Four Star Comics Corp. v. Kable News Co.

289 F.2d 632
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 9, 1961
DocketNos. 265, 266, Docket 26467, 28468
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 289 F.2d 632 (Four Star Comics Corp. v. Kable News Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Four Star Comics Corp. v. Kable News Co., 289 F.2d 632 (2d Cir. 1961).

Opinion

HINCKS, Circuit Judge.

These are two companion cases brought by two publishers of “comic books” against their common, exclusive, distributor. The central issue in both is the interpretation of the distribution contracts; both contracts were prepared by Kable, the distributor, and are identical. It will be convenient to treat the two cases as one. The crucial contractual provisions are set out in the margin.1

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Plaintiffs-publishers brought these actions, contending that Kable credited itself for the price of millions of comic books which nonetheless were sold to the public in competition with the publishers’ subsequent issues. The complaint sought in successive counts: (1) the purchase price (5{S per copy) of all magazines delivered to Kable less payments actually made by Kable; (2) the purchase price of all magazines returned to Kable by its wholesalers which it did not destroy; (3) the purchase price of all magazines returned from wholesalers and then sold to other wholesalers; (4) the purchase price of all magazines which Kable did not return to Four Star after having been requested to do so;2 3 (5) [634]*634damages for fraud.3 The aggregate purchase price claimed as wrongfully withheld amounted to some $1,800,000.

Kable interposed three counterclaims, only one of which is in issue here. That counterclaim was based on the periodic statements sent to the publishers by Kable. These statements constituted an account stated under paragraph 3(e) of the distribution contract. Note 1 supra.

The district court interpreted paragraph 2(b) of the contract to entitle Kable to a credit of the purchase price for all copies which were returned to it from its wholesalers within the specified period. According to the district court’s interpretation this right was absolute, no matter what happened to the magazines thereafter; fraud or any other possibility would not alter the situation. The court understood subparagraphs 3(c) and 3(e) of the contract to imply a duty in Kable to destroy or return to publishers those magazines which its wholesalers did not sell, but ruled that Kable’s right to a credit under paragraph 2(b) was wholly independent of Kable’s duty to return to the publishers or destroy. This interpretation of the contract apparently was based on the view that although the references to “unsold copies,” “returns,” “return,” and “full copy returns,” in paragraphs 3(c) and (e) meant, and impliedly required, returns from Kable to the publishers, of all copies “unsold” in the sense of “never sold to the public,” the deduction from the purchase price provided by paragraph 2(b) “for all returned and unsold copies” became fully accrued upon return to Kable, the distributor.

Accordingly, the district court granted summary judgment to Kable on its counterclaim, since nothing was brought forward to show that Kable had taken credits for any magazines other than thosé “returned” to it by the wholesalers to whom they were originally sent. And since the contract was so interpreted that the publishers were not entitled to the purchase price of copies returned to Kable, irrespective of what disposition was made of them thereafter, the complaint, which was based on claims for the purchase price, was thought not to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Consequently, Kable’s motion to dismiss the purchase price claims of the complaint was granted. Notwithstanding, since paragraph 3 of the contract demonstrated Kable’s duty to return to the publisher or destroy, the district court allowed the publishers to go to the jury to recover “consequential damages” for breach of that duty. By its answers to interrogatories propounded by the court, the jury found that Kable failed to destroy a substantial number of the magazines returned to it and that a substantial number of these were recirculated and sold to the public, with the effect of reducing the sales of each of the publishers’ subsequent issues by 300,000 copies. The court took 5$S per copy as the measure of damages (that being the sale price to the distributor under the contract). The resulting figure was set off against Kable’s damages under its summary judgment on its counterclaim.

Publishers appeal from the dismissal of their purchase price claims and from the entry of the summary judgment for Kable. Kable cross-appeals from the set-off to its judgment measured by the jury’s special verdict, on the ground that there was insufiicient evidence to support the set-off.

We hold that the district court erred in interpreting the contract, and [635]*635particularly paragraph 2(b) thereof, to mean that the distributor was entitled to a deduction for all copies returned to the distributor. Consequently, its dismissal of the purchase price claims and its entry of summary judgment on the counterclaim must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial. It is therefore unnecessary for us to deal with the questions presented by Kable’s cross-appeal.

The contract itself, we think, contains solid internal evidence of the error in the interpretation adopted below. It is in three paragraphs. Paragraph 1 is headed “The Publisher Agrees”; Paragraph '2 is headed “The Distributor Agrees”; and Paragraph 3, “Both Parties Agree.” Looking to paragraph 2(b), on which the interpretation below rested, it will be noted that the distributor’s promise to pay the stipuated price is there stated to extend to “all copies * * * delivered to ‘Distributor’s’ designated wholesalers and not returned to ‘Distributor’ * * * after making deductions [for several generally stated categories and] for all returned and unsold copies * * To understand the reach of all these several deductions one must turn to other provisions in the contract. Thus the deduction of paragraph 2(b) for “advances” is evidently referable to paragraph 3(g); that for “adjustments” to 1(c); that for “allowances” to 1(f) and l(i), and that for “indemnities and guarantees herein above provided for” to l(j).

By a similar process we must go outside paragraph 2(b) to find the definition of the deduction “for all returned and unsold copies.” The 2(b) “deduction” which the distributor may make from his payments for returned copies is plainly referable to, and indeed reciprocal with, the publisher’s promise in paragraph 1(e) “to credit the ‘Distributor’ for all returned and unsold full copies, front covers and/or headings * * *" which is there stated as a qualification of the agreement “to bill the ‘Distributor’ for copies •* * * delivered to ‘Distributor’s’ wholesalers at the rate of five . (5?0 cents per copy.” This subparagraph [1(e)] apparently contemplates that, just as the billing shall extend to all copies delivered by the publisher to the distributor’s wholesalers, the credit is to cover all copies returned to the publisher unsold. Indeed, it would scarcely be appropriate in the context of paragraph 1(e) to speak of copies “returned” by the original wholesalers to the distributor because the wholesalers had not received them from the distributor.

That the 1(e) “credit,” and hence the 2(b) “deduction,” extends only to returns to the publisher is further indicated by the language of 1(e) extending the credit not only to the return of “full copies” but also to “front covers and/or headings at the rate of five (5jé) cents per copy.” To understand the reason for these alternative forms of return we must look to paragraphs 3(c), (e) and (f).

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Bluebook (online)
289 F.2d 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/four-star-comics-corp-v-kable-news-co-ca2-1961.