Berberian v. Joseph E. Miller, Inc.

7 R.I. Dec. 26
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 24, 1930
DocketNo. 66015
StatusPublished

This text of 7 R.I. Dec. 26 (Berberian v. Joseph E. Miller, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berberian v. Joseph E. Miller, Inc., 7 R.I. Dec. 26 (R.I. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

HAHN, J.

Heard on defendant’s motion for a new trial on the usual grounds, after verdict for plaintiff for $1,760.20. The action was assumpsit, based upon various items claimed to be due from defendant to plaintiff. The argument in support of the motion is that the verdict is against the law, the evidence and the weight thereof.

In February, 1920, plaintiff began working for defendant under an oral agreement by which plaintiff was to enamel jewelry for the defendant. Defendant had a shop or department equipped with tools and supplies for such work and plaintiff was to do the work in this shop and receive so much per piece for the work when done. Plaintiff was to pay, or have deducted from the sums due him on account, the expenses of running the shop, including rent, power, labor, materials needed from time to time, and the “overhead” generally. To all intents and purposes plaintiff was in the position of an outside contractor except that he did not own the shop.

In February, 1922, or after two years’ work, plaintiff left the shop and ceased work under the agreement. Late in 1925 he began the present action, seeking to recover what he claims is a balance due him under various items of the work according to the agreement.

The evidence shows that plaintiff took over the shop as it stood (trans. pp. 6, 7, 197, 198) and did considerable work for the defendant over a space [27]*27of two years. Defendant employed a competent bookkeeper wbo sent or gave plaintiff statements and checks from time to time on account of and in payment for the work. Plaintiff hired no bookkeeper and kept no books, no payrolls, no independent system of his own (trans. pp. 107-108) as any outside contractor would have had to do. He objected to some of the statements and checks as being incorrect (trans. p. 125) but never refused to accept them (trans. p. 122) and con tinued working as before. After ceasing work he accepted what was obviously intended as a final statement and check, closing out the account according to defendant’s books (trans. pp. 126-127). He states he objected to this and claimed he had not received all that was due him (trans. p. 128) but he never set forth his claim definitely or even sent defendant a letter calling his attention to the -matter in a businesslike way and stating the claim specifically (trans. p. 129). He waited nearly four years before bringing suit.

Under these circumstances it would seem that the accounts became in law “accounts stated” and incontestable. Plaintiff claims he objected to many items, but is his objection, in the face of his acceptance of the payments and his continued dealings and long delay in bringing suit, to be construed as a real refusal to accept the account or as an expression of protest and complaint? Bills and accounts perhaps more often meet with complaints than not but are paid nevertheless — the complaint not rising to an actual dispute or refusal to accept or pay. The present instance seems one of this kind. Thus plaintiff makes a claim for two items of $100 each because he did not know whether he had received these or not (trans. pp. 359-862). Should defendant be called upon to prove, after the lapse of several years, what plaintiff did not even keep track of at the time? Defendant no doubt considered the accounts long since closed and acted upon them accordingly. Selling prices are based upon costs and if defendant is now to have the former costs increased, it can not recoup the difference in the selling price — the goods being long since sold and paid for. In the following case, although it was the party who rendered the accounts that sought to open them, the Court said generally:

“It is not necessary, in order to give to the accounts the weight and quality of stated accounts, that they should have been examined and approved * * * there are many circumstances to be considered, such as length of. time, acquiescence, and the fact that the party has acted upon them to his injury.”
Greene vs. Harris, 11 R. I. 5, 28. And in another ease it was said:
‘‘Nothing short of an estoppel, or which rises no higher than mere evidence, should have more weight in mercantile transactions than accounts rendered by one man to another, followed by acquiescence, and above all by subsequent dealings of the same nature. In the loose way in which business is now conducted, notes, checks, and other instruments for the payment of money, are constantly given by way of accommodation, and under circumstances which invert the apparent order of obligation, and impose the duty of payment on him to whom payment is prima facie to be made. He who receives an account rendered under these circumstances is bound to examine it at once, and point out its mistakes and inaccuracies; and should at all events not mislead the person who has sent it into the belief that the balance which he claims is admitted, by continuing to transact business with him without objection. Although such a course is not necessarily fraudulent, it may obviously be equivalent in its effects to fraud, and should not be sane-[28]*28tionecl by a Court of justice, without the most satisfactory explanation of the circumstances which have led to it. The rule for a new trial is made absolute.”

Payne vs. Nicholas, 2 Phila. 220 (Penn.).

The fact that plaintiff did accept payment as offered and what was obviously meant as a final statement and payment, gives strong probability to the belief that the objections which he states he made from time to time to certain items were not actual disputes of, and refusals to concede, the items, but were more in the nature of complaints in the hope that the items might be adjusted to his way of thinking and he took what he could get.

Had the accounts not become stated in law, there is not such a preponderance of the evidence in plaintiff’s favor as to justify the verdict. Plaintiff, if his case is taken at face value, evidently thought it sufficient to make a vague and general complaint that he was not paid enough or was charged too much, leaving to defendant the burden of unraveling all the details. And plaintiff, with no independent system of accounting of his own and relying largely upon his memory for all details, waited nearly four years before taking action. Time obscures details and makes it necessary to consider a case in a more general light. Considered in this way it will be seen that plaintiff was in the position of an outside contractor and as such would be expected to bear the overhead or general expenses of running the business, including upkeep, and so forth. Plaintiff might well be expected to pay all the items falling under such heads, including the cost of repairs to equipment, advertising for help, rent, power, light, materials or supplies, and wages. I-Iad he been an actual outside contractor, he would have been put to the additional expense of employing a competent bookkeeper to keep account of all this. Whether the amounts were to be charged as flat rates under the agreement or as actual costs in each case is disputed and is hard to determine at this date, but certainly there is much to be said in favor of the charges as shown by the entries made by a regular bookkeeper in the due course of the business and they should not be impugned except by definite and certain evidence to the contrary. In this case there is simply plaintiff’s denial of the correctness of the entries and charges, made in the face of his continued acceptance of the statements and checks as issued and his long delay in asserting his rights.

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7 R.I. Dec. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berberian-v-joseph-e-miller-inc-risuperct-1930.