminated sooner by mutual consent
      (letters of. the 7th and 10th February 1911) but Cromptons
      demurred to this unless there was a guarantee to take £6,000
      worth of paper per annum (letters of February the 18th and March
      3rd, 15th and 24th 1911) and the Appellants (letter of the 28th
      March 1911) urged that the matter should be left to their good
      faith saying, inter alia " We realise that it is to our interest to use
      as large a quantity of your merchandise as we can and to do
      whatever is in our power to discourage the competition on the
      part of others and we have acted in accordance with this policy
      for the last five years and intend to continue same so long as our
      relations remain as pleasing as they are . . . We beg to repeat
      however that we are looking out for your interest and will sell
      as many of your goods as we possibly can giving them the.
      preference over all others and we will not engage ourselves
      to take any similar line to yours." They accordingly pressed
      again for a letter " consenting to our present understanding
      continuing to December 31st 1913." But Cromptons while assuring
      them that they did not doubt their good faith continued
      to press for a guarantee of the quantity to be taken (letter of the
      10th April 1911) saying " We believe that you will put all your
      energy into the sale of our papers and we believe it is to our
      mutual benefit that you should do this, but on the other hand, of
      course, there may be buyers who would strongly object to pur-
      chasing our papers through you and if we have an agreement with
      you we should of course be debarred from quoting these people
      direct, and the business in our papers would be practically speaking
      solely in your hands. We feel, therefore, considering that this
      would be the case, we should have some sort of a guarantee of a
      given turnover in return for the sole control of our papers."
      Finally it was agreed (letters of the 25th April and 4th May 1911)
      that the matter should be left" as it is under our old arrangement "
      till further discussion.

    3. On the 20th of June 1911 a question arose between the
      Appellants and Cromptons whether Cromptons were committing
      a breach of the understanding between them by selling a
      certain blue paper direct to the Webster Company. The matter
      was discussed in letters of the 28th June, 8th of July, 1st and 10th
      of August, 12th and 19th of September and 3rd of October 1911.
      and in October 1911 the Appellants through their representative,
      Mr. Campbell, came for the first time into communication with the
      Respondents Brittains as appears from letters of the 24th and
      26th October 1911.

    4. This discussion led up to the third and last of the alleged
      agreements made between the Appellants and Cromptons before
      1913. It concerned blue paper already referred to which was a
      very small part of the business done between the parties.
      Cromptons at first consented to give the Appellants control of
      this paper in the United States, i.e., without exception of the
      Webster Company (letter of the 24-th October 1911) with the
      proviso that if the business increased so as to interfere materially
      with the sale of white paper the arrangements would require
      re-consideration, but the Appellants did not accept that and
      insisted that they were to have the sole control throughout the
      world of any blue paper made by Cromptons, terminable only on
      twelve months' notice (letter of the 26th of October 1911). After
      further discussion (letters of the 27th and 30th of October and
      1st and 2nd of November 1911) Cromptons wrote (letter of the
      3rd of November 1911) " We will agree under the peculiar and
      special circumstances to give you the sole control of this particular
      kind of blue paper in question," the Appellants replied (letter of
      the 7th of November 1911) accepting that as satisfactory save that
      with reference to the expression " this particular kind of blue
      paper in question " it was to be understood that Cromptons
      were not to make blue carbonising tissue of any quality for anyone
      but the appellants and " as the usual agreements are not for less
      than one year I think it would be best to have it for this period.
      We of course agree to send you all our business in the grades
      which you supply so long as the agreement is in force," and
      Cromptons agreed to that (letter of 9th November 1911).

    5. In January 1912 the Appellants again took up an attitude
      which showed that they regarded themselves as under no con-
      tractural obligation towards Cromptons and as being free to insist
      upon alterations in the arrangement at their own will. They
      wrote on the 9th of January 1912 enclosing 36 orders to be accepted
      only on the conditions that the discount allowed to them should
      be increased from 10 per cent, to 25 per cent, and that they should
      be accorded the sole right to sell all carbonising papers for the
      United States and Canada dealt in by Cromptons without any
      exception or reservation whatsoever. They said " our business
      relations for the most part have been very friendly and it is our
      desire to continue to do business with and through you,"
      and after referring to changed conditions and the necessity for
      cheaper papers they said '' we must also repeat and dwell upon the
      absolute necessity of your confining the sale of carbonising papers
      in the United States and Canada exclusively to us." On the same
      day the Appellants wrote to the Respondents Brittains enclosing
      a copy of the above letter and saying " We have decided to close
      this business (i.e. the business with Cromptons) in 1912 ; since
      I have seen you however we have decided not to do this hoping
      that we could arrange matters satisfactorily with your assistance.
      Since my return I have gone over the matters discussed by us with
      Mr. Frank and have decided on the plan as per our letter to
      Jas. R. Crompton and Bros, of which I enclose a copy. As our
      stock is very low on your papers we hope that should any difficulties
      arise with J.R.C. that you will see to it that we suffer no loss of
      business through controversy." The position taken up by the
      Appellants thus was that they were entitled to demand
      peremptorily that the arrangement should be extended to Canada
      and that the exception of Webster Company should be eliminated,
      that on failure by Cromptons to comply at once they need order
      no more goods ; and that they could go behind Cromptons and
      obtain supplies direct from Brittains. Brittains protested (cable
      and letter of the 20th January 1912) and the Appellants consented
      to leave the matter in Brittains' hands for further negotiation (cable
      of the 22nd January 1912).

    6. The matter was further discussed throughout the year
      1912, and the first quarter of 1913. The Appellants used language
      indicating that the continuance of relations with Cromptons was
      in their (the Appellants) discretion (letter of the 31st of January
      1912) Brittains intimated that while the business would continue
      to be done through Cromptons, Brittains would now be directly
      associated with them so far as the Appellants were concerned
      (letter of the 3rd February 1912) saying " We think this will be
      a satisfaction and an assurance to you," and the Appellants were
      prepared to continue their relations with Cromptons pending
      settlement of the questions at issue " at least for the present
      especially as we see that you will be directly associated with them
      in their business relations with us " (letters of the 13th of February
      1912).

    1. An offer made by Cromptons on the 5th of February
      1912 in which they insisted on maintaining their right to supply
      the Webster Company and their own arrangements in Canada
      was partially but not unequivocally agreed to by the Appellants
      on the 19th February 1912. and the matter was further discussed
      in letters of the 4th, 12th and 26th of March 2nd April, 13th and
      26th of November, and 5th and 11th of December 1912, and the
      10th, 24th and 28th January, 3rd, 8th and 11th of February 1913
      without any agreement being arrived at. It was arranged,
      however, that the Appellants should submit for consideration a
      memorandum of a proposed agreement.

    2. In March 1913, Mr. Campbell, representing the
      Appellants, came to England bringing a memorandum as appears
      from letters of the 4th and 12th of March 1913. This memo-
      randum being the document set out on page 363 of the Appendix
      and dated the 1st of January 1913. It was however not accepted
      by the Respondents and in its place a draft memorandum was
      sent by Cromptons to the Appellants on the 16th of April 1913.

    3. This memorandum was discussed in letters of the 2nd of
      May, 6th of June and 24th of June 1913, and it was signed as finally
      agreed by Brittains on or about the 10th of July 1913 by Cromptons
      on or about the 11th of July 1913 (see letter of that date) and by
      the Appellants on or about the 13th of August 1913 (see letter of
      that date). It is set out on pages 366 to 369 of the Appendix.

    4. The arrangement contained in addition to the " honour-
      able pledge" clause already set out the following provisions to
      which the Respondents desired to draw attention as being expressed
      in language indicative of an intention not to create contractual
      relations:—

    1. " Messrs. J. R. Crompton & Brothers Limited
      and Messrs. Brittains Limited hereby expressed their .
      willingness that the present arrangements with Messrs.
      Rose and Frank for the sale of these papers which are now
      for one year only shall be continued on the same lines as
      at present for a period of three years say until the 31st of
      March 1916."

    2. " The Rose and Frank Company will as far as
      possible confirm their purchases of all grades of carbonising
      tissues so reserved to them by Messrs. J. R. Crompton and
      Brothers Limited and Messrs Brittains Limited exclusively
      to Messrs. Crompton and Messrs. Brittains, and whilst
      doing their best to increase the business still further,
      undertake that the volumes of business in the present
      grades shall not fall in any year below that of the average
      of the last three years, viz., 1910, 1911 and 1912 without such
      explanations as shall be considered satisfactory by Messrs.
      J.R. Crompton & Bros. Limited and Messrs. Brittains
      Limited."

    (C) " Messrs. J. R. Crompton & Bros. Limited and
    Messrs. Brittains Limited, whose position is, in their opinion,
    soundly assured, will, subject to unforeseen circumstances
    and contingencies, do their best as in the past to respond
    efficiently and satisfactorily to the calls of Messrs. Rose and
    Frank Co. for deliveries both in quantity and quality."

    1. The arrangement set out in this memorandum differed
      from the arrangements set out in the letters written before 1913
      in the following, among other respects:—

    (i) The Respondents Brittains were now made a
    party to the arrangement.

    (ii) The period of the arrangement was now to be
    for three years and, in the absence of notice, for further
    periods of three years.

    (iii) If the Webster Company offered for sale the paper
    they bought from Cromptons objection was to be raised
    by Cromptons.

    (iv) There was an understanding that the Appellants
    would so far as possible confine their purchases of all grades
    of paper reserved to them by the Respondents exclusively
    to the Respondents.

    (v) The Appellants undertook that the volume of
    business in the present grades of paper should not fall in
    any year below that of the average of the years 1910, 1911
    and 1912 without such explanations as should be considered
    satisfactory by the Respondents.

    (vi) The Respondents undertook that they would,
    subject to unforeseen circumstances and contingencies, do
    their best as in the past to respond efficiently and satis-
    factorily to the calls of the Appellants for deliveries both
    in quantity and quality.

    (vii) Any other special and distinctive grades of paper
    made at the suggestion of and introduced by the Appellants
    were to be confined exclusively to the Appellants for the
    United States and Canada.

    (viii) The cheaper papers already the subject of
    discussion were to be covered by the special and exclusive
    arrangement referred to in (vii) above.

    (ix) Prices were to be quoted in future for six months
    only.

    1. Thereafter at the beginning of each year the Appellants
      were in the habit of sending to Cromptons a large number of
      " orders" which were " calls for deliveries" under the August
      1913 arrangement and were stated to be estimates of their require-
      ments for the year and were sent in order to give "some idea as
      to the tonnage we will require " ; and Cromptons replied thanking
      them for the orders and the Appellants were on and after the 11th
      of January 1916 warned that orders were entered without
      guarantee as to price or delivery. Instances of this procedure
      occur in letters of the 30th of December 1913, 20th of January
      1914, 9th of February 1914, 2nd, 3rd, 18th and 30th of December
      1914, 8th of January 1915, 2nd of March 1915, 23rd and 30th of
      December 1915, 11th of January 1916,1st, 10th and 30th of March
      3rd of January 1917, 20th of March 1917, 13th of April
      2nd of July 1917, 16th of October 1917, 10th of December
      1917, 21st of March 1918.

    2. The arrangement of August 1913 was automatically
      renewed until the 31st of March 1919 and thereafter by agreement
      between the parties until the 30th of March 1920, notice of termina-
      tion to be given before the 30th of September 1919 ; as appears
      from letters of the 25th, 26th and 29th of October 1915, and the
      12th of November 1915, 27th, 28th and 29th of August 1918,
      20th and 27th of September 1918, 21st, 22nd and 28th of October
      1918, 8th and 22nd of November 1918, 13th of December 1918,
      6th, 29th and 31st of January 1919, and 11th of March 1919.

    3. With regard to the " Orders " in respect of which the
      Appellants claim in this action, on the 2nd of December 1918,
      Brittains, in a letter, copy of which was forwarded to the
      Appellants, asked Cromptons to ask the Appellants " as they have
      opportunity, to review their own position so as to be able, say
      early in the New Year—to give us some indication for our guidance
      as to their own position and prospective requirements, so that we
      may be able to make the most helpful arrangements possible."
      Cromptons conveyed this request to the Appellants on the 3rd
      December 1918 and on the 9th of December the Appellants Wrote
      saying " Owing to the press of year and affairs and the uncertainty
      connected with the present conditions we have not yet firmly
      concluded as to what quantities on each grade of paper we will
      be able to place orders for the coming year." On the 6th of
      January 1919 they wrote saying " We cannot, of course, state
      definitely what our needs for the coming year will be. For the
      moment we estimate that we will need from 800 to 1,000 cases
      of Brittains' papers during the year 1919." On the 11th of January
      1919 they sent four orders which were duly executed ; and on the
      23rd of January they wrote to Brittains saying " We have not
      yet made up our seasons orders, awaiting advice from you, as
      per your letter through Cromptons, in which you state that about
      the middle of January you would be able to inform us as to your
      view of the situation and the probability of the quantities that you
      could furnish for the coming year." On the 24th of January 1919
      they wrote to both the Respondents sending a number of orders.
      To Brittains they wrote: " We have made no mention of price
      as we take it for granted that you will adjust these in accordance
      with conditions which we hope are such that there will be no
      further advance but probably gradual reductions," and to
      Cromptons they wrote " We have not yet determined the full
      quantity of paper that we will require from you and Brittains,
      but realising that you have no special orders from us we are
      sending you orders enclosed which will cover part of our wants
      for the year 1919." On the 7th of February 1919 they sent a
      further order ; and on the 12th of February 1919 Cromptons
      replied as follows : " We also thank you for the 24 orders for 286
      cases of Messrs. Brittains' papers and 8 orders for 64 cases of our
      paper, to all of which we will give our best attention and Messrs.
      Brittains write us with regard to the orders for their papers that
      they are endeavouring to let you have deliveries this year up to at
      least the full 100 per cent, for the standard year ending 28th of
      February 1918, but that at the moment conditions are particularly
      uncertain. Nevertheless they would like us to assure that they
      would give their most careful attention to your requirements and
      endeavour to let you have the fullest output they possibly can
      and they add that time will make the position clearer." On the
      25th of February 1919 Cromptons acknowledged the order sent
      the 7th of February. On the 11th of March 1919 the Appellants
      sent a further 6 " orders" and on the 29th of March 1919
      Cromptons replied saying " We also thank you for the six orders
      for Messrs. Brittains' blue paper which we have passed on to them
      and same will have their best attention."

    It was in respect of non-delivery of a large part of the paper
    specified in the above " orders" that the Appellants claimed
    damages. Copies of the said " orders" are set out on pages 374
    to 389 of the Appendix.

    1. On the 9th of April 1919 the Respondents cabled to the
      Appellants to come to England as soon as possible, a question
      having arisen whether the Appellants had or had not by their
      conduct in respect of the prices they had charged in America given
      justification for the summary determination of the arrangement
      of August 1913. After further communications the Respondents
      in May 1919 treated the arrangement as at an end by reason of
      the Appellants' conduct.

    2. On the 17th of September 1919 the Respondents gave
      notice if such was necessary, to terminate the arrangement of
      August 1933 on the 31st of March 1920.

    3. The case was heard on documentary evidence alone by
      The Honourable Mr. Justice Bailhache on the 9th and 10th of
      November 1922. The learned Counsel for the Appellants argued
      that the August 1913 document constituted a legally binding
      contract; and that alternatively the 1919 orders and acceptances
      constituted legally binding contracts against the Respondents
      Cromptons alone ; and having stated that these (with the minor
      points which do not now arise) were all the points in the case,
      added later, that there was on the pleadings an alternative claim
      based on the pre-existing arrangements having continued as if
      they were not superseded by the August 1913 agreement. This
      last point, however, was never argued and no further allusion was
      made to it in the course of the case. The learned Judge in his
      judgment, which was delivered on the 10th of November 1922,
      referred to three of the earlier letters written to the Appellants
      by the Respondents Cromptons and treated them as without
      question constituting binding contracts (a point which was never
      admitted on behalf of the Respondents). He then in dealing
      with the August 1913 document assumed a line to be drawn at
      the end of the first paragraph of that document and examining
      that paragraph by itself said that it was quite clear that the parties
      therein agreed that the three pre-existing contracts were to be
      extended and strengthened. What followed was, in his view,
      a setting out of the intended course of business and a bringing into
      one document of the provisions of the three earlier letters referred
      to, with slight alterations, but with nothing to show that the
      pre-existing contracts should cease to be contracts for "if that
      were so, that would be directly contrary to the very object Messrs.
      Rose & Frank had in view, which was not to weaken the ties
      which bound the Defendants to them but to strengthen them."
      The learned Judge then, coming to the "honourable pledge"
      clause, stated that it was incomprehensible why the Appellants,
      having such intention and desire, should have consented to that
      clause being inserted and how three business firms should have
      taken the trouble to write out a memorandum of this kind, which
      was not to be worth the paper it was written on, and led to an
      impossible position; and having come to the conclusion that the
      memorandum, without the clause in question, recited contracts
      which were then binding and did in fact bind the Respondents to
      continue those contracts for periods of three years, held that that
      clause, if it meant that the parties were not to be legally bound,
      was repugnant to the main spirit of the memorandum and must be
      rejected ; and that it must equally be rejected if it merely excluded
      the jurisdiction of the Court, though he expressed the view that
      it had the wider meaning. With regard to the 1919 " Orders,'
      though it was in the circumstances unnecessary to decide the point,
      the learned Judge expressed the opinion that whatever view be
      taken of the 1913 document, these orders constituted binding
      contracts between the Appellants and the Respondents Cromptons
      and that there were sufficient memoranda of such contracts to
      satisfy the Sale of Goods Act. The plea of the Sale of Goods
      Act was abandoned by the Respondents in the Court of Appeal,
      and they do not now rely upon it.

    1. It was accordingly adjudged and declared that the
      agreement of July 1913 was a legally binding agreement against
      both Respondents; that the orders mentioned in paragraph 18
      of the Statement of Claim constituted legally binding contracts
      against the Respondents Cromptons and that all other issues
      remaining to be tried and the issues as to damages should stand
      over for trial by The Honourable Mr. Justice Bailhacheor other judge
      taking the Commercial List (such order to supersede the previous
      order directing reference to an Official Referee) that the Appellants
      should have the costs of the hearing in any event, that taxation
      of costs should stand over, and that a commission should proceed to
      America to take evidence as to the issues raised in paragraphs 18
      and 20 of the Defence.

    2. On the 23rd of November 1922 the Respondents gave
      notice of appeal to the Court of Appeal against the said judgment
      and order (save in certain respects not now material).

    3. The appeal was heard before Lords Justices Bankes,
      Scrutton and Atkin and the Court held unanimously that the
      said agreement of 1913 was not a legally binding agreement
      upon either of the Respondents and (Lord Justice Atkin dissenting)
      that the said orders did not constitute legally binding contracts
      against the Respondents Cromptons.

    4. Lord Justice Bankes on the assumption (but without
      deciding the point) that the pre-existing agreements between the
      Appellants and the Respondents Cromptons were legally binding
      contracts laid down the principle that it is essential to the creation
      of a legally binding contract that the parties should intend that
      it shall have legal consequences and be legally enforceable and
      held that the " honourable pledge" clause, was not a provision
      of means for ousting the jurisdiction of the Court, but an expression
      of an intention that the arrangement should be merely an honour-
      able pledge and that all legal consequences and remedies should
      be excluded and applied to and dominated the ,whole agreement;
      and that the 1919 orders and acceptances were only requisitions
      made under the 1913 agreement, having no more contractual
      force than that agreement.

    1. Lord Justice Scrutton expressed the opinion that the
      pre-existing agreements gave rise to legal relations, though " owing
      to the vagueness of the language used there might be considerable
      difficulty in ascertaining with exactitude what those legal relations
      were" agreed that the " honourable pledge" clause meant
      that the parties should not be under any legal obligation to each
      other at all; and held that such intention being clearly expressed
      there was no reason why effect should not be given to it and that
      there was no ground for the application of the principle of the
      rejection of repugnant clauses. As to the 1919 orders, the learned
      Lord Justice held that on the documents there was "no binding
      acceptance of a legal proposal."

    2. Lord Justice Atkin agreed that the 1913 arrangement
      was not a legally binding agreement; but was of the opinion that
      the 1919 orders were not affected by the arrangement of 1913 and
      constituted contracts binding upon the Defendants Cromptons.

    3. On the question whether the pre-existing agreements
      remained in existence and enforceable, in spite of the 191.3 arrange-
      ment, the Court was unanimously of opinion that the matter should
      be left to the Court of First Instance as one of the issues remaining
      to be tried; though Lord Justice Scrutton expressed the view
      that the question could have been decided on the correspondence
      and documents without further evidence and said that if it had
      rested with him he would have decided it in favour of the present
      Respondents.

    The Respondents humbly submit that the judgment of the
    Court of Appeal, save on the question of the pre-191.3 agreements,
    was right and ought to be affirmed for the following amongst other

    REASONS.

    (1) BECAUSE on the true construction of the
    August 1913 document as a whole and of the


    " honourable pledge " clause it was the intention
    of the parties that the said documents should,
    have no binding legal effect upon their relations.

    (2) BECAUSE there is no reason in law why such
    an intention should not be treated as having
    been effectively carried out.

    (3) BECAUSE the expressed intention of the parties
    was not merely to exclude the jurisdiction of the
    courts, and the rule that an agreement with
    that object is against pub lie policy is inapplicable.

    (4) BECAUSE even apart from the " honourable
    pledge'' clause, the language used in the
    document is indicative of an intention of the
    parties that the document should have no
    binding legal effect upon their relations and
    there is no repugnancy between that clause and
    the rest of the document.

    (5) BECAUSE even if the language of the document,
    apart from that clause, is language creating a
    contractual relation, it cannot be taken
    independently of that clause; and the doctrine
    as to the rejection of repugnant clauses is
    inapplicable.

    (6) BECAUSE the " orders " and acceptances were
    on their true construction not intended by the
    parties to create binding legal contracts, but
    were merely indications by the Appellants,
    acknowledged by the Respondents Cromptons, of
    the Appellants' probable requirements for the
    year under the August 1913 arrangement and
    were " calls for deliveries " under that arrange-
    ment and were of no higher contractual force
    than that arrangement, but were merely part
    of the method of carrying it out.


    (7) BECAUSE to attribute a contractual validity
    to the orders would be to treat the parties as
    contractually bound for a year to the extent
    of the orders, and so to nullify to that extent
    the intention of the parties expressed in the
    August 3 93 3 document.

    (8) BECAUSE the order of the Court of Appeal on
    these issues was right.

    The Respondents Cromptons as Appellants by cross-appeal,
    humbly submit that the judgment of the Court of Appeal was
    wrong in that it was not further declared and adjudged that the
    arrangements made before 1913 by these Respondents with the
    Appellants were not legally binding contracts or alternatively,
    if they were legally binding contracts that they had ceased to be
    binding upon the parties after the arrangement of August 1913
    was entered into and/or had so ceased in the year 1919 ; and will
    humbly pray that it may be declared and adjudged accordingly,
    or that such other order may be made as to this most Honourable
    House may seem meet for the following amongst other

    REASONS,

    (1) BECAUSE the Appellants before the Court of
    First Instance (as is stated in paragraph 30 of
    this case) did not contend that the arrangements
    made before 1913 continued in force.

    (2) BECAUSE the whole of the evidence necessary
    and admissible for the decision of the question is
    contained in the correspondence and documents.

    (3) BECAUSE the said arrangements were on their
    true construction not intended by the parties
    to be of legally binding effect; and the parties
    and in particular the Appellants showed by their
    conduct that they were not intended to be of
    legally binding effect.


    (4) BECAUSE there was no consideration for the
    undertakings given by the Respondents
    Cromptons.

    (5) BECAUSE there were no sufficient memoranda
    of the said alleged agreements to satisfy the
    Statute of Frauds.

    (6) BECAUSE the said alleged agreements were
    so vague as to be unenforceable.

    (7) BECAUSE, even if the said alleged agreements
    were legally binding contracts, they were by
    mutual consent rescinded and abandoned when
    the parties entered into the arrangement of
    August 1913.

    (8) BECAUSE they were abandoned and became
    obsolete by reason of the conduct of the parties
    in carrying on business and acting from 1913
    onwards under the arrangement of August
    1913.

    (9) BECAUSE the judgment of the Court of Appeal
    was wrong in so far as the Court refused to deal
    with these issues and to decide them in favour
    of these Respondents.

    JOHN SIMON.
    T. EASTHAM.
    JAMES WYLIE.

    In the House of Lords

    ON APPEAL

    From His Majesty's Court of Appeal
    (England).

    between

    ROSE AND FRANK COMPANY - Appellants

    and

    J. R. CROMPTON & BROTHERS LIMITED
    and BRITAINS LIMITED - Respondents

    AND BETWEEN

    J. R CROMPTON & BROTHERS LIMITED

    Appellants on the Cross-Appeal
    and

    ROSE AND FRANK COMPANY

    Respondents on the Cross-Appeal

    Case

    for the respondents on the original
    appeal and appellants on the cross-
    appeal.

    RAWLE, JOHNSTONE & CO.,

    1 Bedford Bow,

    London, W.C. l,
    Agents for
    ADDLESHAW, SONS & LATHAM,

    Manchester,
    Solicitors for the Respondents and for
    . the Appellants on the Cross-Appeal.


    In the House of Lords

    ON APPEAL

    FROM HIS MAJESTY'S COURT OF APPEAL (ENGLAND).


    between—ROSE & FRANK COMPANY ... appellants

    AND

    J. R. CROMPTON & BROTHERS

    LIMITED and BRITTAINS LIMITED respondents.

    CASE

    FOR THE RESPONDENTS ON THE CROSS APPEAL
    (The Appellants on the Original Appeal).

    1.—The Appellants on the Cross Appeal raise in their Case two
    points :—

    1. That the Agreements made before the 1913 Agreement
      (hereinafter called the pre-1913 Agreements) were not valid
      and legal contracts ; alternatively that if they were legal
      contracts they were not enforceable by reason of there being
      no memorandum sufficient to satisfy the Statute of Frauds.

    2. That the Court of Appeal was wrong in treating the issue
      as to whether the pre-1913 contracts were superseded or
      cancelled by the 1913 Agreement as being an issue of fact
      which should not be tried on the Appeal before them but
      dealt with by a Judge of First Instance and as an issue
      which fell under the Consent Order dated the 10th November
      1922 and should be tried by the Honourable Mr. Justice
      Bailhache or if he could not take it by another Judge taking
      the Commercial List.


    2.—With regard to the first question raised on the Cross Appeal,
    viz.: whether the pre-1913 Agreements were valid and legal contracts,
    it was never disputed by Mr. Disturnal, who appeared on behalf of
    the Appellants on the Cross Appeal before the trial Judge, that such
    Agreements were valid and legal contracts.

    The Honourable Mr. Justice Bailhache in his Judgment found
    that the pre-1913 Agreements were legal binding contracts, the
    Judgment of the trial Judge as drawn up by Agreement between
    the parties, did not recite that part of the learned Judge's Judgment,
    because it was immaterial in view of the learned Judge's finding as to
    the 1913 Agreement.

    3.—In the Court of Appeal, Sir John Simon, who appeared for
    the Appellants on the Cross Appeal, in opening, said that he did not
    admit that the pre-1913 Agreements constituted binding contracts,
    but said that this question had yet to be decided ; in his reply,
    however, he assumed that they were enforceable contracts.

    4.—Neither before the trial Judge nor before the Court of Appeal
    was it contended that the pre-1913 Agreements were not enforceable
    by reason of there being no memorandum sufficient to satisfy the
    Statute of Frauds.

    5.—The position, therefore, would appear to be that the House
    of Lords is asked to decide a point which was not in issue before the
    trial Judge, and which was not the subject of appeal to the Court of
    Appeal, and which, in the Court of Appeal, was first stated to be a
    question yet to be decided, and was subsequently treated as being not
    in issue.

    6.—With regard to the second question raised on the Cross-
    Appeal, viz.: that the Court of Appeal was wrong in treating the
    issue as to whether the pre-1913 contracts were superseded or
    cancelled by the 1913 Agreement as being an issue of fact which
    should not be tried on the appeal before them, but dealt with by a
    Judge of first instance and as an issue which fell under the Consent
    Order, dated the 10th November 1922, and should be tried by the
    Honourable Mr. Justice Bailhache, or if he could not take it by
    another Judge taking the Commercial List. This point was never
    taken before the trial Judge, but was taken by Sir John Simon in
    opening on behalf of the Appellants on the Gross Appeal in the Court
    of Appeal; when Mr. Wright, Counsel for the Respondents on the
    Cross Appeal, started arguing this point in the Court of Appeal he
    was stopped by the Court on the ground that it involved a question
    of fact, and that the material was not available for the Court of
    Appeal to arrive at a conclusion on the question of fact.

    7.—In their Judgment, Lord Justice Bankes and Lord Justice
    Atkin decided that the question as to whether the pre-1913
    Agreements cancelled or superseded the previous agreements was
    one of fact and should be tried by the trial Judge. Lord Justice
    Scrutton, on the other hand, was prepared to give Judgment on this
    question in favour of the Appellants on the Cross Appeal.

    8.—It is submitted that the view that the majority of the Court
    of Appeal on this point was correct. The effect of the Cross Appeal
    on this point is to ask the House of Lords to decide an issue of
    fact, the materials for which decision were. not before the trial
    Judge, or the Court of Appeal of the House of Lords. The House of
    Lords would further, if it acceded to the Cross Appeal, be deciding
    the point which has never been the subject of complete arguments
    in the Courts below. In order to enable a decision to be arrived at,
    it would be probably necessary to hear oral evidence, and in any case
    to examine and peruse a great number of letters which were never
    put in evidence or considered before the trial Judge or in the Court
    of Appeal.

    9.—It is humbly submitted that the Judgments of Lord Justice
    Bankes and Lord Justice Atkin were right and ought to be affirmed
    for the Reasons stated above.

    R. A. WRIGHT.

    C. J. CONWAY.


    In the House of Lords

    on appeal

    FROM HIS MAJESTY'S COURT OF APPEAL
    (ENGLAND).

    between

    ROSE & FRANK COMPANY Appellant

    AND—

    J. R. CROMPTON & BROTHERS
    LIMITED and BRITTAINS
    LIMITED ... ... Respondent

    CASE

    FOR THE RESPONDENTS ON THE
    CROSS APPEAL

    (The Appellants on the Original Appeal)

    WILD, COLLINS & CROSSE,

    Kennan's House,

    Crown Court,

    Cheapside, EC

    In the House of Lords

    ON APPEAL

    FROM HIS MAJESTY'S COURT OF APPEAL (ENGLAND).

    BETWEEN

    ROSE & PRANK COMPANY - - - - - Appellants

    AND,

    J. R. GROMPTON & BROS. LIMITED and

    BRITTAINS LIMITED - - - - - - Respondents

    and between

    J. R. CBOMPTON & BROS. LIMITED - - - Appellants

    (On the Cress Appeal)

    and

    ROSE & FRANK COMPANY - - - - - Respondents

    (On the Cross Appeal).

    Respondents' Additional Documents

    EAWLE, JOHNSTONE & CO.,

    1 Bedford Row, W.C.I.
    Agents for
    ADDLESHAW, SONS & LATHAM,

    Manchester,
    Solicitors for the Respondents and for the

    Appellants in the Cross Appeal.


    No document Page
      correspondence.
     
    29 Letter Appellants to J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd., dated
    24th June 1909
    416
      Letter J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to C. Campbell, dated
    12th March 1913
    418
      Letter J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to C. Campbell, dated
    26th March 1913
    419
      Letter J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants, dated
    16th April 1913
    420
      Letter Appellants to J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd., dated
    2nd May 1913
    420
      Letter J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants, dated
    6th June 1913
    423
      Letter Appellants to J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd., dated
    24th June 1913
    424
      Letter Appellants to J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd., dated
    22nd July 1913
    426
      Letter J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants, dated
    15th March 1916
    427
      Letter J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants, dated
    23rd March 1916
    428
      Letter Appellants to Brittains Limited, dated -24th March
    1916
    428
      Letter Appellants to Brittains Limited, dated 24th March
    1916
    429

    INDEX

    In the House of Lords.


    ON APPEAL

    FROM HIS MAJESTY'S COURT OF APPEAL (ENGLAND).

    BETWEEN

    ROSE & FRANK COMPANY - - - - Appellants

    and

    J. R. CROMPTON & BROS. LIMITED and

    BRITTAINS LIMITED - - - - Respondents

    and between

    J. R. CROMPTON & BROS. LIMITED - - Appellants

    (On the Cross Appeal)

    and

    ROSE & FRANK COMPANY ... - Respondents

    (On the Cross Appeal)

    Respondents' Additional Documents.

    No. 29.
    CORRESPONDENCE.

    S. J. rose & frank.
    Paper.

    201 & 203, Wooster St.,

    New York.

    Messrs. Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. June 24th 1909.

    Bury, England.

    Gentlemen,

    We beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of June 9th
    contents of which has been duly noted.


    We are rather surprised at the tone of your letter, as well as
    your reply to Ailing & Cory, of which you send us a copy. It sounds
    as if you lack confidence in our ability to carry on your business.
    If you do not think that we have your interest in mind as well as our
    own, and recognize that they are mutual, you are entirely mistaken.
    You need have no fear that Ailing & Cory will introduce any paper
    to substitute yours as they have been trying that for the last two
    years, and have not succeeded.

    There is but one house in this country that can introduce a new
    paper to the trade, and that is ourselves.

    You evidently do not realise the position that we hold with the
    carbon trade, and the importance of the position that we occupy,
    as we have a full line to supply these people with, which no other
    house in this country has.

    It is absolutely necessary that you leave matters entirely in
    our hands and let us work according to our best judgment and
    discretion and you will not be a loser by it in any way. If there
    is any lack of confidence either in our integrity or our ability to
    handle the situation we should be very much pleased if you would
    let us know. We have been shaping things for the last six months,
    and it now looks to us that with a little patience, you will not
    be the loser.

    In our last letter we explained to you that it is not to our
    advantage nor to yours to encourage a competition with ourselves,
    which to say the least is not satisfactory in its dealings.

    We beg herewith to enclose draft for L.579.3.7 in payment of
    bills as per pay statement attached.

    We also enclose four orders for which we bespeak your
    attention, calling your special attention to order 776. You know
    what trouble we have had in the past by reason of the uneven
    weights, and we trust that you will succeed in avoiding a
    re-occurrence.


    We think we can do a much larger business in this R. & F.
    substance if you would see your way clear to reduce the price. Also
    if you could make it so that it would take the Blue and Purple ink,
    which it does not take now, as there must be some chemical in your
    mixture which causes these colors to fade.

    We have no trouble in this respect with your extra heavy.
    51/2 lb. paper and we cannot understand why you cannot get the
    same thing in R. & F. 7 lb.

    Please hurry forward order 781 with the first Shipment that
    you make to us.

    With regards, we are,

    S. J. Rose & Frank.
    ALFRED FRANK.

    james R. crompton & brothers limited.

    Elton Paper Mills,
    Near Bury,

    Ref. A.N. " 1178." Lane.

    12th March 1913.
    Charles Campbell Esq.,
    (of New York)

    Hotel Meurice,
    Rue de Rivoli,
    Paris.

    Dear Sir,

    We are in receipt of your favor of the 10th inst. and have also
    received a letter from your New York House intimating that you are
    on this side, and that you would call and see us. We understand
    you have the memorandum of the proposed Agreement for three
    years. We will arrange for a meeting with Messrs. Brittains if you
    will let us know definitely what time you can be in Manchester on
    Tuesday next.

    We enclose private letter we have received for you, and with
    kind regards, we remain,

    Yours truly,

    For Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd.
    ALF. NUTTALL,

    Director.

    P.S.—We hope you will be able to get here not later than
    Tuesday next, as we shall be closing for holidays latter end of
    the week, and the writer will be away from home.

    james R. crompton & brothers limited.

    Elton Paper Mills,
    Near Bury,

    Lane.
    Ref. A.N. " 1178." 26th March 1913.

    Charles Campbell Esq.,
    Midland Hotel,

    Manchester.

    Dear Sir,

    We confirm telephone conversation with you this morning, &
    shall be pleased to see you here tomorrow morning. We have
    arranged with Mr. Haigh to meet us at the Midland Hotel at
    3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon.

    Yours truly,

    For Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd.
    ALF. NUTTALL,

    Director.


    Ref. J.R.C. " 1178."

    The Rose & Frank Co.

    New York. 16th April 1913.

    Gentn.
    re Carbonizing Tissue business in the United States and Canada.

    We now beg to submit to you for your acceptance, the enclosed
    revised draft of the proposed three years Agreement & upon
    hearing from you that you approve the same, we will have prepared
    two clear copies, one for your signature, & one for ours, unless in
    order to save time, you like to send one to us signed by yourselves,
    & one for us to sign which latter we will return to you immediately
    after we receive it. This we think is all that should be necessary
    to put the matter upon a satisfactory footing. & we shall be glad
    when it is finally settled.

    If you like to include Messrs. Brittains cheap grade tissue in
    the Agreement, under the same conditions which apply to the best
    papers, we shall be glad for you to do so. If you cannot see your
    way to this, we suggest this grade should be left out of the present
    Agreement, leaving it to apply only to Messrs. Brittains best papers.

    The writer is sorry, that through illness, he was unable to see
    Mr. Campbell when over here, but sends his kind regards, & hoping
    soon to hear from you in reply to this letter, we are,

    Yours truly,

    For James R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd.
    JAMES R. CROMPTON,

    Director.

    New York.
    May 2 1913.

    Messrs. J. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd.
    Bury.

    Dear Sirs,

    We have your letter of the 16th ulto. in the matter of the
    3 years agreement between Messrs. Brittains Ltd., yourselves and
    ourselves, and have carefully read over the Memorandum.


    We would suggest the following changes.

    The first sentence on the first page, first paragraph to be
    amended to read as follows: If no notice be given by either
    party the arrangements shall be regarded as continuing for
    a further period of three years.

    This is the form of agreement that we have with all our manu-
    facturers and seems to be the fairest all around, as we do not think
    that any contract in which there is so much involved to all of us
    should continue at the risk of being terminated by six months notice
    at any time. No doubt if you will think this matter over you will
    agree with us. The same reasons that moved us all to make a three
    year contract now remain at the end of the first three years for any
    new contract.

    We would suggest an addition to the first paragraph on page 2
    regarding the F. S. Webster Co. That the paper sold to the
    F. S. Webster Co. shall only be in such quantities as they require
    for manufacturing carbonizing paper in their own plant. And
    that they are not to be allowed to offer any of the paper for sale
    uncarbonized.

    On page 2, paragraph 2 11th line, we would suggest that the
    average of the last three years, 1910, 1911 and 1912 be inserted.

    We think that in order to avoid any possible misunderstanding,
    something should be said in your letter carrying out the idea of
    paragraph 4 of the agreement submitted by us. This does not bind
    you in any way to accept the making of new papers for us unless
    you desire to do so under an understanding as outlined in the
    paragraph referred to.

    We are of the opinion that the first paragraph of your letter
    on page 3 is unnecessary and better omitted. If, however, you desire
    to insert this we have no objection, as we feel perfectly safe in the
    light of our past experience, and we think you should reciprocate
    the same feeling toward us which seems to us to make this paragraph
    unnecessary and might be construed as a reflection on either one of
    us. As stated, however you can leave it in or just as you desire.

    If you will have clear copies prepared and sent to us, adopting
    the suggestions that we made, we shall be pleased to sign and
    return them.

    You will see that we have elected not to include Messrs. Brittains
    cheap grade of tissue in this agreement, as we cannot recede from
    tine position that we have taken regarding the confining of the sale
    of this paper exclusively to us for the United States and Canada
    without any exception whatever.

    We also beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of
    April 17th and beg to state that we have not yet had a chance to
    try out the R & F Paper which you mention. Replying to your
    enquiries regarding an agreement with you in regard to R & F
    paper, we of course take it for granted that we have the selling
    right for this and similar grades in this country and Canada, and
    are perfectly willing to enter into a three year agreement with you
    under the same conditions that we have had the paper heretofore
    which you can incorporate in the letter to be signed by yourselves,
    Brittains and ourselves noting the different conditions under which
    the sale of this paper is given to us, to wit, that it is strictly
    confined to us without any exception whatsoever, both for these
    grades and anything similar.

    We have received your invoices for shipments of some of our
    orders and note that you shipped these via Hull, which is rather
    embarrassing to us, as in cabling our order No. 2721 we stated to
    ship by quickest route which we thought you would understand as
    meaning via Liverpool. In order to avoid any future misunder-
    standings of this kind please note that when we cable for goods,
    unless we state otherwise, we would like our orders cabled shipped
    via Liverpool, quickest steamer.

    We enclose herewith draft for £1235/8/5 in payment of bills
    as per pay statement attached.

    With kindest regards, we are,

    Very truly yours,

    Rose & Frank Co.
    (Sgd) ALFRED FRANK.

    Copy of this letter sent to Brittains.


    We would suggest the following changes.

    The first sentence on the first page, first paragraph to be
    amended to read as follows: If no notice be given by either
    party the arrangements shall be regarded as continuing for
    a further period of three years.

    This is the form of agreement that we have with all our manu-
    facturers and seems to be the fairest all around, as we do not think
    that any contract in which there is so much involved to all of us
    should continue at the risk of being terminated by six months notice
    at any time. No doubt if you will think this matter over you will
    agree with us. The same reasons that moved us all to make a three
    year contract now remain at the end of the first three years for any
    new contract.

    We would suggest an addition to the first paragraph on page 2
    regarding the F. S. Webster Co. That the paper sold to the
    F. S. Webster Co. shall only be in such quantities as they require
    for manufacturing carbonizing paper in their own plant. And
    that they are not to be allowed to offer any of the paper for sale
    uncarbonized.

    On page 2, paragraph 2 11th line, we would suggest that the
    average of the last three years, 1910, 1911 and 1912 be inserted.

    We think that in order to avoid any possible misunderstanding,
    something should be said in your letter carrying out the idea of
    paragraph 4 of the agreement submitted by us. This does not bind
    you in any way to accept the making of new papers for us unless
    you desire to do so under an understanding as outlined in the
    paragraph referred to.

    We are of the opinion that the first paragraph of your letter
    on page 3 is unnecessary and better omitted. If, however, you desire
    to insert this we have no objection, as we feel perfectly safe in the
    light of our past experience, and we think you should reciprocate
    the same feeling toward us which seems to us to make this paragraph
    unnecessary and might be construed as a reflection on either one of
    us. As stated, however you can leave it in or just as you desire.

    If you will have clear copies prepared and sent to us, adopting
    the suggestions that we made, we shall be pleased to sign and
    return them.


    You will see that we have elected not to include Messrs. Brittains
    cheap grade of tissue in this agreement, as we cannot recede from
    tine position that we have taken regarding the confining of the sale
    of this paper exclusively to us for the United States and Canada
    without any exception whatever.

    We also beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of
    April 17th and beg to state that we have not yet had a chance to
    try out the R & F Paper which you mention. Replying to your
    enquiries regarding an agreement with you in regard to R & F
    paper, we of course take it for granted that we have the selling
    right for this and similar grades in this country and Canada, and
    are perfectly willing to enter into a three year agreement with you
    under the same conditions that we have had the paper heretofore
    which you can incorporate in the letter to be signed by yourselves,
    Brittains and ourselves noting the different conditions under which
    the sale of this paper is given to us, to wit, that it is strictly
    confined to us without any exception whatsoever, both for these
    grades and anything similar.

    We have received your invoices for shipments of some of our
    orders and note that you shipped these via Hull, which is rather
    embarrassing to us, as in cabling our order No. 2721 we stated to
    ship by quickest route which we thought you would understand as
    meaning via Liverpool. In order to avoid any future misunder-
    standings of this kind please note that when we cable for goods,
    unless we state otherwise, we would like our orders cabled shipped
    via Liverpool, quickest steamer.

    We enclose herewith draft for £1235/8/5 in payment of bills
    as per pay statement attached.

    With kindest regards, we are,

    Very truly yours,

    Rose & Frank Co.
    (Sgd) ALFRED FRANK.
    Copy of this letter sent to Brittains.



    james R. crompton & brothers limited.

    Elton Paper Mills
    Near Bury, Lane.

    Ref. B.C. Jr. " 1178 " 6th June 1913.

    The Rose & Frank Co.
    New York.

    Gentn,

    We duly received your favor of the 2nd ulto. with reference
    to the three years agreement, copy of which was sent on to Messrs.
    Brittains Limited. We have fully conferred with them & now
    enclose draft of what we propose this should be, & hope you will
    agree with it.

    You will notice that we have acceded to your wish that if no
    notice be given by either party the arrangement shall be regarded
    as continuing for- a further period of three years.

    With reference to the F. S. Webster Co. & your request that
    we should embody a paragraph to the effect that these customers
    should be supplied with paper only on the understanding that it is
    for their own use, & not for sale in the unprepared state, we have
    no reason for supposing that they do sell the paper except after
    they have coated it, & having no special reason for writing them
    now limiting them to the coating of all the paper themselves, we
    think that the point raised by you will be quite covered by the
    clause we have inserted in the agreement, to the effect that should
    they, during the currency of the Agreement, offer for sale in its
    unprepared state the paper they buy from us, objection shall then
    be raised by us to their doing so, as the assumption at present is that
    the I'. S. Webster Co. coat all the paper we supply to them.

    With regard to the average of the last three years, we have
    also acceded to your desire that the minimum volume of business
    should be based on the average of the last three years instead of
    the last two years. In doing this we bear in mind that the whole
    basis of this agreement rests upon the honourable & loyal way in
    which the Agreement is carried through by each of the three
    parties. The natural expectation of course would be that1 the
    business should show an increase from year to year, instead of
    falling to the average of a past series of years. For the same reason
    we should not like to delete the paragraph in this connection which
    makes it clear that this is not an ordinary legal Agreement subject
    to the interpretation of the Law Courts, but something that we
    ourselves & Brittains Limited regard as more binding still, the
    honourable pledge of each of the three parties.

    With reference to the substance of paragraph 4 in your draft
    Agreement submitted to us, you will see that we have incorporated
    the essence of this paragraph in the revised draft agreement, as
    now sent forward, & after full discussion with Messrs. Brittains
    Limited, we have agreed, as stated in the draft, that the cheaper
    carbonizing papers which have already been the subject of dis-
    cussion, shall be included in this special & exclusive arrangement
    in which the " R & F " Papers are also included.

    The draft Agreement as it now stands covers the whole ground
    of this carbonizing tissue business, & if you unreservedly agree,
    we will have it copied in triplicate, each copy to be signed by the
    three parties, & one copy retained by each of them.

    After the full consideration that has now been given to this
    matter, we trust the business will go forward on sound foundations
    to the satisfaction of all the parties concerned.

    Yours faithfully
    For Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd.

    RALPH CROMPTON jr.

    Director.

    rose & frank Co.

    New York,

    June 24th 13.

    Messrs. Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd.
    Bury, Lancashire, England.

    Dear Sirs : —

    We beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letters of the 3rd,
    6th, 9th and 11th inst.


    The Matter of Blue Carbonizing Tissue, we note that you are
    doing your utmost to hurry forward part of our order and we trust
    that you have been successful and that a partial shipment is now
    on the way.

    In reference to the draft agreement sent us in your letter of
    the 6th inst., we beg to state that the same is satisfactory to us,
    and if you will have the agreement or memorandum drawn up in
    triplicate we shall be pleased to sign two copies returning them
    to you, asking you to send us one copy signed by you and Messrs.
    Brittains Ltd.

    We desire to call your attention to the fact that we have been
    penalized on the Canadian business which we do not think is just
    fair. We are willing to enter the market on an even basis with
    you so far as the selling price is concerned but at the same time
    we do not think it right that we should be handicapped by having
    to pay more for goods going into Canada than we would if the same
    goods were sent to the United States.

    We think that Messrs. Brittains Ltd, will agree with us that
    this should not be done, and we look forward to a discontinuance
    of the practice of this on your part in the future.

    We are very glad that the matter of our future dealings is now
    on a basis which is fully understood, by all of us, and we look
    forward to a continuance of the agreeable relations that we have
    had with you in the past for a long time in the future.

    As soon as we can get at it, which we hope will be in the
    Course of the next few weeks, we will try to send you an Order for
    the 7 lb. Substance to be manufactured by the Brittains Co.

    We enclose herewith one order for which we bespeak your
    careful attention, as well as draft for £429. 10. 6 in payment
    of bill as per pay statement attached. Another draft will be sent
    to you in the course of a few days.

    With kindest regards, and again wishing to express our
    satisfaction that our little differences are now smoothed out, we are

    Very truly yours,

    ROSE & FRANK CO.

    rose & frank Co.

    New York

    Messrs. Jas R. Crompton & Bros Ltd., July 22/13

    Bury, Lancashire,
    England.

    Dear Sirs,

    We beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letters of July 7th,
    10th and 11th. We also acknowledge receipt of the Memorandum
    of Agreement in triplicate. Our Mr. Frank is at present on his
    vacation and this matter will have our attention as soon as he
    returns.

    We note what you say regarding the #14 A. Gauze as against
    # 4 A Gauze. We shall call our customers attention to the superior
    quality and hope that this grade will prove superior as you state.
    As you state nothing in your letter about the price, we presume
    that you expect to sell this at the same price as the 4—A Gauze.

    Regarding the # 14 — D Extra Thin quality, we wish to
    state that at the present time we could not pay 1d. per lb extra
    for light weight tissue. We shall be glad to bear this in mind,
    however, and see if we cannot open up a new trade for this grade.
    Before offering this, however, we would like to be sure that Brittains
    can keep it absolutely uniform and that it will show superior
    quality. In order to give it a fair test for a higher priced paper,
    it might be well if Brittains would make a few cases of this in
    18 inch, rolls and ship the same when convenient.

    We think it will be difficult to introduce such a high priced
    paper, as competition on the finished product is very keen and
    the prices on the light weight papers are very high as it is now.
    We shall do all we can to try and get a market if it is possible to
    do so. When the first sample run is finished, will you kindly ask
    Brittains to give you a report as to whether they will be able to
    maintain the uniformity and superior quality of the paper so that
    we can promise this to our customers accordingly.

    We enclose herewith draft in payment of invoice as per pay
    statement attached.

    With regards, we are Very truly yours

    ROSE & FRANK CO.


    ' '

    james R. crompton & brothers limited.

    Elton Paper Mills,

    Ref. A.N. Near Bury, Lane.

    Messrs. Rose & Frank Co. March 15th 1916.

    New York.

    Dear Sirs,

    REVISION OF PRICES.

    You will have received copy of Messrs. Brittains' letter of the
    26th ulto. informing us that they find it necessary to ask for an all
    round advance in price of 12½ % to apply to all deliveries after
    March 31st and you will note what they say about not being able
    to give any guarantee, but that they hope to allow the new prices
    to remain in operation for the next six months.

    We have been reviewing our own position and we too find we
    must ask the same advance from the same time.

    It is impossible for us to tell you the difficulties with which
    we now have to contend and the difficulty we have in getting raw
    materials not to mention the greatly increased cost of that which
    we can obtain. We are also, as you can understand troubled as
    regards labour, coal, chemicals and practically everything we
    require.

    We send you under separate cover invoice for a quantity of
    20 L sent on your account to Canada and we very much regret that
    we have had to keep you so short of supplies of this paper but
    we have really been doing the best we could under the awkward
    circumstances.

    Messrs. Brittains write us saying they will be sending forward
    this week a good supply of Blue Gauze 18" also some 26½" rolls No. 7
    and before the end of the month a further delivery of Blue Gauze
    60 rolls 18" No. 6A and some 18" and 261" No. 7.

    We hope we shall be able to get these shipped without any
    undue trouble and delay and hope they will reach you safely and
    help you out of your difficulties.

    Yours faithfully,

    ALF. NUTTALL

    Director.


    james R. crompton & brothers.

    Elton Paper Mills,

    Messrs. Rose & Frank Co. Nr. Bury, Lane.

    Ref. A.N. March 23rd 1916.

    136/140, West 21st Street
    New York.

    Dear Sirs,

    We beg to acknowledge receipt of your favour of the 1st instant
    and thank you for your esteemed remittance £7.34. 3. 7d.

    Messrs. Brittains write to say that the balance of the Blue
    carbonizing Paper together with some of the other grades, will
    be coming round quickly and we shall probably be able to ship
    same next week. They also add that this will make the total
    quantities delivered this quarter equal to the quantity delivered
    in the corresponding quarter last year and they are glad they have
    been able to keep up the deliveries to this standard.

    No effort will be spared to deal with other deliveries.
    As regards the E. C. C. Paper we will try and let you have a
    delivery very soon, but are sorry we cannot at present do very
    much with this.

    With kind regards, we remain,

    Yours faithfully,

    For James R. Crompton & Brothers Ltd.
    ALF. NUTTALL

    Director.

    rose & frank Co.

    136-140 West 21st Street,

    New York,
    Mar. 24th 1916.
    Private & Confidential.
    Messrs. Brittains Ltd.,

    Nr. Leek, Staffs. England.
    Dear Sirs,

    Your private letter of the 26th of February has been duly
    received and we enclose copy of our cable sent to you on March 17.
    reading:

    " Cover six months supply "


    by this you will understand that we accept the conditions outlined
    in your letter as to taking at the advanced price, a six months
    supply of paper, conditional upon your being able to gather a
    supply of stock sufficient to make the same and to take this paper
    from you at the price last quoted independent of the market
    conditions as to price should there be a downward tendency.

    We fully appreciate the position in which you are in and can
    only repeat what we have so often stated, that we regard our
    interests as mutual and our relations such as to warrant the helping
    out of each other in difficulties which may arise from circumstances
    entirely beyond the control of either. We have every confidence in
    you and appreciate the services which you have rendered to us.
    We hope that you will find no further obstacles in supplying us
    with the paper that we have ordered and that you will be in a
    position to make us shipments in the future as you have heretofore.

    With kindest regards, we are,

    Very truly yours,

    Rose & Frank Co.
    ALFRED FRANK.

    136-140 West 21st Street

    New York
    March 24th 1916.
    Messrs. Brittains Ltd.

    Nr. Leek, Staffordshire,
    England.

    Dear Sirs,

    We beg to acknowledge receipt of the copy of your letter
    addressed to Messrs. James R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. in reference
    to price and note that after the 31st of this month you will be
    compelled to make an all round increase of 12 ½ %

    We accept all the conditions as outlined in your letter, to wit:
    That this price is to remain for six months viz : to the end of
    September.

    We beg to confirm all our recent orders sent to you under the
    new conditions, as we do not wish to withdraw any of them, but
    desire them all filled as given.

    430

    A copy of this letter sent to Messrs. James R. Crompton &
    Bros. Ltd. to day.

    With kindest regards, we are, .

    Very truly yours,

    ROSE & FRANK CO
    AF/HG

    P.S.—Enclosed please find copy of letter sent today to Messrs.

    In the House of Lords.

    ON APPEAL

    FROM HIS MAJESTY'S COURT OF APPEAL (ENGLAND).

    between

    ROSE & FRANK COMPANY ...Appellants

    AND-

    JAS. R. CROMPTON & BROS. LIMITED

    and BRITTAINS LIMITED ... Respondents.

    APPENDIX.

    WILD, COLLINS & CROSSE,

    Kennan's House, Crown Court,

    Cheapside, London, E.C.2,

    Appellants' Solicitors.

    RAWLE, JOHNSTONE & CO.,

    1 Bedford Row, London, W.O.I.

    Agents for ADDLESHAW, SONS & LATHAM,

    Manchester,

    Respondents' Solicitors.

    Doct.
    No.
    Description of Document. Date. Page.
    1 Writ, issued 19 Nov. 1919 1
    2 Statement of Claim, delivered 15 Dec. 1920 3
    3 Particulars, delivered 25 Feb. 1921 14
    4 Defence and Counterclaim, delivered 29 July 1921 15
    5 Particulars of Bequest referred to in paragraph 20 of the Defence, delivered 29 July 1921 21
    6 Particulars of Counterclaim under paragraph 22 of the Defence, delivered 29 July 1921 26
    7 Reply to Defence and Counterclaim, delivered 2 Nov. 1921 31
    8 Order of Mr. Justice McCardie transferring .Action to the Commercial
    List, dated
    8 Feb. 1922 32
    9
    Precis of Letters between Solicitors for the parties relative to arrange-
    ments made between them as to the Trial, dated
    8 Mar. 1922
    8 Mar. 1922
    27 Mar. 1922
    31 Mar. 1922
    33
    33
    34
    35
    10 Transcript of Shorthand Writer's Notes of the Judgment of Mr. Justice
    Bailhache, delivered
    10 Nov. 1922 36
    10a Judgment of the Court, dated 10 Nov. 1922 56
    11 Notice of Appeal, dated 23 Nov. 1922 58
    12 Transcript of Shorthand Writer's Notes of the Judgment of the Court
    of Appeal, dated
    Lord Justice Bankes
    Lord Justice Scrutton
    Lord Justice Atkin

    23 Mar. 1923
    … …
    … …
    … …

    59
    59
    64
    70
    13 Order of the Court of Appeal, dated 23 Mar. 1923 80
    14 Further Order of the Court of Appeal, dated 23 Mar. 1923 82
      DOCUMENTS PUT IN AT THE TRIAL.    
    15 Correspondence—
    Letter, Jas. R. Crompton & Bros, Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Brittains Ltd
    " Brittains Ltd. to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Appellants
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants

    7 April 1904
    11 May 1904
    13 Sept. 1904
    22 Sept. 1904
    23 Sept. 1904
    3 Oct. 1904
    12 Oct. 1904

    84
    85
    85
    86
    87
    88
    89
      Correspondence (continued)—
    Letter, Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Alfred Frank to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Alfred Frank
    " Alfred Frank to .Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " " "
    " " "
    " Alfred Nuttall to Alfred Frank
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Brittains Ltd.
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Alfred Frank to Alfred Nuttall
    " Alfred Nuttall to Alfred Frank
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " " "
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Ap pellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " "
    " " "
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Chas. Campbell to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " "
    " Chas. Campbell "
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R, Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " " "

    21 Oct. 1904
    9 Nov. 1904
    23 Nov. 1901
    14 Feb. 1905
    23 Feb. 1905
    25 Feb. 1905
    27 Feb. 1905
    7 Mar. 1905
    5 April 1905
    22 June 1905
    28 Aug. 1905
    22 Nov. 1905
    1 Dec. 1905
    4 Dec. 1905
    17 Jan. 1906
    26 Jan. 1906
    10 Feb. 1906
    30 Mar. 1906
    9 April 1906
    13 July 1906
    27 July 1906
    10 Aug. 1906
    21 Aug. 1906
    10 Sept. 1906
    28 Sept. 1906
    9 Oct. 1906
    19 Oct. 1906
    31 Oct. 1906
    20 Feb. 1907
    20 Mar. 1907
    5 April 1907
    21 Oct. 1907
    2 Dec. 1907
    13 Dec. 1907
    20 Feb. 1908
    4 Mar. 1908
    13 Mar. 1908
    23 Mar. 1908
    28 Aug. 1908
    8 Sept. 1908
    6 Dec. 1908
    24 Dec. 1908
    30 Dec. 1908
    4 Jan. 1909
    11 Jan. 1909
    18 Jan. 1909
    29 Jan. 1909
    6 Feb. 1909
    13 Feb. 1909

    90
    90
    91
    92
    93
    94
    84
    95
    96
    97
    98
    98
    99
    100
    101
    101
    102
    103
    104
    105
    106
    107
    108
    109
    109
    110
    111
    111
    112
    114
    115
    116
    117
    118
    119
    120
    121
    121
    122
    123
    125
    125
    127
    127
    129
    130
    131
    133
    136
    15 Correspondence (continued)—
    Letter, Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton &.Bros. Ltd.
    " Brittains Ltd. to Appellants
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " " "
    " " "
    " " "
    " Appellants to Brittains Ltd
    " " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd.
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " "
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " "
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " Brittains Ltd
    " " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Brittains Ltd
    " " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " Brittains Ltd. "
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Brittains Ltd
    " " Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " Brittains Ltd
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " " "
    " Brittains Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " Brittains
    " Brittains to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " "
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " "
    " " Brittains Ltd
    " " "
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Brittains Ltd
    " " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd
    " " "
    " " Brittains
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Brittains Ltd. to Chas. Campbell
    " Jas. R. Crompton & Bros. Ltd. to Appellants
    " Appellants to Brittains Ltd

    21 Aug. 1914
    1 Sept. 1914
    14 Sept. 1914
    17 Sept. 1914
    23 Oct. 1914
    2 Dec. 1914
    3 Dec. 1914
    18 Dec. 1914
    18 Dec. 1914
    30 Dec. 1914
    8 Jan. 1915
    19 Jan. 1915
    2 Feb. 1915
    2 Mar. 1915
    17 Mar. 1915
    20 Mar. 1915
    2 April 1915
    2 April 1915
    9 April 1915
    15 July 1915
    6 Aug. 1915
    6 Aug. 1915
    25 Oct. 1915
    26 Oct. 1915
    29 Oct. 1915
    12 Nov. 1915
    12 Nov. 1915
    27 Nov. 1915
    10 Dec. 1915
    11 Dec. 1915
    23 Dec. 1915
    30 Dec. 1915
    11 Jan. 1916
    1 Mar. 1916
    10 Mar. 1916
    30 Mar. 1916
    26 May 1916
    23 June 1916
    23 June 1916
    15 Dec. 1916
    J Jan. 1917
    19 Jan. 1917
    19 Jan. 1917
    20 Mar. 1917
    11 April 1917
    13 April 1917
    5 May 1917
    2 July 1917
    16 Oct. 1917

    246
    248
    249
    250
    251
    252
    253
    254
    254
    255
    256
    257
    258
    259
    261
    262
    264
    266
    266
    268
    270
    270
    272
    274
    275
    276
    277
    278
    278
    280
    281
    282
    284
    284
    285
    286
    287
    288
    288
    289
    290
    290
    291
    292
    294
    297
    299
    300
    301



    No. 1.

    Writ, issued 19th November 1919.

    1919.—R.—No. 1401.
    IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE.
    King's Bench Division.

    Between—Rose & Frank Company ... Plaintiffs

    and

    J. R. Crompton & Bros. Limited and Brittains
    Limited Defendants.

    GEORGE THE FIFTH, by the Grace of God, of the United
    Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of the British Dominions
    beyond the Seas, King, Defender of the Faith To J. R. Crompton &
    Bros. Limited of Bury in the County of Lanes and Brittains Limited
    near Leek in the County of Staffs We command you, that within
    eight days after the service of this Writ on you, inclusive of the day
    of such service, you do cause an appearance to be entered for you in
    an action at the suit of Rose & Frank Company And take notice that
    in default of your so doing, the Plaintiff may proceed therein and
    judgment may be given in your absence.

    Witness, Frederick Viscount Birkenhead, Lord High Chancellor
    of Great Britain, the Nineteenth day of November in the year of Our
    Lord One thousand nine hundred and nineteen.

    N.B.—This Writ is to be served within twelve calendar months
    from the date thereof, or, if renewed, within six calendar months from
    the date of the last renewal, including the day of such date, and not
    afterwards.

    The Defendant may appear hereto by entering appearance either
    personally or by Solicitor, at the Central Office, Royal Courts of
    Justice, London.



    The Plaintiffs claim:—

    1. Damages for breach of contract.

    2. Damages for non-delivery of goods.

    This Writ was issued by Wild, Collins & Crosse of and whose
    address for service is Kennan's House, Crown Court, Cheapside, in the
    City of London, Solicitors for the said Plaintiffs, who carry on business
    as Importers and Exporters at 152 West 22nd Street New York in the
    United States of America, and are a body incorporated under the laws
    of the United States.

    This Writ was served by me at
    on the Defendant
    on , the day of , 192 .

    Indorsed the day of ,192 .

    (Signed) ,

    (Address)


    No. 2.

    Statement of Claim, delivered 15th December 1920.

    1919.—R.—No. 1401.
    IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE.
    King's Bench Division.

    Writ issued the 19th day of November 1919.

    Between—Rose & Frank Company Plaintiffs

    and

    J. R. Crompton & Bros. Limited and Brittains
    Limited Defendants.

    STATEMENT OF CLAIM.

    1.—The Plaintiffs carry on business in New York as dealers
    in tissues for carbonising papers and prior to 1907 dealt chiefly in
    tissues for carbonising papers manufactured in countries other than
    England. The Defendants Brittains Limited are English manufacturers
    of high-class tissues for carbonising papers and the Defendants
    Crompton & Bros. Ltd. are English manufacturers of less expensive
    tissues for carbonising papers. At all material times the Defendants
    Crompton Bros. Ltd. had the exclusive right to the output and the
    sale of the products of the Defendants Brittains Limited.

    2.—All the tissues hereinafter referred to bought by the Plaintiffs
    from the Defendants or either of them were to the knowledge of the
    Defendants and or each of them bought for the purpose of resale to the
    Plaintiffs' customers. In respect of all the tissues hereinafter referred
    to the practice of the Plaintiffs as the Defendants well knew was to
    buy such papers from the Defendants in an unfinished state and to sell
    such, papers to manufacturers who coated the unfinished tissues and so converted them into carbonising papers.

    3.—By an Agreement made in or about December 1907 between


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1924/2.html