Bonnett Brown Sales Service v. Klepper

265 S.W. 993, 218 Mo. App. 597, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 160
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 993 (Bonnett Brown Sales Service v. Klepper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonnett Brown Sales Service v. Klepper, 265 S.W. 993, 218 Mo. App. 597, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 160 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is a suit upon a promissory note in the sum of $100, executed by defendant in favor of plaintiff and payable in monthly installments of $5.56 each. The note contained a provision that if any installment remained unpaid, the whole note should become due and payable at once. The payments were to be made on or before the fifteenth of each month, beginning October 1, 1921. Defendant paid the October installment but refused to pay more, resulting in plaintiff’s bringing this suit. The defense was a failure of consideration. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant and plaintiff has appealed.

The note was made in connection with the execution of the following contract between the parties (only the material part being quoted);

*599 “For value received Bonnet-Brown Sales Service agrees upon its acceptance hereof at its principal place of business in Chicago, Illinois, to furnish its matrix sales service to Optimist (hereinafter named the purchaser), together with exclusive right and license to use such sales service in Lathrop, State of Missouri, for the period of September 1, 1920 to March 31, 1921. Such Sales Service to be sent at purchaser’s expense and risk and to consist of the following.

“Use of ads and unlimited Selection of Stereotypes on the following Supplements:

Men’s Service, about 5 supplements per month.
Women’s Service, about 5 supplements per month.
Newspaper Service, about 6 supplements per month.
Furniture Service, about 4 supplements per month.
Big Book August and September Service Free.

Stereotyping; is to be done by us, if the above mentioned unlimited selection plan is hereby agreed to be furnished, at an extra charge to the purchaser of 2‡ per square inch with a minimum charge of 20‡ per Stereotype. Mortising also extra- — outside 15^, inside 20^.”

Defendant published a newspaper in Lathrop, Mo., styled ‘ ‘ The Lathrop Optimist. ’ ’ Plaintiff had its place of business in Chicago and furnished to newspapers its “Sales Service” which consisted of sheets of illustrations of cuts and a loose-leaf book for the binding of these cuts, referred to in the contract as the “Big Book.” These illustrations were furnished monthly to the users of its service. The users of the service would select from these illustrations what cuts he thought his advertisers would want or would exhibit them to his proposed advertisers so that they could select the cut. When the illustration desired by the advertiser to appear in the paper was selected, the user of the service would order the stereotype from plaintiff at Chicago and the same would be furnished by plaintiff and sent to the owner of the newspaper to be used in printing his paper.

Defendant testified that he used the service in September and October but on account of the stereotypes *600 not arriving in time for nse in Ms paper lie did not attempt to make use of it further and after vainly trying to get defendant to ship' the stereotypes in time finally, in May, 1921, notified the postmaster at Lathrop that he would not receive any more of the illustrations out of the post office. Defendant further testified that the Optimist was a Weekly paper which was printed upon Thursday and that he solicited advertisers by the use of the illustrations a sufficient time to obtain the stereotypes from plaintiff at Chicago before his paper came out; that he would order the stereotypes on Friday but that they would not arrive in time and that the space where the advertisement was to appear in his paper was left blank to the disappointment of his advertiser and with loss of business to himself; that in the usual course of mail an order mailed from Lathrop to Chicago if mailed in time for the evening train would bring the shipment back on the second morning; that stereotypes delivered in four or six days after they were ordered could have been used by him but that they did not arrive within this time.

Defendant had some correspondence with plaintiff about the delay, plaintiff claiming that defendant’s orders were filled the same day they were received. Defendant testified that he finally “tried to cancel my contract, or change it to matrix service, so I could use it;” that he did not have a stereotyping outfit at the time he entered into the contract but later acquired one and asked plaintiff to send him matrices in place of sheets (stereotypes?) and that plaintiff then sent him another price list and “wanted more money.” The contract provided that the service for the first two months should be free but defendant testified that plaintiff tried to charge him for this service. ' '

The evidence shows that a matrix is a paper mold upon which molten lead is poured and when cooled, trimmed and mounted on wood becomes a cut ready for printing. This process is called sterotyping and the cut is called a stereotype or an electrotype.

*601 Plaintiff’s president testified that -when the users of its service were unable to make the stereotype that it sent out to stereotypers in Chicago the “mats” (we judge a mat to be the same as a matrix) and had them make the stereotypes, charging the user for the service an extra sum above the contract price equal to the actual cost of the work to plaintiff.

It seems that the stereotypes sent to defendant were in plaintiff’s stock for the reason that the testimony of plaintiff shows that they were sent by return mail. However, defendant’s construction of the contract shown by his testimony to the effect that he had a right to change to matrices without extra cost, is erroneous. The contract does not provide for the substitution of matrices for stereotypes but provides that the stereotyping was to be done by plaintiff at a specific cost to the defendant. As before stated, it does not provide for a substitution of matrices for stereotypes without extra cost to the defendant, in fact, it does not provide for any such substitution at all.

Plaintiff insists that the court should have given its peremptory instruction to find for it. Waiving aside the question as to whether a court can give a peremptory instruction for plaintiff where plaintiff’s case, in part at least, is founded upon parol testimony, we think there is no merit in the contention. Plaintiff rests the contention upon the claim that it was required under the contract only to mail at Chicago the stereotypes to defendant within a reasonable time after receiving the orders for them, and that the evidence is undisputed that plaintiff immediately mailed the stereotypes upon the receipt of the orders.

We think that in view of the facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of the contract that time was of the essence of the contract although no time for the delivery of the stereotypes is mentioned in it.

“When the time of delivery is not fixed or' is stated in general and indefinite terms, time is not of the essence of the contract. The law implies, however, that if no *602

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Related

Drown v. Tough
38 S.W.2d 736 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 993, 218 Mo. App. 597, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonnett-brown-sales-service-v-klepper-moctapp-1924.