Blackwell-Weilandy Co. v. Sabine Supply Co.

64 S.W.2d 419
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 26, 1933
DocketNo. 2446
StatusPublished

This text of 64 S.W.2d 419 (Blackwell-Weilandy Co. v. Sabine Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackwell-Weilandy Co. v. Sabine Supply Co., 64 S.W.2d 419 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This appeal is by writ of error, but the parties will be referred to as appellant and appellee. A former appeal is reported, Blackwell-Weil£|.ndy Co. v. Sabine Supply Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 38 -S.W.(2d) 654. The suit was by appellant, Blackwell-Weilandy Company, versus appellee, Sabine Supply Company, to recover certain specific charges for compiling a catalogue, made by appellant for the use of appellee, under a contract dated March 1, 1924, but not.accepted by appellee until March 15, 1924. The catalogues were completed and delivered, and invoices for their cost were mailed by appellant to appel-lee, dated June 30, 1926, as follows: Invoice No. 1 was for $12,691, which was duly paid by appellee; invoice No. 2 was as follows:

“Class or Key Number Charges for Postg. & Ins. Amt. of Invoice including Post.
“Additional compilers time required for changing original data sheets received after 4 months, as agreed in contract 2996 00”

Attached to this invoice was an itemized statement of the work which it covered, with the date the work was done and figures identifying the employees who did the work; the invoice was for 1,498 hours at $2 per hour. Appellant does not contend that the items charged for in the second invoice were authorized by supplemental contract or that appellant, on an independent consideration, accepted and agreed to pay the invoice. Appellant’s only contention is that the items charged in the second invoice were specifically covered by the original contract. The trial was to a jury, and judgment was for appel-lee, upon an instructed verdict, that appellant recover nothing and go hence without day.

The contract, in so far as it related to the issue in controversy herein, was as follows:

“Alterations: (a) All changes made after pages are set in type from copy approved by customer or changes made in standing type •matter, will be charged for at $2.75 per hour.
“(b) All changes in new compiled copy before page is set in type will be made without charge, excepting where it is necessary to recompile the copy. A charge of $5.00 per page will be made per each page recompiled.
“(c) Should it be necessary. to eliminate items from the pages after being compiled or set im type, sufficient data must be furnished to fill the open space, if items are canceled a charge covering the compilation or composition or both, as toe case may be, will be made.”

For purposes of reference we have marked these separate paragraphs as (a), (b), and (c). Appellant contends that invoice No. 2 was au[420]*420thorized by paragraph (c), and was therefore a proper charge under the contract. Ap-pellee contends that all charges covered by invoice No. 2 came within the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b), and were therefore covered by invoice No. 1. As we construe the record, there' is no conflict in the testimony on the issue between appellant and appellee. The evidence is as follows: The following quotation is taken from a letter from appellee to appellant, written after both invoices had been received.

“July 7th, 1926.

“Mr. E. J. Kehlenbrink, Blackwell-Weilandy Book & Stationery Co., St. Louis, Mo.

“Dear Sir: We are in receipt of your letter of the 25. and have since received the shipment of catalogs. We have gone over the whole catalog very carefully. In the first place, the cover about which we have been a little anxious, in knowing how it would show up after printed, is very attractive and has already created somq favorable comments among the people who have received our catalog. The catalog as arranged and printed is also very satisfactory, furthermore, it is different from the general run of catalogs which we have in our files from jobbers in our section. The size of the sheet is better suited to the class of goods we are showing. In reviewing the whole catalog we do not see very well how it could have been improved.

“Now with reference to the invoices received from you covering this work. We have finished checking the items on invoice for $12,691.00 and find them in line with the contract. We are bound to take exception, however, to your invoice for $2,996.00 which is not according to contract. According to our records Mr. Dicker arrived and reported to us about July 5th, 1924 and left us the middle of August.”

On August 4, 1926, appellant wrote appel-lee as follows: “On the writer’s last visit to Orange we had a talk regarding the catalog situation, and at your suggestion we invoiced it strictly according to contract, but as explained before, this job represents a complete loss to us and, therefore, we forwarded you an additional invoice, which we now inclose again.”

Mr. E. J. Kehlenbrink, manager of appellant’s catalogue department, testified as follows (question and answer form reduced to narrative form):

“In building a general hardware catalog such as the one built for Sabine Supply Company, the first thing to do is to have the data sheets made up showing the items that are to be listed in the catalog, and they are taken back to St. Louis to be checked as to the number and from whom it is bought; that means that we must write or wire the manufacturer for the correct information; that means that we must get a catalog from the manufacturer listing the items, and when the catalog is received it usually doesn’t have the information that we want and we must then use our forms to specify what is to make a proper description of the item, and we then go to the manufacturer again for the engraving in order to illustrate the item. When this material is received we are ready to go to work and write up the catalog. A catalog is usually divided into various sections in order to shorten the time to make up a catalog, so when we get all the data together that is required to make up a particular section and when the section is finished we send it to the customer for his approval. We either take the required items out of the manufacturer’s catalog or get the information direct from him; we then make a dummy of that particular section and send it to the customer and when o. k.’d by him and sent back to us it is ready for the composing room, but first let me define compilation. It includes the securing of data, the checking of data, securing information and cuts from manufacturers — that is one operation or condition. The second operation is compiling the copies, that is making up manuscripts of the illustrations, but the charge referred to in our claim is work that we did on the data sheets before the copies were put in manuscript form. There is a claus.e in the contract which covers changes in the data sheets as part of the compilation, there are two charges for that work, one for each new compiled page, $17.25. That means that we are to compile, get together, edit, print and build complete one page; and for each standard type page the price is $7.50. The difference in this price comes about because the standing page is information that is obtained from our files — that means items that are selected by the jobber that have no compilation ; the difference between $17.25 for each new compiled page and $7.50 for each standing page would be $9.75, and that is to pay for the compilation and our overhead, postage, etc. That does not pay for all the changes to be made by us; the difference of $9.75 is to obtain data for extra work that is to be done in compiling the catalog.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackwell-weilandy-co-v-sabine-supply-co-texapp-1933.