The question, to my mind, is what obligations the corporation
assumed in transactions on the commission basis. Its obligation
was to find buyers for the respondent's goods, and for so doing it
was to receive a commission. It may be that it could establish the
relationship of seller and buyer between the respondent and its
constituents or customers, or that it could establish such a relation-
ship as between its customers and itself. But the arrangement did
not contemplate or stipulate that the corporation should itself buy
from the respondent, or that the relationship of seller and buyer
should be established between them. The corporation was bound,
no doubt, to exercise due care, skill and diligence in procuring buyers
of the respondent's goods, and to arrange that the buyers " put up
a credit" for the goods. If the respondent were dissatisfied with
the credit "' put up" by the buyers, then he could call upon the
corporation "to put up a credit," and for which, if it did so, a
further charge of } per centum was payable. It was admittedly not
a del credere but a special arrangement. The corporation is not
charged with any want of care, skill or diligence in connection with
the Brodsky transaction, but simply that it agreed to "put up a
credit " for, or to pay, the amount stated in the invoice forwarded
to it. But, in my opinion, the obligation of the corporation to
"put up a credit" only arose when it had procured a buyer, and
when that buyer's credit was refused, or was unsatisfactory to the
respondent. The evidence is that Brodsky was willing to try out
a pitfull of hides, and this is borne out by a cable which the respondent
sent to Australia directing his representative "to buy 150 Queens-
land Meat Works hides as a sample." The respondent did not even
remember the name of the supposed buyer. No price was ever
fixed, though the respondent, according to his own evidence, told
the tanners (presumably Brodsky and his partner) whom he met in
the offices of the corporation that he " would do his absolute best "
and " did not want to make a profit out of a paltry line like this."
Cahn's evidence and Brodsky's declaration support the view that
the respondent should make a trial or sample shipment of 150 hides.
The hides shipped were, however, " ticky," and were unsuitable, so
far as Brodsky was concerned, both as to condition and as to price.
He, in these circumstances, declined to try them out. or to take any