Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
L. J. LEACH AND COMPANY LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JARDINE SKINNER AND CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/01/1957
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
DAS, S.K.
CITATION:
1957 AIR 357 1957 SCR 438
ACT:
Amendment of plaint-Addition of alternative ground for claim
--Necessary allegations Present in Plaint-Fresh suit on
amended claim barred by limitation -Whether amendment should
be allowed-Action in trover-when maintainable.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants filed a suit for damages for conversion
against the respondents on the allegations that the
respondents were the agents of the appellants, that the-
appellants had placed orders for certain goods with the
respondents, and that the respondents had actually imported
the goods but refused to deliver them to the appellants.
The suit was dismissed on the findings that the parties
stood in the relationship of seller and purchaser, and not
agent and principal and that the title in the goods could
only pass to the appellants when the respondents
appropriated them to the appellants’ contracts. In appeal
before the Supreme Court, the appellants applied for
amendment of the plaint by raising, in the alternative, a
claim for damages for breach of contract for nondelivery of
the goods. All the allegations necessary for sustaining a
claim for damages for breach of contract were already
present in the plaint and the only allegation lacking was
that the appellants were, in the alternative, entitled to
claim damages for breach of contract by the non-delivery of
the goods. But a fresh suit on the amended claim was barred
by limitation on the date of the application.
Held, that this was a fit case in which the amendment should
be allowed. The fact that a fresh suit on the amended claim
was
(1) A.I.R. [1954] Raj. 211.
439
barred by limitation is a factor to be taken into
consideration in the exercise of the discretion as to
whether the amendment should be ordered or not, -and does
not affect the power of the court to order it, if that is
required in the interests of justice.
Charan Das v. Amir Khan, L.R. 47 I.A. 225 and Kisan Das
v. Rachappa, (1909) I.L.R. 33 Bombay 644, followed.
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To maintain an action in trover the plaintiffs must
establish that they had title to the goods in question and
that further they were entitled to possession thereof when
they called upon the defendants to deliver them. If the
parties stood in the relation of sellers and purchasers with
reference to the transactions, then the plaintiffs must show
that the property in the goods, which initially was with the
defendants had passed to them in accordance with the-
provisions of the Sale of Goods Act. If, however, the
defendants imported the goods as agents of the plaintiffs,
then the title to them would undoubtedly be with the latter,
and the only question then would be whether the former were
entitled to retain possession, as they would be if they had
paid the price on behalf of the principals, and had not been
reimbursed that amount.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.
219 of 1953.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated June 26, 1952, of
the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 20 of 1952 arising out
of the judgment and decree dated December 17, 1951, of the
-said High Court in its ordinary Original Civil Jurisdiction
in Suit No. 1623 of 1948.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, M. N.
Gharekhan and M. S. K. Sastri, for the appellants.
H. D. Banaji, D. P. Madon, S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath
and J. B. Dadachanji, for the respondents.
1957. January 22. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-This appeal arises out of a suit
instituted by the appellants in the High Court of Bombay for
damages for conversion estimated at Rs. 4,71,670-15-0. The
suit was decreed by Shah J. sitting on the Original Side,
but his judgment was reversed on appeal. by Chagla C.J. and
Gajendragadkar J. Against this judgment, the plaintiffs have
57
440
preferred the present appeal on a certificate under Art.
133(1)(a) of the Constitution.
Messrs. Maitland Craig Lubricants Ltd. is an American
Company engaged in the manufacture and sale of lubricants.
It carried on business in India with its head office at
Calcutta and a branch office at Bombay. The second
plaintiff, H. J. Leach, was employed during the years 1933
to 1935 in the Bombay branch of the said Company.
Subsequent thereto, the Company closed its Bombay branch,
and eventually wound up its Calcutta office as well, and
thereafter its business was taken over firstly by Ewing and
Company and then by the defendants. After he left the
service of Maitland Craig Lubricants Ltd., Mr. Leach started
business as seller of lubricants on his own account and was
importing them through the defendants. On June 6, 1941,
they entered into an agreement, Ex. A, under which Mr.
Leach was given an exclusive right to sell lubricants of the
make of Maitland Craig Lubricants Ltd., within the limits of
Bombay Presidency, Central Provinces, Rajputana and such
parts of Central India and Hyderabad as might be determined
by the defendants. The agreement was to continue for a
period of five years "unless sooner determined in the manner
hereunder - provided. " Clause 14 of the agreement
runs as follows:
"Notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained this
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agreement shall be terminable by either of the parties
hereto upon giving to the other three calendar months
previous notice in writing expiring at any time but without
prejudice to the rights and liabilities of the parties
respectively which shall have accrued prior to such
termination. "
Clause 16 provides that the agreement was personal to the
selling agent, and that he was not to assign or attempt to
assign his rights thereunder without the consent of the
defendants in writing first obtained. It is common ground
that the dealings between the parties continued on the basis
of this agreement during the
relevant period.
On March 18, 1944, the first plaintiff, which is a Joint
Stock Company, was incorporated -under the provisions
441
of the Indian Companies Act, and on March 30, 1944, the
second plaintiff assigned his business to it. On June 13,
1945, the defendants wrote to the second plaintiff that they
were cancelling the agency constituted under the agreement
dated June 6, 1941, as he had assigned the same to the first
plaintiff without obtaining their consent in writing as
provided therein. Before that date, however, the defendants
had placed orders for import from America of certain goods
which the plaintiffs had required, but these goods were
actually received by them after the cancellation of the
contract. The plaintiffs called upon them to deliver those
goods to them, but they refused to do so. Thereupon, the
plaintiffs instituted the present suit for damages for
conversion alleging that the goods in question were due to
them under Government quotas comprised in Nos. P.L. 1004 to
1007, and that the defendants who had ordered them on their
behalf had themselves no title to them. The plaintiffs also
averred that in importing those goods the defendants were
acting as their agents. The defendants repudiated this
claim. They contended that far from they being the agents
of the plaintiffs, it was the second plaintiff who was their
agent, and that the property in the goods was with the
defendants and that the action for damages for conversion
was not maintainable.
The suit was tried by Shah J. who held that the plaintiffs
were not the agents of the defendants, that the goods in
question had been imported by the latter on behalf of the
former, and that in refusing to deliver the same to them,
the defendants were guilty of conversion. He accordingly
passed a decree referring the suit to the Commissioner for
ascertaining the damages. On appeal, Chagla C.J. and
Gajendragadkar J. held that on the terms of the agreement
dated June 6, 1941, on which the suit was based, the title
to the goods imported by the defendants vested in them, and
that it would pass to the plaintiffs only when the
defendants endorsed the shipping documents in their favour,
and that as that had not been done, the claim for damages on
the basis of conversion was misconceived. They accordingly
allowed the appeal, and dismissed the suit.
442
Now, the contention of the appellants before us is that on
the facts proved, they were entitled to damages on the basis
of conversion.
There is no dispute as to the position in law. Before the
plaintiffs can maintain an action in trover, they must
establish that they had title to the goods in question and
that further they were entitled to possession thereof when
they called upon the defendants to deliver them. If the
parties stood in the relation of sellers and purchasers with
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reference to the transactions, then the plaintiffs must show
that the property in the goods, which initially was with the
defendants, passed to them in accordance with the provisions
of the Sale of Goods Act. If, however, the defendants
imported the goods as agents of the plaintiffs, then the
title to them could undoubtedly be with the latter, and the
only question then would be whether the former were entitled
to retain possession, as they would be if they had paid the
price of the goods on behalf of the principal, and had not
been reimbursed that amount. This question, however, would
not arise on the facts of this case, as the defendants
denied the title of the plaintiffs to the goods, and there
was no refusal by the latter to pay the price. The main
question that arises for determination, therefore, is as to
the relationship in which the parties stood with reference
to the suit transactions.
It is conceded that to start with, it is the agreement, Ex.
A, that governs the rights of the parties. It is therefore
necessary to examine its terms to ascertain the true
relationship of the parties thereunder. It has been already
mentioned that under this agreement Mr. Leach was
constituted the selling agent of the defendants in certain
areas specified therein. Under Ex. A, the second plaintiff
was not to sell the goods below a certain price, and they
were also to be sold with the mark, Mait land Craig
Lubricants Ltd. The course of business was that the second
plaintiff used to intimate to the defendants his
requirements. They would then import those goods in their
own names from America under c.i.f. contracts. After
importing them, they would fix their own price for those
goods and
443
endorse the shipping documents in favour of the second
plaintiff, who would be entitled to clear them at the
harbour on payment of 80 per cent. of the price, the balance
of 20 per cent. being payable on the delivery of the goods
by him to his purchasers. The sales to be effected by the
second plaintiff within the area to his own customers were
matters which concerned only him and his purchasers. The
defendants had nothing to do with them. Under cl. 6, the
second plaintiff had to "keep the value of his stocks at all
times fully insured against fire risk." Clause 13 is as
follows:
" The relationship between parties hereto shall be that of
principal and principal only and the selling agent shall
have no authority whatsoever except such as may be conferred
upon him in writing by the firm to transact any business in
the name of the firm or to bind the firm by any contract,
agreement or undertaking with or to any third party."
In contrast with these terms, there is cl. 4, which provides
that the defendants would themselves supply to the Indian
Stores Department all their requirements of lubricants
within the territory allotted to the second plaintiff, who
was to act as their agent in clearing the goods and
delivering them to the authorities. And for this, the
second plaintiff was to be paid a commission.
It is clear that the agreement read as a whole is a
composite one consisting of two distinct matters. So far as
cl. 4 is concerned, the second plaintiff was merely an agent
of the defendants. As regards the other clauses, the true
relationship is, as stated in cl. 13, that the second
plaintiff was purchaser of the goods from the defendants,
and the conditions relating to the minimum price at which
they could be sold and the marking of the goods with the
name of Maitland Craig Lubricants Ltd. were only intended to
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protect their trade interests but that once the shipping
document were endorsed by the defendants to the second
plaintiff, he became the owner of those goods. The object
of the insurance clause was obviously to safeguard the
interests of the defendants with reference to the balance
price payable by the second plaintiff. In this case, we
444
are not concerned with any goods consigned by the defendants
for supply to the Government under cl. 4 but with goods
which were imported by them for meeting the requirements of
the plaintiffs. The relationship of the parties with
reference to those goods, if it is governed by this
agreement, is undoubtedly that neither party is agent of the
other, and that the defendants are the sellers and the
plaintiffs are the purchasers. If so, the title to the
goods would pass to the plaintiffs only when the defendants
appropriated them to the contract, as for example, by
endorsing the shipping documents, and as that had not been
done, the claim for damages on the ground of conversion
would be misconceived.
The learned Solicitor-General who appeared for the
appellants, did not dispute that this was the position under
Ex. A. But he contended that the relationship of seller and
purchaser created by the agreement became modified when the
Government introduced the licence system. That was
introduced in August ,September, 1941, while the war was on,
with a view to regulate and control imports. The system
adopted was that every importer was required to give a
statement as to they extent of his import business during
the preceding years, and on the basis of that statement, a
licence was given to him to import up to a limit. On
September 26, 1941, the second plaintiff applied to the
Controller for a licence to import lubricants stating that
he had been doing that business for seven years and giving
particulars as to the volume of his business. Sometime in
November, a licence was granted to him by the Government.
The defendants also applied for a licence to import
lubricants based on the volume of their business and
obtained it. That licence did not -include the quantity
which they sold to the second plaintiff, and thus the two
licences were mutually exclusive. Mr. Leach would have been
himself entitled under the licence to import goods directly
from America, but he chose to import them through the
defendants as before, because under the terms of the
agreement, Ex. A, he would have to pay only 80 per cent. of
the price when clearing the goods. There was,
445
however, this change in the character of the transaction,
that whereas before the licence system the defendants were
the purchasers from American Companies under c.i.f.
contracts and they then sold the goods to the second
plaintiff on a price fixed by them, under the licence system
the price payable to them was only what they themselves had
to pay to the American sellers with an addition by way of
commission on the transaction.
Now, the argument of the appellants is that as they were the
persons entitled to import the goods under the licence
granted to them, in importing them on their requisition the
defendants must be held -to have acted for them, and that
the relationship between them was no longer one of seller
and purchaser under Ex. A but of agent and principal. To
this, the answer of Mr. Banaji, learned counsel for the
respondents, was twofold. He contended firstly that in
applying for and obtaining the licence in his own name, the
second plaintiff was merely acting as the agent of the
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defendants, and secondly that the present contention was not
raised in the plaint and was, therefore, not open to the
appellants. On the first contention he referred us to the
correspondence which passed between the parties at the
relevant period. On September 5, 1941, the defendants wrote
to the second plaintiff to send particulars of certain
shipments consigned to him so that they could include them
in their application for licence, and on September 11, 1941,
they further wrote to him that those goods were not to be
included in hi,, application for licence. But the second
plaintiff was obviously not agreeable to it, and actually
included those very shipments in his application for licence
dated September 26, 1941. The defendants did not pursue the
matter further, and wrote to the second plaintiff or
December 10, 1941, to intimate to them the number and date
of his import licence and continued to import goods for him
on the basis of that licence. Counsel for respondents
relied on a letter dated December 11, 1941 in which the
defendants advised the second plaintiff to join a group of
oil merchants, which was to be formed at Bombay, but that
was obviously by way of adviced
446
to him as a customer. This evidence is too inconclusive and
too slender to support the contention that the second
plaintiff obtained the licence as the agent of the
defendants. On the other hand, if the true position of the
second plaintiff under Ex. A was that he was a. purchaser
of goods, then the sales by him of those goods were as owner
and the licence issued to him on the basis of those sales
must have been given to him in his own right and not as
agent of the defendants. This wag the finding of Shah J.
and that has not been reversed on appeal, and we are in
agreement with it.
It is next contended that the entire plaint is framed on the
footing that the rights of the parties are governed by Ex.
A, that there is no averment therein that that agreement had
been cancelled or modified, and that a new agreement had
been substituted after the licence system was introduced,
that the evidence of Mr. Leach in the box was also that Ex.
A was in force throughout the period, and that therefore it
was not open to the appellants now to contend that the rela-
tionship of seller and purchaser under Ex. A had been
altered into one of agent and principal. It is true that
the plaint proceeds on the basis that Ex. A is in force,
and there is no allegation that it had been modified. But
Ex. A had not been wholly abandoned. It was still in force
governing the relationship of the parties in respect of
various matters such as delivery of goods on payment of 80
per cent. of the price. The plaint does refer to the
introduction of the licence system, and the defendants
clearly knew as much of the true position thereunder as the
plaintiffs, and there could be no question’s surprise.
Under the circumstances, if the rights of the parties had to
be determined on the basis of the licence system, we would
have hesitated to non-suit the appellants merely on the
ground that the effect of that system had not been expressly
stated in the plaint.
But then, the licence system itself came to an end in March-
April, 1942, and was replaced by what is known as " Lease
and Lend " scheme. It was under this scheme that the goods
which form the subjectmatter of this litigation were
imported, and we have therefore to examine what the rights
of the parties
447
are with reference to the incidents of that scheme taken
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along with Ex. A, which is admitted by the appellants to
have been in force. This scheme was introduced by the
Government of India as a war measure to facilitate the
import of certain essential goods and to conserve them for
the effective prosecution of the war. Oil and lubricants
were among the goods which were controlled under this
scheme. Under it, the Government prohibited the direct
import of oil and lubricants from America through private
agencies, whether individuals, firms or companies and took
upon itself to import the required quantity.
An association of importers and dealers in Calcutta called
the Central Lubricants Advisory Committee (C.L.A.C.) was
formed, and importers were to write to the Committee what
quantity they required to be imported on their behalf. This
Committee was a private body, and served as a liaison
between the importers and the Government. A similar
Committee was formed at Bombay called the Bombay Lubricants
Advisory Committee (B.L.A.C.). The procedure adopted in the
import of goods was this: the importers were to state their
requirements to the Committee which sent the same to the
Government. Then on intimation given by the Government
authorities, the dealers would have to make deposits on
account of the price to be paid for the goods. The
Government had a purchasing agent in America and he would be
required by them to purchase the requisite goods and to
arrange to get them transhipped to the destinations in India
mentioned by the several dealers. The shipping documents
would be taken in the name of the Government and on payment
of the bills endorsed over to the importer for clearance at
the harbour. The features of the system to be noticed are
that it was the Government who was the importer of the goods
and the dealers became entitled to the goods only on the
shipping documents being endorsed to them by the Government.
Now, so far as the plaintiffs are concerned, the facts are
that they made no deposits with the Government,
58
448
and their names were not in the list of traders for whom the
Government imported the goods. They had direct dealings
only with the defendants and sent their requirements to
them. The defendants would in their application to the
Government include what the plaintiffs required as well as
what they themselves required and make the necessary
deposits for all the goods. But all that would stand only
in their name. Though it would be possible to ascertain by
reference to the correspondence between the parties which of
the orders placed by the defendants with the Government
related to the requirements of the plaintiffs, so far as the
Government itself was concerned it knew only of the
defendants as importers, and it was in their name that. it
would endorse the shipping documents, and it was only when
the defendants in their turn endorsed the same to them that
the plaintiffs would get title to the goods, and the
evidence of Mr. Leach makes it clear that this had not been
done, as regards the shipments with which the suit is con-
cerned. This is what he says in his deposition.
" The goods were shipped all to the order of the Government
of India Separate documents were drawn up in respect of the
consignments which were to be supplied to each of the trader
according to his requirement submitted to Government. The
traders who submitted their requirements cleared the goods
by paying the amount of the bills.... The Government did not
make any allocation to me. I depended on the defendants for
obtaining my requirements from the Government. I did not
make any cash deposit as required of the dealer. 1 made no
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deposit with the Government in respect of the quantity which
I wanted. The entire deposit was made with the Government
by the defendants even in respect of my requirements... The
defendants endorsed over the documents in my favour for
goods which were meant for me... Excepting for the admitted
portions the documents for remaining part of PL. 1004 to
1007 were not handed over to me or endorsed in my favour,
except to the extent to which the goods were delivered,"
449
The evidence of Sir John Burder for the defendants was "the
shipping documents were received in the name of the
defendants ". It is thus clearly established that with
reference to the goods comprised in P.L. 1004 to 1007, which
formed the subject-matter of the suit, the shipping
documents had not been made out in the name of the
plaintiffs, nor had the defendants in whose names they were
taken, endorsed the same to them. That being so, unless the
plaintiffs established that the defendants were importing
the goods as their agents, they would not have title to
them, and the claim for damages on the basis of conversion
must fail.
We should mention that the appellants relied on some of the
letters written by the defendants as showing that they
recognised the plaintiffs as having the title to the goods.
Thus, on August 12, 1944, the defendants wrote to the
plaintiffs " We confirm that the consignment is for you ",
and on March 24, 1945, they wrote, " We enclose herewith a
statement showing quantities and grades that have been
ordered by Government on your account against order P.L.
1006/10" But these statements are quite consistent with the
position of the defendants as sellers who had ordered the
goods on the requisition of the plaintiffs, and do not
import that title thereto had passed to them, which could be
only after the goods came into existence and were
appropriated. That did not happen in this case, and the
shipping documents continued in the name of the defendants.
We therefore agree with the learned Judges that on the
pleadings and on the evidence the claim for damages on the
footing of conversion must fail.
That would entail the dismissal of this appeal, but the
plaintiffs have applied to this Court for amendment of the
plaint by raising, in the alternative, a claim for damages
for breach of contract for non- delivery of the goods. The
respondents resist the application. They contend that the
amendment introduces anew cause of action, that a suit on
that cause of action could now be barred by limitation, that
the plaintiffs had ample opportunity to amend
450
their plaint but that they failed to do so, and that owing
to lapse of time the defendants would be seriously
prejudiced if this new claim were allowed to be raised.
There is considerable force in the objections. But after
giving due weight to them, we are of opinion that this is a
fit case in which the amendment ought to be allowed. The
plaintiffs do not claim any damages for wrongful termination
of the agreement, Ex. A, by the notice dated June 13, 1945.
What they claim is only damages for non-delivery of goods in
respect of orders placed by them and accepted by the
defendants prior to the termination of the agreement by that
notice. Clause 14 of the agreement expressly reserves that
right to the plaintiffs. The suit being founded on Ex. A,
a claim based on Cl. 14 thereof cannot be said to be foreign
to the scope of the suit. Schedule E to the plaint mentions
the several indents in respect of which the defendants had
committed default by refusing to deliver the goods, and the
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damages claimed are also stated therein. The plaintiffs
seek by their amendment only to claim damages in respect of
those consignments. The prayer in the plaint is itself
general and merely claims damages. Thus, all the
allegations which are necessary for sustaining a claim for
damages for breach of contract are already in the plaint.
What is lacking is only the allegation that the plaintiffs
are, in the alternative, entitled to claim damages for
breach of contract by the defendants in not delivering the
goods.
It is no doubt, true that courts would, as a rule, decline
to allow amendments, if a fresh suit on the amended claim
would be barred by limitation on the date of the
application. But that is a factor to be taken into account
in exercise of the discretion as to whether amendment should
be ordered, and does not affect the power of the court to
order it, if that is required in the interests of justice.
In Charan Das v. Amir Khan (1) the Privy Council
observed:
" That there was full power to make the amendment cannot be
disputed, and though such a power
(1) [1920] 47 I.A. 255.
451
should not as a, rule be exercised where the effect is to
take away from a defendants, legal right which has accrued
to him by lapse of time, yet there are cases where such
considerations are out-weighed by the special circumstances
of the case.
Vide also Kisan Das v. Rachappa
In the present case, apart from the contents of the plaint
already set out, there is the fact that the defendants
cancelled the contract without strictly complying with the
terms of cl. 14. The ground on which they repudiated the
contract was that the second plaintiff had assigned his
interests to the first plaintiff ; but the record shows that
subsequent to the assignment the defendants had business
transactions with both the plaintiffs and therefore the
ground for cancellation appears to have been a mere device
to deprive the plaintiffs of the benefits of the orders
which they had placed. We are of opinion that the justice
of the case requires that the amendment should be granted.
The plaintiffs will accordingly be allowed to amend the
plaint as follows:
" 12(a) In the alternative and without prejudice to the
claim on the footing of conversion, the plaintiffs say that
by reason of the facts aforesaid, there was a contract
between the parties whereby the defendants undertook to
supply and deliver to the plaintiffs (or either of them) the
goods ordered out by Government on-their (the plaintiffs’)
account and included in the quotas PL. 1004-PL. 1007. The
said goods arrived in Bombay, but the defendants failed and
neglected to deliver the same though demanded, and in fact
repudiated their obligation to deliver. The plaintiffs say
that they were always ready and willing to pay for and take
delivery of the same.
The defendants at all material times well knew that the
plaintiffs had purchased the same for resale and for
fulfilment of contracts of sale and supply. The plaintiffs
claim damages as per particulars. "
This appeal must accordingly be allowed, the decree under
appeal set aside, and the suit remanded for
(1) [1909] I.L.R. 33 Bombay 644.
452
rehearing to the trial court. The defendants will file
their written statement to the amended claim and the suit
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will be tried and disposed of in accordance with law.
There remains the question of costs. As the plaintiffs are
getting an indulgence, they must pay the costs of the
defendants both in the suit and in the appeal to the Bombay
High Court. So far as costs of this appeal are concerned,
as the defendants persisted in their contention that the
plaintiffs were only acting as their agents, a contention
which, if upheld, would have furnished a conclusive answer
to the amended claim as well, we direct the parties to bear
their own costs in this Court.
Appeal allowed.
Case remanded.