Hart Publications, Inc. v. Kaplan

37 N.W.2d 814, 228 Minn. 512, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 3, 1949
DocketNo. 34,817.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 N.W.2d 814 (Hart Publications, Inc. v. Kaplan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart Publications, Inc. v. Kaplan, 37 N.W.2d 814, 228 Minn. 512, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 575 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

Losing, Chief Justice.

This is an action to recover “the agreed price,” or reasonable value, of printing for defendants tickets or slips of paper to be used in games of chance. The total bill was alleged to have been $4,165, upon which $800 had been paid. Plaintiff had findings in its favor, and defendants Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller, who were the only defendants who answered, appeal from an order denying a new trial. Four questions are presented:

*514 (1) Were the answering defendants liable to plaintiff as business associates under M. S. A. c. 338?

(2) Was error committed in the admission in evidence of Dun & Bradstreet’s report?

(3) Does the fact that plaintiff, when it accepted the order, knew that the product of its work was to be used in a game of chance preclude a recovery?

(4) If the foregoing questions be answered in favor of plaintiff, did it prove its case as to agreed price of the work done?

Plaintiff is a printing company which did composition, make-up, electrotyping, and presswork on certain printed matter for the Park Square Manufacturing Company, of which it was alleged that defendants Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller were among the owners. They separately answered plaintiff’s complaint denying liability. The trial court made findings for plaintiff and ordered judgment for $8,365 with interest from April 29, 1946. This is an appeal by the answering defendants from the order of the trial court denying their motion for a new trial.

At the trial, it appeared that plaintiff obtained an order to print a carload of paper according to specifications which were to be furnished to plaintiff. As requested from time to time, plaintiff was to produce and deliver tickets or slips of paper to be used in games of chance called “jar deals” and “punch boards.” The sales agent who obtained the order was vice president of plaintiff. He was aware that the product was to be used in connection with games of chance.

Among others, defendants Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller were named as persons interested in the Park Square Manufacturing Company (hereinafter referred to as Park Square) by the terms of a certificate of business name filed in behalf of that company under the provisions of M. S. A. c. 333 in the office of the clerk of the district court of Ramsey county on July 21, 1944. It listed “the full and true individual names of each and every person who is in any way interested in said business under said name, * * Plaintiff *515 had no personal contact with either answering defendant, as an individual, but its officers asserted that they had knowledge, independent of the certificate, that these defendants were part owners of Park Square at the time credit was first extended to it.

There is evidence tending to prove that both Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller retired from the business in December 1945. In May 1946, Park Square was incorporated to take over all the assets of the previous business, conducted under the same name, and early in 1947 the corporation subsequently filed a petition in bankruptcy. It was then that plaintiff obtained the Dun & Bradstreet report. Defendants now object to its admission in evidence. The record indicates that Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller, although subpoenaed to testify at the trial of this cause, were not found by the sheriff and did not at any time appear except by counsel. The certificate above referred to was introduced in evidence from the records of the clerk of the district court of Ramsey county. There was no subsequent record of the filing of a change of ownership certificate, as required by § 333.03, in order to relieve the owners named in the certificate filed July 21, 1944, of liability to persons extending credit without actual notice or knowledge of change of ownership. The clerk of the district court testified that there was no such subsequent certificate on file in his office.

The court made findings of fact that the individual defendants, including Thelma Geller and Ida Kaplan, were doing business under a partnership name of Park Square Manufacturing Company; that plaintiff had no notice or knowledge of a later withdrawal of such partners from the partnership; and that on or about June 29, 1945, plaintiff and defendants entered into a contract, upon which part performance was carried out by plaintiff and certain payments made on the purchase price, leaving a balance due and owing to plaintiff of $3,365. The court also found that plaintiff did not participate in any illegal transaction by printing and delivering paper stock, and, as conclusions of law, ordered judgment for plaintiff for $3,365 with six percent interest running from April 29, 1946.

*516 Plaintiff made out a “presumptive” case that Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller were members of the partnership, styled “Park Square Manufacturing Company,” by introducing the certificate of ownership under §§ 333.01 and 333.03 and the proof that that certificate had never been amended or superseded. 2 Section 333.03 makes the individuals named in the certificate liable to persons who extend credit to the business without actual notice or knowledge of change of ownership.

Counsel for appellants admitted at the trial that this certificate included defendants in a partnership, but challenged the certificate as hearsay. There was evidence that plaintiff had no actual notice *517 or knowledge of the change of ownership, which was alleged to have taken place in December 1945. There was no evidence to the contrary.

The statute does not require that the persons extending credit to owners of a registered business be, at that time, aware of the existence of such certificate or its filing as a condition of liability of the persons named in the certificate. There is credible testimony in the record that plaintiff received information concerning the membership of Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller in the business before it extended credit to it. The certificate is presumptive evidence in all courts of law of the facts therein contained. § 333.04. There is evidence tending to prove that plaintiff’s first notice or knowledge of withdrawal of Ida Kaplan and Thelma Geller was by receipt of the Dun & Bradstreet report of February 26, 1947, which was long after the completion of the contract upon which plaintiff’s claim was founded. The burden of proof was upon defendants to show that plaintiff came within the exception, and they offered no such evidence.

Defendants’ only assignment of error on the admission of evidence relates to the admission of the special Dun & Bradstreet report of February 26, 1947, which was designated as plaintiff’s exhibit G. This report came to plaintiff when the Park Square corporation, defendants’ successor, went into bankruptcy. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove that the receipt of exhibit G was the first information it had of any change from the original ownership of Park Square as disclosed by the certificate filed on July 21, 1944, with the clerk of the district court of Ramsey county, where it conducted its business.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.W.2d 814, 228 Minn. 512, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-publications-inc-v-kaplan-minn-1949.