Baldwin Piano Co. v. Wylie

247 N.W. 397, 63 N.D. 216, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 173
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1933
DocketFile No. 6098.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 397 (Baldwin Piano Co. v. Wylie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin Piano Co. v. Wylie, 247 N.W. 397, 63 N.D. 216, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 173 (N.D. 1933).

Opinions

*219 Burr, J.

L. E. Wylie and Marie L. Wylie, under the name of Wylie Piano Company, brought action against the Baldwin Piano Company to recover the sum of $1",945.77 with interest, claiming that during the years 1928-1931 inclusive, they “were engaged in the business of selling, dealing in and handling pianos and musical instruments,” for the defendant, the sales being made according to the terms of sales contracts or notes which were sent to the office of the defendant, and the amounts due thereon collected by the. defendant; that commissions in the sum of $4,162.27 were earned by them and are due from the defendant ; that the defendant authorized plaintiffs to procure sub-agents, and that there is $690 due the plaintiffs thereunder; that the plaintiffs advanced moneys to salesmen of the defendant in the sum of $480; and paid out for advertising and for piano boxes for the defendant $149 and $70 respectively; that the plaintiffs paid to the defendant $900 for credit on the ledger account and the same w?as never credited; that the plaintiffs were employed by the defendant to effect settlements on goods and agreed to pay the plaintiffs $125 therefor and failed to do so; that plaintiffs made further sales of pianos for the defendant under the aforesaid contract and that there is due and owing the plaintiffs thereon $1,383.50.

The defendant answered denying the claims of the plaintiffs and sets forth a counterclaim where it claims plaintiffs collected approximately $1,500 from sales of pianos and musical instruments belonging to the defendant and failed to remit the same although the amount is due.

At the same time the Baldwin Piano Company commenced an action against L. E. Wylie, individually, asking for an accounting from him as its agent for the sale of pianos and and other musical instruments consigned to him, and in this action L. E. Wylie denied any liability.

By written stipulation between the parties these cases were consolidated and designated as an accounting case, triable to the court, without a jury, under the title of Wylie Piano Company plaintiff against the Baldwin Piano Company and are so considered here.

*220 ' The court found, that under' tbe contract between the parties “there exists in favor of the defendant company a remainder or balance on ledger accounts of sixteen hundred and one dollars and twenty-three cents, also an indebtedness in favor of the company of ten hundred and eighty-seven dollars for pianos sold after termination of the contract;” that plaintiff has a contingent interest and claim against the defendant “for unpaid commissions or equities in the amount of $1,869.96.”

The court ordered judgment in favor of the defendant for $1,601.23, as balance due on the ledger account, and $1,087 “for pianos sold after termination of the contract, and for its costs and disbursements herein, and that when the payment on the unpaid commissions on customers’ contracts shall be made that they shall be deducted from the amount of the judgment of the defendant against the plaintiff.”

The plaintiffs appeal “from the whole of said judgment and the said parties demand a trial de novo in the Supreme Court.” This appeal involves principally the determination of facts. The testimony is quite voluminous — the transcript consisting of over six hundred pages of testimony.

L. E. Wylie was in business in New Rockford, handling pianos and other musical instruments manufactured by the Baldwin Piano Company. His brother J. M. Wylie was the manager for the piano company, with headquarters at Fargo. The business arrangements between L. E. Wylie and the piano company at New Rockford were evidenced by a written contract. Later L. E. Wylie and wife moved to Jamestown and continued their business relations with the defendant company.

It is the claim of the plaintiffs that a new and oral contract governed the relations in Jamestown. This is one of the causes of dispute between the parties and the determination thereof is essential to a proper determination of the case. The trial court found that the parties were operating in Jamestown under this written contract. It is true that the sale of pianos and the settlement of special features of business, which arose from time to time, were often consummated by conference, and very frequently these oral agreements became executed so there may have been at times departure from some of the requirements of the written contract. Nevertheless the evidence is such as to sustain the *221 finding of the trial court that the business relationship was fixed by the written contract.

Under this agreement all of the instruments were to remain the. property of the defendant until paid for and to be kept by Wylie for the benefit of the defendant, free from any claim whatsoever. Wylie was to make all sales on contract blanks furnished by the defendant, subject to its approval and acceptance. He was to receive as commission the difference between the price made to him and the price at which the instruments were sold; and this was to be in full payment of all services. No commissions were to be assigned without the consent of the defendant, who had a lien on the commissions for any amount duo from Wylie, and these commissions could be credited to Wylie on his indebtedness at the option of the defendant. No commissions drew interest nor was Wylie to receive any portion of interest received on sales. When customers were in default on their contracts Wylie was to repossess the instrument sold at his own expense, upon demand of the company, and if he failed to regain the instrument he was to pay to the company the entire sum due to it on such instrument. In case an instrument was sold and repossessed it could bo reconsigned to Wylie “at the original price and under original date” less the amount already received by the company, subject to the conditions of the contract. Wylie was to make no charges for repossessing instruments, nor for collections, nor “for any service which was for our mutual benefit, unless same be agreed upon and authorized in writing previous to the rendering of such service.” Where instruments were sold on time, Wylie was to guarantee the payment of the “notes, contracts or leases and renewals on the same,” and it was his duty to send to the company on the “first of each month a report of all instruments consigned and unsettled for, in stock and in possession of prospective customers, giving the style and number of each instrument and its location.”

On the back of the written contract, are “Hules for the Disposition of Instruments,” telling the defendant not to make a contract with a minor; to get a first payment in cash; to have the contract or mortgages witnessed if the state law so requires; not to sell any .instrument for less than the wholesale price, nor on open account; nor to trade it for merchandise, labor, stock or notes; nor take in any stock, labor, etc., on a.sale “where the balance remaining to be paid in money.shall bo *222

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 397, 63 N.D. 216, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-piano-co-v-wylie-nd-1933.