Doubleday, Page & Co. v. Shumaker

60 Misc. 227, 113 N.Y.S. 83
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 60 Misc. 227 (Doubleday, Page & Co. v. Shumaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doubleday, Page & Co. v. Shumaker, 60 Misc. 227, 113 N.Y.S. 83 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Erlanger, J„

On January 22, 1904, plaintiff, a corporation, entered into an agreement with the defendant and one Hiddlebrook under which the defendant and said Hiddlebrook were to conduct a mail order department in plaintiff’s business; the capital required was to be furnished two-thirds by plaintiff and one-third by the others named. The profits or losses were to be divided in two equal parts, the plaintiff to share in one of such parts and the defendant and said Hiddlebrook in the other. Both the defendant and Hiddlebrook were to receive fixed salaries, and, in the event of either drawing beyond the .compensation agreed upon, the excess was to be charged against their share of the profits. The agreement was to continue from year to year with the understanding that the one withdrawing was to have his or its interest in the profits reduced according to the terms fixed by the writing. On January 13, 1905, the agreement referred to was modified as to the manner and proportion of the investments. The parties continued under the modified plan until February 25, 1905. On that day plaintiff and the defendant purchased the interest of Hiddlebrook, and the existing contract was further revised so that, among other things, defendant’s interest was increased to three-eighths and the plaintiff’s to five-eighths. By this last revision it was provided that if, on April first, the sales for the month of Harch did not equal a sum which would make the entire expenses only one-third of the total sales, the agreement was to end automatically, and the profits or losses, as shown by the books, were to be divided according to the respective interests in the proportion of three-eighths and five-eights. The writing stipulated further for a termination of the compact at the end of June, if the expenses on the first of any intervening month should be more than one-third of the total sales for [229]*229the preceding month, unless renewed. Under the agreement so revised plaintiff and defendant continued until May 23, 1905, when a new one was made, and under it plaintiff agreed to purchase the interest of defendant on July 1, 1905, on the same basis as was employed when the interest of Middlebrook was purchased. The terms of the sale were set forth, and it was among other things provided that all undelivered orders ’ and portions of orders on hand July 1, 1905, taken by the mail order department prior to July 1, 1905, shall be included in the inventory at fifty per cent, (half) of their retail sale value. If the returns or losses show that this way of settlement is unjust to either side, the matter will he read,justed according to the facts which developed by August 15, 1905.”

It appears from the evidence that the business was rather of an uncertain, if not of a precarious, character. Custom was obtained by means of advertisements and circulars sent out broadcast to the public and orders for books and pictures were obtained by such method. The success of the business depended largely upon the whim of the purchasing public. When inquiries were made either in response to advertisements or to circulars, books or pictures were sent on approval. If the article was retained it could be paid for in cash with a discount or in installments covering a period of from six to eighteen months or beyond that time. The purchasers upon this plan might pay the whole price or they might retain the goods and not pay for them, or they might pay part and default as to the balance, or again they might after the lapse of some time return them either in a soiled condition or otherwise so damaged as to require in respect of the books rebinding; in the latter event the loss would be the cost of rebinding plus the expense of sending and returning. All these elements added uncertainty to the business, and this condition existed on May twenty-third, when defendant’s interest was purchased. It was believed by the parties that between July first and August fifteenth the fairness of their bargain could be ascertained and the latter date was fixed as the time of readjustment, if it was then ascertained that the method of settlement was unjust to either side. The [230]*230writing among other things is silent as to outstanding accounts and delivered orders, hut they, of course, were included in the sale. It was not possible on June 30, 1905, to determine what the actual value of the mail order department was, and according to the evidence the feat was not practicable on the day of the trial so far as concerned the business transacted prior to July first, the day on which it was agreed to purchase defendant’s interest, because books were still being returned and collections going on. Up to August 10, 1905, on account of this situation the plaintiff became somewhat alarmed as the day for completing the purchase was close at hand. Between May twenty-third and August fifteenth the claim is made by plaintiff that numerous discussions were had with the defendant on the subject. Plaintiff contends that the defendant always answered the objections urged in that regard by a promise to readjust if it developed that he was overpaid his share as fixed by the agreement of sale. In any event some time prior to August fifteenth Middlebrook, who possessed special knowledge of the business, prepared a statement from which it appeared that the value of defendant’s interest on June 30, 1905, amounted to $30,275.81 with the added interest. The largeness of the estimate was a complete surprise to plaintiff, and through its president objection to its accuracy was made, and the defendant is alleged to have again assented to a readjustment and to repay the amount which might be overpaid to him on the settlement. Plaintiff was still unsatisfied, and it seems that its president repeated his fears about the correctness of the inventory, because returns were still coming in. In this condition of affairs the unconditional payment of this large sum which was to be paid on August fifteenth might subject the plaintiff to considerable loss, bounded by the overpayment to the defendant of his correct proportionate share in the business. Thereupon plaintiff maintains that the sale contract of May twenty-third, which originally provided for the payment to defendant of the amount found to be due to him in ten monthly installments, and which before the document was executed was changed to “ ten monthly notes,” was on August fifteenth or thereabouts modi[231]*231fled so as to provide that the plaintiff should deliver to the defendant one check for $2,000 and fourteen notes for the balance of the purchase price, which were delivered to the defendant on that day upon the understanding that the notes were to be held by him or by Middlebrook subject to the readjustment of the account in the future as the facts would develop. In accordance with this understanding the check and notes were delivered and the defendant acknowledged receipt thereof on the writing itself as being in “ full settlement of this contract.” Between the 15th of August, 1905, and the twenty-second of that month plaintiff’s president again spoke to the defendant on the subject of a readjustment, and thereupon on the date last mentioned the defendant wrote to the plaintiff the following letter: “ To record the substance of what I said this morning I will repeat. Regardless of what the books or statements may show from time to time, we will postpone all discussion of our recent settlement when you purchased my interest in the mail order-department until the February 1, 1906, statement has been completed, say about March 1, 1906.

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

Related

Brozan v. Worms
138 Misc. 404 (New York Supreme Court, 1930)
Doubleday, Page & Co. v. Shumacker
119 N.Y.S. 1123 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 Misc. 227, 113 N.Y.S. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doubleday-page-co-v-shumaker-nysupct-1908.