American Spirits Manufacturing Co. v. Western Manufacturing & Oil Co.

210 Ill. App. 454, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 282
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 9, 1918
DocketGen. No. 6,515
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 210 Ill. App. 454 (American Spirits Manufacturing Co. v. Western Manufacturing & Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Spirits Manufacturing Co. v. Western Manufacturing & Oil Co., 210 Ill. App. 454, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 282 (Ill. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Carnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, a corporation, hereafter called the spirits company, sued appellant, a corporation, hereafter called the oil company, in assumpsit, and filed the common counts. The defendant filed the general issue. There were other pleadings not discussed in the briefs and not material on questions presented here. There was a judgment on a verdict of $5,766.23 for the plaintiff.

It appears from the evidence that February 20,1897, the spirits company was engaged in making spirits and high wines from corn and small grains at Peoria, Illinois, and on that date it entered into a contract with the oil company to sell it its degerminating plant situated adjacent to its Monarch Distillery there, and lease it the land on which it was situated, and furnish it at least 6,000 bushels of com daily for degermination for at least 200 days a year, and on demand any other corn it might use in its business in Peoria, and sufficient power to enable the oil company to properly operate said plant to a capacity of at least 10,000 bushels of com daily; and the oil company in turn . agreed to extract the germ from at least 6,000 bushels '■of com daily and return the com to the spirits company in as good condition as when the same was delivered, the contract to be effective for a period of 40 years from date. October 19, 1898, the companies entered into a written agreement amending said contract, providing that .the oil company should operate at the spirits company’s plant at its G-reat Western Distillery, at Peoria, instead of the former-named plant, reciting that the spirits company was constructing an oil milling department, including proper machinery for degerminating com, at said Great Western Distillery, and granting the oil company for the same term and under the same conditions as set forth in said contract of February 20,1897, the sole and exclusive right to the use of that degerminating and other machinery, and agreeing that all com used at said distillery during the period of said agreement should be delivered to the oil company for, the purpose of being degerminated by it. The oil company agreed to use the said machinery and the privileges therein granted in such manner as not to interfere with the business of the spirits company, and that at the termination of the contract it would turn the machinery over to the spirits company in as good condition of repair as the same then was.

The parties engaged in business as forecast by the modified contract, but in less than 5 years from its date the spirits company commenced to advance money to pay for all labor employed in degerminating the com and making oil and cake at that plant, and the oil company compensated the spirits company therefor on the basis of a quarter of a cent a bushel of grain mashed at the distillery. Monthly statements and balance sheets were issued showing such payments, and that course of dealing continued up to October 1914, when the oil company ceased such payments. The spirits company continued the work and the principal part ($4,776.13) of its account here sued on is a charge at that rate for those services from October 1914 to August 1, 1915. The balance of the account ($990.10) is for the cost of repairs and replacements of apparatus and machinery to keep the plant in order and the work in progress. The oil company, as before noted, had agreed to turn the machinery over to the spirits company at the termination of the contract “in as good condition of repair as the same are at present, ’ ’ and it appears to have been the .uniform practice for the spirits company to charge for and receive payment from the oil company of its necessary disbursements of' that kind while it was so furnishing labor to operate the plant.

The verdict and judgment are for the full amount of the spirits company’s claim. The oil company contends that the plaintiff was not entitled to judgment on proof that said labor and material were furnished and of the cost of the material to the plaintiff, but that there should have been further proof of what such services and material were reasonably worth. It argues also that said apparatus and machinery were in part used in the business of the spirits company, and that there is nó sufficient proof to support the conclusion that the sum of $990.10 was a fair charge to be paid by the oil company; and also that there can be no recovery under the common counts because it says there was no express contract to pay the sums demanded. The spirits company answers that it had the right to rely on the long-established course of dealing and to continue furnishing such labor and material on the terms and prices so established 'until it should receive notice from the- oil company that it would not continue in that course of dealing under those terms, and that it received no such notice before this suit was brought.

We think the spirits company is right in its contention on the law. “Where labor and services are rendered in a continuous employment, the rule is that for labor and services so furnished, a recovery can be had at.the rates previously recognized and paid.” (Glucose Sugar Refining Co. v. Flinn, 184 Ill. 123, 125.) Where an employer continues to receive services without notice of any change in the compensation that has been for a considerable time paid, the employee has the right to presume that the compensation will continue as in the past. If the employer intends to change the terms of the employment to the detriment of the employee, good faith and honesty require that he should give the employee notice and thus enable him to leave the service if not satisfied with the reduction. (Crane Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Adams, 142 Ill. 125, 129.) The same principle applies to money laid out and material furnished for repairs and supplies necessary in operating the degerminating plant. . A request of the oil company that the spirits company expend such money may be implied. (27 Cyc. 837.) The measure of damages in an action for money paid for the use and benefit of another is the sum actually paid by the plaintiff. (27 Cyc. 845:) The benefit to plaintiff may be more or less than that sum.

It is immaterial whether the contract was express or implied. If nothing remained to be done under the contract except to pay over money, there could be a •recovery under the common counts. Expanded Metal Fireproofing Co. v. Boyce, 233 Ill. 284; Concord Apartment House Co. v. O’Brien, 228 Ill. 360; Evans v. Howell, 211 Ill. 85; Shepard v. Mills, 173 Ill. 223. The evidence showed purchase of the material charged for “at the market price”; that there were no discounts or allowances that did not appear in the statements. This was some evidence of the market value of the materials and supplies. Moreover, there was evidence tending to show that the oil company had a representative on the ground that authorized $783.03 of the replacements and repairs in question.

But the oil company contends that two letters of April 21,1915, and April 26,1915, written by its president to the president of the spirits company, afforded notice to the spirits company that it would no longer be bound by the established course of dealing. We find nothing in either or. both of those letters to justify that conclusion.

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Related

American Spirits Manufacturing Co. v. Western Manufacturing & Oil Co.
213 Ill. App. 612 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
210 Ill. App. 454, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-spirits-manufacturing-co-v-western-manufacturing-oil-co-illappct-1918.