Burr v. American Spiral Spring Butt Co.

81 N.Y. 175, 8 Abb. N. Cas. 403, 1880 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 34, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 216
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 175 (Burr v. American Spiral Spring Butt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burr v. American Spiral Spring Butt Co., 81 N.Y. 175, 8 Abb. N. Cas. 403, 1880 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 34, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 216 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Per Curiam. *

The agreement between the parties provided for publishing, in a book to be called “ The great Industries of the United States,” an advertisement of the defendant’s business, at a compensation measured by the number of books sold. It recited that the plaintiffs were about to publish such a book, which would be sold by subscription through their authorized agents in every State in the Union and in Canada •; that in the work was to be inserted an article containing six pages of reading matter setting forth the name, “ biography,” and-business of the defendant, and then followed the agreement proper as follows: “How, therefore, in consideration of said Burr & Co. so incorporating in said article, to the acceptance of said company, the name of said company, their biography,’ etc., and publishing the same in the forthcoming edition of the said work, said company agree to pay to said Burr <& Co. the sum of two cents for six pages of the said article for each and every copy of said work sold by said Burr & Co. Said Burr & Co. agree to furnish to said company their certificate, properly subscribed and certified to before a justice of the peace if so required, as to the number of copies of said work actually sold and delivered to subscribers.”

The plaintiffs, whose business was publishing and selling books by subscription, proved their mode of conducting it; that agents were appointed in the various States and in Canada who canvassed for subscribers, and who then ordered the num *178 her of books required for delivery to subscribers and paid for them, and the books were shipped by express or freight directly to the agents who delivered the books to the subscribers, the plaintiffs having no personal connection with and no knowledge of the individual subscribers éxcept through the agents. They gave evidence tending to prove, and sufficient, we think, to prove prima facie that this book was published and sold in this way, and that they had actually delivered to their agents and been paid for the number for which they claimed to charge the defendants, including the number delivered to editors and publishers of newspapers as compensation for advertising, etc. Except to a very limited extent there was no proof of actual delivery to individual subscribers. The learned referee found that the proof was not sufficient to show a compliance with the contract on the part of the plaintiffs, and we infer from the findings that he held that it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to prove a sale by subscription through agents in every State in the Union, and in Canada, to entitle the plaintiffs to recover any thing. This cannot be sustained. It appeared in evidence that at the time the contract was made the plaintiffs had agents in every State, and in Canada, engaged for them in selling other books by subscription, and this recital must be regarded in the nature of a proposition as to the mode of doing the business. There is nothing in the contract importing an absolute agreement that the plaintiffs would sell the book in every State, and such a construction would be very unreasonable. The failure to sell in a single State would deprive the plaintiffs of all compensation, while the agreement is that the defendant is to pay only for the number actually sold at the rate of two cents a copy. Becitals in a contract are not strictly any part of the contract, but they may have a material influence in construing the instrument and determining the intent of the parties. There is no principle of construction which would justify a court in holding that the parties intended to make a right to recover any compensation dependent upon selling the books in every State in the Union.

If the compensation had been fixed at a gross sum, it might *179 have been claimed that the consideration implied a sale in all the specified places; but as the defendant limited its liability to a specified sum for each book sold, the plaintiffs were entitled to recover for the number proved to have been sold in accordance with the contract, whether more or less. We infer, also, that the learned referee decided that the proof was insufficient, because it did not go far enough to establish an actual sale and delivery to the individual subscribers which, it is claimed, is indispensable to a sale by subscription. This presents the most important question in the case. It will be observed that the obligatory part of the contract does not require the books to be sold by subscription, in express terms, but it is claimed, and with considerable reason, that as the preamble recites that the books are to be sold by subscription, the agreement fixing the price at two cents for each copy sold should be construed as implying sold by subscription, and that this construction is confirmed, because the defendant presumably regarded this as the mdst effectual way of advertising its business. Assuming that the contract, fairly construed, required the books to be sold by subscription, it is insisted by the plaintiffs that the parties must be deemed to have contracted with reference to the mode of doing that business by the plaintiffs, and that the recitals, although requiring the books to be sold by subscription, qualified such sales to the mode which the plaintiffs had adopted, and were then practicing, and that the proof showed, that the books were delivered to their agents in that mode, and were actually paid for. The contention of the plaintiff is sustained by Burr v. Crompton (and three other cases) reported in 116 Mass. 493. These cases were actions upon similar contracts, and in one or two of them upon contracts identical with the contract in the case at bar for compensation for advertising in the same book, and the evidence was sub. stantially the same as that given in this case. The court held it sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover. Devens, J., in delivering the opinion, said : As from the mode in which the business was to be conducted, according to the evidence of the plaintiffs, the defendants must have known that the publisher *180 was not brought into immediate contact with the subscriber, and did not deliver the book to him personally, the books of account kept by the plaintiffs with such agents, and the recollection of witnesses as refreshed by them (which evidence was admitted by the auditor), were competent to prove a business conducted according to the usage of the trade, the transmission of the books in answer to orders on them by agents, and the payment therefor, which would justify a finding for the plaintiffs. Although this evidence fails to show directly that the books were delivered into the hands of the individual subscribers, it is the only evidence which is reasonable and practicable in ascertaining the liability of the defendants. As between them and the plaintiffs, it should be considered that there has been a sale and delivery of the books, when the plaintiffs prove that they have done every thing to place them in the hands of individual subscribers, which the contract contemplated that the publisher should do.”

It is urged that the form of the question in those cases and in this is different.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 175, 8 Abb. N. Cas. 403, 1880 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 34, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burr-v-american-spiral-spring-butt-co-ny-1880.