Farm & Auto Supply v. Phoenix Fuel Co.

442 P.2d 88, 103 Ariz. 344, 1968 Ariz. LEXIS 266
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1968
Docket8558
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 442 P.2d 88 (Farm & Auto Supply v. Phoenix Fuel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farm & Auto Supply v. Phoenix Fuel Co., 442 P.2d 88, 103 Ariz. 344, 1968 Ariz. LEXIS 266 (Ark. 1968).

Opinion

McFARLAND, Chief Justice:

Plaintiff-appellee, Phoenix Fuel Co., Inc., a corporation, sued defendant-appel *345 lant, Farm & Auto Supply, a corporation, for over eleven thousand dollars, stating that its complaint was on “open account,” and alleging that defendants owed plaintiff the money for “goods sold and delivered according to the account annexed as exhibit ‘A’.” After plaintiff garnisheed several parties, defendant paid the account in full. The parties then stipulated that the action should continue solely to dispose of two questions: (1) whether defendant was liable for attorney’s fees, and, if so, how much, and (2) whether ■defendant was liable for the costs of the action, including the cost of serving process on all defendants. The case was tried before a judge, sitting without a jury, and plaintiff was awarded judgment for $212.85 costs and for $3,816.74 attorney’s fees. Defendant appealed.

Plaintiff’s proof is inconclusive on nearly every point, and it is therefore difficult to determine on what facts the lower •court based its judgment.

Plaintiff was a wholesaler of petroleum products. Defendant had one or more tank trucks and purchased plaintiff’s products regularly over a period of a year and a half; delivery was always made into defendant’s truck at plaintiff’s place of business. The original contact with defendant was made by plaintiff’s salesman, who appears to have made arrangements for the sales to be made on credit. Plaintiff carried as an account receivable, an open account to which he posted each sale to defendant. Defendant’s truck would enter plaintiff’s yard, and the driver would do his own loading. He would then enter plaintiff’s office and tell the bookkeeper what he had loaded, and the latter would make out an invoice which the driver would then sign, after which it would be posted to defendant’s account owing to plaintiff.

At the trial, plaintiff introduced in evidence Exhibit 2, which it stated were all of the invoices pertaining to defendant’s account. These consisted of 174 printed forms each entitled “invoice,” dated, and reading “Sold to”; followed by a blank in which defendant’s name had been inserted. Each invoice had a blank space filled in with the description, quantity, price, and total amount of the purchase. Each had a line for the customer’s signature. 37 invoices, totalling nearly $7,000, were not signed by any one on the lines for customer’s signature; 137 invoices, totalling approximately $38,000, had assorted signatures of: “Jerry,” “James J. Hill,” “Pliad Watt,” “D. Dallas Hyde,” “W. G. Vaughn,” “D. Brown,” etc. 74 of these invoices have printed on their, faces:

“Customer agrees to pay 8% interest and all costs, including reasonable attorney fees, if legal action becomes necessary.”

while one hundred bear the following statement:

“If account unpaid within time permitted, customer agrees to pay 8% interest and all costs of collection including reasonable attorney fees.”

We see no problem with plaintiff’s recovery of costs. Since defendant paid the account in full only after the action was started, it is liable for costs. If the issue referred to in the stipulation is whether those costs should include the expense of serving process by private process-servers, the authority for including the cost of process serving by private process servers is found in A.R.S. § 11-445, subsec. F:

“ * * * However, a party adjudged entitled to recover his costs of suit in any civil action shall be awarded in any such judgment or order for the costs of service made by a private process server only the amount actually charged the party by such private process server or the amount which a sheriff or constable would have been authorized to *346 charge the party for the same service, whichever is less, except that an additional allowance shall be made of fifty cents for the notarization of each affidavit of service made by a private process server. As amended Laws 1962, Ch. 139, § 1; Laws 1963, Ch. 3, § 2.”

The remaining question is whether defendant is liable for attorney’s fees. In Commercial Standard Insurance Company v. Cleveland, 86 Ariz. 288, 345 P.2d 210, we affirmed a long-standing rule that

“It is fundamental * * * that attorney’s fees are not recoverable in an action unless provided for by contract or statute.”

The evidence indicates that some form of agreement was made as to price and terms of payment, between plaintiff’s salesman and defendant, prior to delivery of the goods in question, and that they were thereafter sold and delivered on open account in accordance with such an agreement. Defendant certainly did not agree to buy from plaintiff without some assurance of a price or of a method for ascertaining the price, and it seems to have been admitted that the sales were to be made, and were actually made, on credit. Therefore, it may be said that the parties, before any purchases were made, had created a situation where the seller had made an offer for a series of contracts at a mutually-agreeable price. The burden is upon the party attempting to show that such agreement included a promise to pay attorney’s fees, and not upon defendant. If he has failed in this respect he must fail in the lawsuit. The evidence does not show that when this agreement was made there was even any discussion of attorney’s fees.

Plaintiff, having failed to show agreement to pay attorney’s fees, seeks to fill this gap by claiming that the invoices contained in Exhibit 2 are individual contracts, providing for the payment of attorney’s fees, signed by defendant’s agents. In support of this argument it cites two cases: Slim Olson, Inc. v. Winegar, 122 Utah 180, 246 P.2d 608; and Braun v. S. F. Hess & Co., 187 Ill. 283, 58 N.E. 371.

In Olson, supra, defendant personally signed 47 invoices, and the court said that he did so “without protest on his part,” and that:

“To conclude that there was no manifestation of assent by defendant to be bound by his own acts or those of his servants in such an atmosphere of non-protestation and non-disclosure, would be to arrogate to this court the privilege of ignoring the record and of supplying defendant and his case with belief and understanding undisclosed, quite unsupported by any evidence. We believe and hold that under the facts there was no error in concluding that Winegar, by personal signature accompanied by silence as to his acts and those of his employees, bound himself to pay attorney’s fees, — under simple principles of contract and of ratification of agents’ acts by failure to speak up. Such being our conclusion, matters of actual or apparent authority need not be canvassed.” [Italics ours.]

It will be noted that the court based its. opinion largely on the fact that Winegar had personally signed 47 of the invoices,, and for this reason the court did not go. into the question of apparent authority of employees to so sign.

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Bluebook (online)
442 P.2d 88, 103 Ariz. 344, 1968 Ariz. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-auto-supply-v-phoenix-fuel-co-ariz-1968.