Curlander v. King

77 A. 60, 112 Md. 518, 1910 Md. LEXIS 131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 4, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 77 A. 60 (Curlander v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curlander v. King, 77 A. 60, 112 Md. 518, 1910 Md. LEXIS 131 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a proceeding for mandamus, and the appeal is from an order of the Court below sustaining a demurrer to the petition and refusing the writ.

The question inovlved is whether the appellee, as publisher of the Alary] and Reports, under his contract with the State, can be compelled by mandamus, at the suit of the appellant, as a law book dealer, to sell to the latter a certain number of the volumes which he has demanded for the purposes of his trade.

It was alleged in the petition that in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 327 of the Acts of 1904 the State Reporter and Codifier advertised for sealed proposals for publishing the reports of the decisions of this Court for the term of five years beginning on the first Wednesday of June, in the year 1909; that the defendant (appellee) in response to the advertisement, filed a sealed proposal to print and publish and keep in the City of Baltimore for sale to the public inaecordance with the -terms of the statute volumes of the reports bound in first class law sheep at the rate of ninety-five cents per volume, and volumes in sheets unbound at the rate of forty-five cents per volume; that the contract was awarded by the Reporter to the defendant as the most responsible bidder who wonld agree to publish the reports as provided' by the statute and sell them on terms most advantageous to the public and at the lowest price; and that the defendant entered *520 into a contract with the State in accordance with the terms of his proposal and gave bond as required by law to secure its satisfactory performance. It was further alleged that during the month of July, 1909, the defendant received from the Reporter the manuscript for Volume 109 of the reports, and published and then had on hand, at his printing establishment in Baltimore City, copies of the volumes both bound and unbound.

The petition then proceeded to charge that the petitioner (appellant) was and for many years past had been a dealer in law boohs and as such was well known to the legal profession; that for many years he had furnished to a large number of members of the Bench and Bar copies of the reports as they were published, which he was enabled to do by purchasing them in unbound volumes from the publishers and selling them to his customer's after having bound them in a binding of high quality; that his bindings have been uniformly superior to those used by the publishers; and that his customers are still desirous of purchasing volumes of the reports as- they are issued in order to secure a binding uniform with the other volumes of the sets heretofore published and purchased.

It was further charged that in June, 1909, after the contract had been awarded, the defendant, in response to an inquiry made by him, was informed by the petitioner that he had ordered and received from Baughman Brothers, the publishers of the reports for the preceding term of five years, two hundred and seventy-five unbound copies of each volume of the reports when published and had given scattering orders for each volume thereafter; that thereupon, the defendant, knowing that the petitioner had the unbound copies of the reports bound outside of the State and by parties other than those who bound the volumes for the defendant, stated that he would personally see the petitioner and arrange with him that the delivery to the legal profession of the bound volumes by the petitioner and the defendant should be made at the same time, and to that end the one first receiving the bound *521 copies should -make no deliveries until the other party was in a similar position; that the petitioner was thereby led to believe that when the next volume, 109, should be published the defendant would promptly deliver to the petitioner the number of copies he needed for his customers; that subsequently, in July, .1909, the petitioner sent to his customers notices stating the change in price of the volumes and soliciting a continuance of their subscriptions to the reports, and, having received from his customers orders for about two hundred and twenty-five copies, he ordered verbally from the defendant that number of unbound copies of Volume 109; ■that on September 9th, 1909, the petitioner learned for the first time that the volume had been printed and published and that some of the bound copies had already been delivered to members of the Bar, although in the meantime the defendant had failed to deliver to the petitioner any unbound copies; that on the following day the petitioner asked for the two hundred and twenty-five copies which he had ordered previously, whereupon the defendant denied the receipt of the order, and on the same day the petitioner ordered by letter, a copy of which is exhibited, two hundred unbound and twenty-five bound copies of Volume 109 and accompanied the order with a check for one hundred and thirteen dollars and seventy-five cents in full payment; that the defendant did not make any reply to this written order, though requested repeatedly to do so, and retained the check until September 15th, when he returned the check with a letter of that date, which is filed as an exhibit; that subsequently the petitioner through counsel informed the defendant by letter that he would, for the latter’s convenience, waive his right to insist upon the delivery of the twenty-five bound volumes, but would insist upon the immediate delivery of the two hundred and twenty-five unbound copies; but that the defendant thereupon refused to deliver any copies to the petitioner; and that the action of the defendant in refusing to supply the necessary copies of the volumes has resulted and will continue to result *522 to the great damage and inconvenience of. the petitioner and of the members of the Bench and Bar of the State.

In 'the defendant’s letter of September 15th the receipt of the petitioner’s check was acknowledged, as was also his letter demanding a “certain number of copies, bound and unbound, of 109 Maryland Beports.” The letter then proceeds : “As we consider this demand for this number

of copies very unreasonable and not having any bound copies ready that we could deliver to you at this time, we have delayed answering your letter, which we intended to do this A. M. Your Mr. Zimmer called upon us today and said that unless we delivered the copies per your order of the 10th in an hour, that you would enter suit against us. We herewith return you your check which you will see has never been used by us, respectfully declining to have you act as our sales agent.”

The petitioner replied to this by the letter written through his counsel and exhibited with the petition. He disclaimed that he was assuming to act as the defendant’s sales agent, and stated that his order was given by him, as part of the public which, he asserts, the defendant had undertaken to supply with bound and unbound volumes of the Maryland Beports at the rates fixed by his contract with the State. He insisted that the publisher had no legal' right to pass upon the reasonableness of the number of copies of the reports, bound and unbound, which the public or any part of it may 'require, and that the reasonableness of the order in question was shown by the fact that the number required was less than he had heretofore ordered and received from the former printer of the reports.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Buchholtz v. Hill
13 A.2d 348 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1940)
Jones v. House of Reformation
3 A.2d 728 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Ghingher v. Manufacturers' Finance Co.
178 A. 600 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1935)
American-Stewart Distillery, Inc. v. Stewart Distilling Co.
177 A. 473 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 60, 112 Md. 518, 1910 Md. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curlander-v-king-md-1910.