Braverman v. American Manufacturing Co.

186 Iowa 863
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 7, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 186 Iowa 863 (Braverman v. American Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braverman v. American Manufacturing Co., 186 Iowa 863 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

This is an action to recover the value of certain goods claimed by the plaintiff under conditions.hereinafter explained.

Prior to the commencement of this suit, and on or [864]*864about December, 1911, tlie defendant brought an action against the plaintiff, on account, for goods sold and delivered by it to the plaintiff. In that suit, the plaintiff filed a counterclaim. After the cause had been assigned for trial, and on or about the 20th day of September, 1912, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a written stipulation of settlement, in the following words:

“It is hereby stipulated and agreed by and between the parties to the above entitled cause that the same is hereby settled as follows: The said A. Braverman to pay to the American Manufacturing Company at once $241.47. The said A. Braverman is to return to the American Manufacturing Company all of the goods he now has on hand which were sold and delivered to him by the plaintiff, the same to be returned at the invoice price. In return for the goods delivered back, the American Manufacturing Company is to give A. Braverman other goods, without cost, in the place of the same, as he may select from time to time, said goods to be furnished to him at the regular wholesale price to the amount of goods returned as above provided. Each party to pay one half the costs.”

Thereafter, the defendant in that suit paid to the plaintiff in that suit the sum of $241.47, and returned to it certain goods which he claimed he had on hand at the tmie the settlement was made, and which he claims were sold and delivered to him by this defendant, and thereafter demanded of this defendant, both orally and in writing, that it deliver to him under the stipulation, without cost, at regular wholesale prices, new goods to the amount of the value of the goods returned. He claims that the goods he returned were of the value of $363.55. He claims that the defendant refused to allow him to select other goods to the value of the goods returned, and that this converted his claim into a money demand; and he brings this action to recover of the defendant $363.55, with interest.

[865]*865The defendant answers and says that it admits that it started an action against the plaintiff during the January term, 1911, in the district court of Linn County; admits that, in that suit, this plaintiff filed a counterclaim, and that, when the cause was at issue, each party was claiming judgment against the other; admits that it entered into the stipulation in writing heretofore set out; denies that the writing contains all the contract; and denies all other claims made by the plaintiff. It alleges, further, that the compromise referred to was “partly in writing and partly oral;” that, before the writing was signed, this plaintiff had orally agreed to drop his counterclaim, if the agreement or settlement could be made; that, in pursuance of this writing and the oral agreement, they compromised on $241.47, being the amount which this defendant was claiming then against the plaintiff. It further says that the only goods involved in the discussion, at the time of the settlement, were the goods on which the American Manufacturing Company was claiming a balance due of $2ll.47; that this plaintiff objected to paying this balance, on the ground that some of the goods represented by the balance were damaged, and proposed to return such as were so damaged, and to take other goods in place of what he returned; that the defendant agreed to this, provided that the plaintiff in this suit would pay the balance which they were suing for; that the written instrument referred to and sued on was made to cover this understanding and agreement; that the defendant understood, at the time, that only $241.47 worth of goods were to be returned; that, in lieu of the goods so returned, plaintiff could select goods of the same make as itemized in plaintiff’s suit; that this plaintiff had reason to suppose that this defendant so understood the writing; and that the writing should be construed in the sense in which this plaintiff had reason to believe the defendant understood it when it signed it.

[866]*866The defendant, further answering, says that all the goods returned by the plaintiff, under the agreement, were not goods sold by the defendant to the plaintiff; that he returned a lot of old goods, which were not involved in the suit that was settled, but were out of date, shopworn, and worthless, and not purchased by the plaintiff from it; that he returned goods amounting to more than $241.47 in value, and demanded the right to have credit at the original purchase price of said goods, whether they were mentioned in the original law suit or not. Defendant further says that the plaintiff has never given an order for any goods that, under the contract, he was entitled to have in lieu of any goods returned; that, if he had done so, defendant would readily have supplied him with them at the wholesale price.

By way of counterclaim, defendant says that the old goods which plaintiff had no right to return under the contract, and which he did return, were stored by it, and the plaintiff was notified that the defendant would not accept them in fulfillment of the agreement, and would store them at plaintiff’s expense; that the actual reasonable value of the storage was $100.

Upon the issues thus tendered, the cause was tried to a jury, and a verdict returned by the jury in favor of the defendant for $45.

It might be said here that, on the hearing of the case, the court struck out all that part of defendant’s answer in which it alleged and undertook to show the understanding of the defendant of the terms of the contract, and held the defendant bound by the contract as written, and on this holding fixed the rights of the parties in the suit, and left for the determination of the jury practically only two questions: Were the goods returned by the plaintiff to the defendant, in pursuance of the contract, goods which the plaintiff had purchased from the defendant? The court informed the jury that, as to any goods which were not pur[867]*867chased by the plaintiff from the defendant, though delivered to the defendant, the plaintiff could not recover for, under the contract, because he had a right, under the contract, to return only goods which were on hand at the time the settlement was made, and then only such as he had received from the defendant; that he could not return other goods not purchased by him from the defendant, and compel the defendant, under the contract, to deliver to him new goods in lieu thereof, at wholesale prices. It became material, then, for the jury to determine what, if any, goods the plaintiff did return to the defendant which, under the contract, the defendant was bound to receive. For such goods as the plaintiff returned to the defendant under this contract, which the defendant was bound to receive, the plaintiff was entitled to have delivered to him new goods, at wholesale prices. If the evidence disclosed that the plaintiff returned to the defendant, in pursuance of this written contract, any goods which he had a right to return under the contract, then it became the duty of the defendant to permit plaintiff to select new goods, at wholesale prices, in lieu of the goods returned, and to the value of the goods returned, figured by the contract. This we say under the theory upon which the case was submitted to the jury, without approving the theory.

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186 Iowa 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braverman-v-american-manufacturing-co-iowa-1919.