Bommarito v. Southern Canning Co.

208 F.2d 56
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1953
Docket14835_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 208 F.2d 56 (Bommarito v. Southern Canning Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bommarito v. Southern Canning Co., 208 F.2d 56 (8th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

This was an action in replevin instituted by the Southern Canning Company to recover personal property from Jerome Bommarito, doing business as Cardinal Products Company, and for damages in the amount of $10,000 for breach of contract. Defendant answered by way of a general denial and counterclaimed for damages in the sum of $50,000, alleging a breach of contract on the part of plaintiff. A jury was waived. Judgment of possession was rendered for the plaintiff and damages were denied to both parties, whereupon defendant prosecutes this appeal. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below.

Plaintiff is a Texas corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of dog food, among other things. In the fall of 1950 it desired to establish a processing and distributing plant in St. Louis to provide dog food for its customers in several mid-western slates and had negotiations to that end with defendant’s father. He and his wife, defendant’s mother, owned a building at 4027 Easton, St. Louis, Missouri, where he was carrying on business under the trade name “Cardinal Products Co.” Pursuant to the negotiations and an oral agreement-entered into with the father, the plaintiff moved its machinery and equipment, which is the subject matter of this suit, into the building, and the dog food was manufactured there for several months but without any written agreement to evidence the terms and conditions. The plaintiff tendered several forms of agreement for the father’s signature but he always refused to sign a written contract. In April, 1951, Cardinal Products Co. was turned over to defendant and thereafter all negotiations concerning the business were carried on between plaintiff and defendant.

After several conferences and preliminary drafts an instrument entitled “Lease and Contract” was drawn up on *58 May 3, 1951, intended to specify the respective obligations to be assumed by the several parties to be concerned in the manufacture of plaintiff’s dog food by the defendant with the plaintiff’s machinery, equipment and supplies on his parents’ property in St. Louis. It recited that the machinery and equipment of the plaintiff referred to were already located upon the property of the parents and were to remain the property of the plaintiff but defendant was to bear the expense of its maintenance and repair. The agreement was to extend for a period of two years and continue for an additional five years unless terminated by either party after giving four months written notice. It was provided that defendant could move to a new location after giving plaintiff 30 days written notice of his intention to do so. There was also a provision that plaintiff would pay defendant $350 at the termination of the contract for changes made and damage already done to the building of the parents.

Thus the terms and conditions of the instrument included and defined obligations necessary to be assumed by the plaintiff as the intended provider of machinery and supplies, by the defendant as intended operator of the plant and by defendant’s parents as the recognized owners of the premises intended to be used in the operations. The instrument accordingly left blank spaces to be signed fey each of those expected to become obligated. In drawing it up the scrivener first specified the numerous affirmative acts of cooperation required of the plaintiff and defendant to carry on the manufacturing business on the property of the parents and provided blank spaces thereunder for plaintiff’s and defendant’s signatures. Following that blank space the instrument provided:

“We, the undersigned, Antonina Bom-marito, and Joseph Bommarito, her husband, owners of property 4027 Easton Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, have read the above contract and herewith ratify the authority of Jerome Bommarito to enter into such contract and agree that he may have the peaceful and undisputed possession of said premises during the existence of said contract or any extension thereof, it, however, being understood that we in no wise obligate ourselves to see that Jerome Bommarito or any one acting on his behalf performs the terms and conditions of said contract, and it is further understood that we in no wise will be responsible for any damage that may result in the event it is contended that Jerome Bommarito has not performed the terms and conditions of said contract.

Antonina Bommarito.

Joseph Bommarito. ”.

Defendant signed the agreement on May 3,1951, and it was sent to plaintiff’s home office in Texas where it was signed by the president of plaintiff company, impressed with the corporate seal, and returned to defendant. Defendant immediately mailed it to California where his parents were at the time. Shortly thereafter defendant’s brother, at defendant’s request, telephoned his parents in California to explain the agreement and why their signatures were necessary thereon. Defendant’s parents refused to sign the instrument and returned it to defendant. On June 18, 1951, defendant delivered the instrument unsigned by the parents back to plaintiff’s attorney, specifying certain conditions on which he was making such delivery. These conditions concerned the repair of some of plaintiff’s equipment and machinery in the plant. There is a direct conflict in the testimony as to whether plaintiff promised to make these repairs. The agreement itself provided that defendant would make all necessary repairs but the ownership of the equipment and machinery was to remain in plaintiff.

At the time the form of agreement was prepared on May 3, 1951, plaintiff gave defendant a check for $1,580, subject to two conditions contained in a letter of even date, the receipt of which was acknowledged by defendant over his signature. The letter referred to the *59 form of agreement and provided that the check was delivered on condition:

“1. That the contract between you and the Southern Canning Company of this date is to be signed by you and approved by your father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bom-marito.
“2. That the check is in full and complete liquidation of all accounts or demands of every nature now existing between you and the Southern Canning Company.”

Defendant cashed this check and received the proceeds thereof.

There is evidence tending to show that about June 14,1951, defendant told plaintiff’s attorney that he had obtained a lease from his parents for the premises where plaintiff’s equipment was located. Plaintiff’s attorney asked to see the lease but it was not shown to him until about August 18, 1951, or about two days before this action was commenced. Plaintiff’s attorney was unable to state whether he had told his client about the existence of the lease before August 18, 1951. The president of plaintiff company testified he did not learn of its existence until after suit was filed.

Due to the controversy over the repairs and the failure to obtain the parents’ signature of the agreement, plaintiff brought suit on August 20, 1951, to recover possession of its machinery.

The trial court found that the provision requiring the signature of defendant’s parents was an essential part of the agreement, and said signatures not having been obtained, no contract in fact ever existed between the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
208 F.2d 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bommarito-v-southern-canning-co-ca8-1953.