Geneva Organ Co. v. Ambassador Theatres Corp.

249 Ill. App. 390, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 72
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 20, 1928
DocketGen. No. 32,386
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 249 Ill. App. 390 (Geneva Organ Co. v. Ambassador Theatres Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geneva Organ Co. v. Ambassador Theatres Corp., 249 Ill. App. 390, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 72 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is prosecuted at the instance of defendants from a judgment against them on the verdict of a jury in the sum of $16,306.80.

Defendants assign thirty-eight alleged errors and argue but five. Under well-settled rules of procedure in this court we shall confine our decision within the five assignments of error argued for reversal, and ignore the remaining thirty-three not argued.

Defendants in their main brief say:

“On this appeal we rely upon the following specific errors committed by the trial court:

“(1) The improper and erroneous instructions to the jury that the use of the organ by the defendant corporation after its rejection by defendant corporation constituted a waiver, as a matter of law, of the rejection of such organ.

“(2) The exclusion of proper evidence over defendants’ objection.

“ (3) The admission of improper evidence over defendants’ objection.

“(4) The refusal to give proper instructions offered by defendants.

“(5) The refusal to direct a verdict for defendants.”

The cause of action is based upon a promissory note, which is as follows:

“Chicago, Jany. 15, 1925.

$14,400.00

“On or before 6 months after date we promise to pay to the order of Geneva Organ Company Fourteen Thousand Four Hundred Dollars payable at 5823 W. Division St.

“Value received with interest at 6% per annum.

M. & H. Theatres Corp.

W. P. McCarthy, President, Joseph Wassell, Treas.”

The consideration of the note was one pipe organ, furnished for and installed in the Ambassador Theatre in Chicago. When the note became due it was not paid and the payment of the note was at the request of defendants extended to November 15, 1925, on condition that the defendant Joseph Wassell joined in such extension. The extension was indorsed on the back of the note in these words: “Payment extended to November 15, 1925. Geneva Organ Co., Walter Hogans, Treas., Joseph Wassell.”

Under defendants’ first alleged assignment of error it cites Seeberg Piano Co. v. Lindner, 221 Ill. App. 94, in which the opinion was written by the writer of this opinion, and it is contended that that opinion is in its essence controlling of the instant case. A careful perusal of that opinion quite affirmatively demonstrates that in essential particulars, as applied to the case at bar, it is very different. In the Seeberg Piano Co. case, supra, the defendants rejected the organ, tendered it back to the piano company, who refused to take it, and thereupon the organ was put in storage for plaintiff’s account, sending the piano company the warehouse receipt therefor. In that opinion this court said:

“There was an abundance of evidence from which the jury might properly find that the style ‘V’ organ which defendants bought of plaintiff for their moving picture theatre was wholly unsatisfactory for the purpose for which it was purchased and entirely worthless to defendants in their moving picture business in which it was to be used, and that plaintiff knew the purpose for which the organ was to be used and, so knowing, installed it in defendants’ Rosewood Theatre. ’ ’

Many defects in the organ were pointed out in the testimony, among which were the sticking of the keys, the failure of other keys to respond to the touch of the organist, the failure of notes to stop when the fingers were removed from the keys, and that discords and unharmonious sounds resulted from such defects when the organ was in action. In the Piano Co. case plaintiff was given every opportunity to remedy the defects found in the organ and reported to it by defendants, but failed to do so. The piano company urged for reversal “that defendants were obligated when they rescinded the contract to restore the status quo and put plaintiff in as good a position as it was in before the sale. We think this primary obligation was fully met by the return of the organ; that such restitution of the organ to plaintiff was all that could possibly be done under the circumstances and was a sufficient compliance with the law which made it obligatory upon defendants to put plaintiff in as good a condition as it was before the sale.”

While it is true that defendants made many complaints that the organ was not in good condition in many respects, and while defendants offered to return the organ, they never did so; it remained in the theatre and was in constant use until the time of the trial. If defendants had desired to effectually bring themselves within the law laid down in the Piano Co. case, supra, on plaintiff’s refusal to take the organ out of the theatre, defendants should, as in the Piano Co. case, supra, have either physically returned the organ to plaintiff or stored it in some warehouse in its name and sent the warehouse receipt to the plaintiff. This they made no attempt to do. In no way did they attempt to restore the status quo; on the contrary defendants retained the organ and used it, and for aught that appears to the contrary, they are still doing so. Furthermore at the request of defendants plaintiff gave a waiver of lien which it had under the law and accepted the note in suit in full payment. Thereafter defendant theatre company inventoried the organ as an asset and secured blue sky permits to sell stock in which the organ was stated to be an asset and inventoried it for that purpose. In September, 1926, the theatre company entered the money owing on the organ as a liability to the plaintiff organ company and so continued to carry it as a liability to the time of the trial. Furthermore in the general blanket trust deed given upon the theatre company’s property securing a bond issue in the sum of a quarter of a million dollars, the organ was specifically conveyed as a part of the mortgage- security, and after the installation of the organ the theatre company used it continuously for more than a year and a half until the trial of the case in the court below.

It further appears that there was a demonstration of the capacity of the organ, at which defendant Was-sell was present with others of the theatre company, and that the test there made, it is in evidence, was satisfactory to those who heard it, but that Was sell and others of the theatre company after the playing was started did not remain to hear the organ tested, but went away.

Under the reasoning in the case supra defendants’ actions were a mere pretense to rescind the contract; they never did any act which, under the law, was necessary to restore the status quo. The actions of defendants regarding the possession and use of the organ above recited unqualifiedly indicated that the defendant theatre company affirmed the contract, and that thereafter they held themselves out to be the owners of the organ. These material facts are virtually undisputed. The defendants cannot now be heard, while in possession of the organ and operating it in the business of the theatre, to have any right to claim that they rescinded the contract, for every action above recited was in law an affirmance of the contract of purchase and their ownership of the organ.

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Bluebook (online)
249 Ill. App. 390, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geneva-organ-co-v-ambassador-theatres-corp-illappct-1928.