Church v. Bobbs-Merrill Company

170 F. Supp. 32, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3679
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedFebruary 10, 1959
DocketIP 58-C-89
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 170 F. Supp. 32 (Church v. Bobbs-Merrill Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Church v. Bobbs-Merrill Company, 170 F. Supp. 32, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3679 (S.D. Ind. 1959).

Opinion

STECKLER, Chief Judge.

This matter came before the court upon the defendant’s motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff brought this action seeking damages for an alleged breach of a contract executed by the plaintiff and defendant on or about January 18, 1951. In that contract plaintiff assigned to defendant all the volume publication rights in an unpublished literary composition to be written by plaintiff and entitled “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery,” and plaintiff agreed to deliver to the defendant, a publishing house located in Indianapolis, on or about January 2, 1953, the manuscript for said composition “complete, legible and ready for the printer,” and consisting of approximately 4,000 recipes. The defendant agreed to publish the completed manuscript in one volume in the style and manner it deemed best. The contract stipulated no publication date or other time requirement for the performance of defendant’s undertaking under the contract. Plaintiff charged in her complaint that defendant, on or about November 13, 1957, wholly repudiated that contract.

After the execution of the January 18, 1951, contract, and until 1956, plaintiff periodically supplied the defendant with parts of the manuscript for the book “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery.” During the period from 1951 through 1955, plaintiff also prepared two other manuscripts which were published by defendant. The first of such manuscripts was for a book entitled “Mary Meade’s Magic Recipes for the Electric Blender,” which was published in 1952, and the second was for a book entitled “Mary Meade’s Kitchen Companion,” which was published in 1955. Both plaintiff and defendant have conceded that the preparation and publication of the two intervening books retarded progress on the preparation of the manuscript for the book “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery,” particularly since parts of the manuscript earlier delivered by plaintiff for the book “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery” were taken from that manuscript and incorporated and used in the manuscript for the 1955 publication, “Mary Meade’s Kitchen Companion.”

The January 2, 1953, deadline for the delivery of the manuscript for the book “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery,” as provided in the January 18, 1951, contract, was formally extended by the defendant in September, 1952, to September 15, 1953. In its formal extension defendant expressly noted that the original contract was being amended only with respect to the delivery date and that all of the remaining terms of the contract remained in full force and effect. Although the delivery date for the manuscript of “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery” was never again formally extended,- both parties admitted that such delivery date, after September 15, 1953, was extended from time to time by mutual consent and that the contract was considered by them to be in effect at the time of the alleged breach thereof charged by plaintiff.

During the years 1956 and 1957 plaintiff submitted no additional manuscript to the defendant for the book “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery.” In March, 1957, in reply to a letter written by plaintiff inquiring as to whether the defendant had any thought of publishing the manuscript for “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery” in parts as cookbook specialties, defendant explained to plaintiff that it had no thought of publishing parts of the manuscript as small, separate books. Defendant further explained to plaintiff that before it could make any real choice relative to the publishing and marketing of the manuscript as a general cookbook, *35 it would be necessary for the defendant to receive the manuscript “in final form ready for manufacture.” Plaintiff had earlier admitted in a letter dated February 4, 1957, that “there need[ed] to be revision on earlier chapters [of the manuscript] due to taking out material for Kitchen Companion.”

Plaintiff did not reply to defendant’s letter of March 7, 1957, until August 21, 1957, during which time no additional manuscript was supplied by plaintiff. In her letter of August 21, 1957, plaintiff admitted that she had supplied only 85 per cent of the manuscript for the book “Mary Meade’s Magic Cookery.” Plaintiff then made the following demand:

“Unless you have a firm, clear plan for, the book, I should like to have the manuscript back and present it to another publisher.”

Plaintiff’s letter was acknowledged by defendant by a letter dated September 4, 1957. In that letter the defendant communicated to plaintiff in clear and unambiguous language its understanding of plaintiff’s proposal of August 21, 1957, viz.:

“I take it from your letter that what you want us to do now is to set up a definite publication schedule for the book; and if we are not able to do that at this time, you would like to have the manuscript returned and the contract cancelled so that you could arrange for publication elsewhere. Nothing could be fairer than that. From time to time we have given you extensions of the delivery date for the final, complete, manuscript; and in every instance I believe that this has been a matter of mutual accord.”

Ross G. Baker, the writer of defendant’s letter, further stated that plaintiff could expect to have from the defendant within four or five weeks a definite answer to her “proposal.”

On October 17, 1957, defendant again wrote plaintiff and stated that it had been unable to give plaintiff “a final reply on Mary Meade’s Magic Recipes,” but that plaintiff would receive a letter “soon.” Thereafter, by letter dated November 13, 1957, defendant informed plaintiff that it was returning the manuscript. The return of the manuscript is the act which plaintiff charged as constituting a repudiation of the contract by defendant.

Plaintiff admitted that she received defendant’s letters of September 4, 1957, October 17, 1957, and November 13,1957. Plaintiff also admitted that she never returned the manuscript to defendant, and that she has never offered to return the manuscript to defendant. Plaintiff further admitted that she in fact submitted the manuscript to another publisher or publishers.

At no time during the interval between September 4, 1957, and November 13, 1957, did plaintiff ever communicate in any manner to defendant any objections or corrections concerning defendant’s clear and unambiguous understanding of her proposal of August 21, 1957, as set forth in defendant’s letter of September 4, 1957. Defendant in fact received no communication from plaintiff until December, 1957, when it received a letter dated December 7, 1957 from plaintiff’s attorneys charging that defendant, by returning the manuscript, had repudiated the contract.

Pursuant to Rule 56, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A., defendant seeks a summary judgment on the ground that there is no genuine issue of any material fact, and that as a matter of law defendant is entitled to judgment. Defendant asserts that the contract was expressly rescinded by mutual agreement; that plaintiff is estopped to deny such rescission; that plaintiff repudiated the contract, in which repudiation defendant concurred and thereby was released from the contract; and that in any event defendant had no obligation to perform the contract until plaintiff furnished the complete manuscript and therefore could not be guilty of the alleged breach of contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 F. Supp. 32, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-bobbs-merrill-company-insd-1959.