International Filter Co. v. Hartman

141 Ill. App. 239, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 669
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 18, 1908
DocketGen. No. 13,835
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 Ill. App. 239 (International Filter Co. v. Hartman) 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
International Filter Co. v. Hartman, 141 Ill. App. 239, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 669 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error sued out from this court by the International Filter Company to reverse a judgment in its favor by the Municipal Court for $30 and costs against S. B. Hartman, doing business as the Peruna Drug Manufacturing Company. The essential assignments of error are that the finding of the court below (which tried the case without a jury) was contrary to the law and the evidence, and that it was error not to-find for the plaintiff, the International Filter Company, in the sum of $780.65, and enter judgment on that finding.

The inquiry whether this contention is well made involves a statement of the facts as shown by the evidence.

The plaintiff is engaged in the manufacture of filters and filter discs in Chicago. The defendant is the manufacturer of a proprietary medicine, called Peruna, at Columbus, Ohio.

In August, 1905, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff asking for a catalogue of filters, saying that they expected to use several in their establishment. The rej suit was a sale of a filter by the plaintiff to the defendant in that year. It was a small No. 1 filter, and was sent to the defendant company in September, 1905. It does not appear that the International Filter Company knew for what particular compound or liquid it was used.

Mr. Schumacher, the vice-president of the Peruna Company, however, testified that there was a compound for which they could use the defendant’s filters successfully—“a preparation,” he says, “of which we use a very small volume”—and it seems probable that this was the liquid which the filter sold in 1905 was used for. But this is not in evidence or material.

October 26, 1906, the International Filter Company wrote the following letter to the Peruna Company:

‘ ‘ Our files show that we have received no disc order from you. within the last year. The quantity we supplied last time must he about exhausted by now. To do away with any possibility of your running out, you better order now either for immediate or future shipment.

It is very possible that your requirements have increased so that your present filter equipment is really not large enough for your use. If this is the case, let us hear from you and we will make you a proposition on exchange of your present filter for one of larger size. A filter more than large enough is a good thing, not only from point of rapidity and convenience, but also from point of economy.”

To this letter the Peruna Company replied, under date of November 10, 1906, as follows:

“Tours of October 26 received, and in reply will say we have plenty of disc for filters to last us for another year, so will not need any at the present time.

We wish to make inquiry, however, concerning filtration which we find necessary to do in our work, and for which we have been unsuccessful in getting a filter to accomplish for us.

Our mixture consists of different ingredients, which contain oleorosins and different oils in the crude drugs. Some of these are extracted and incorporation in our liquid at the proportion which we want to exist in the same, and with a weak alcoholic solution there is a cloudiness which takes place; we find by experimenting that this can only be removed by incorporating magnesia and filtering the same out, which gives us a clear product with all the ingredients in perfect solution.

The amount which we wish to filter in one day is 2,000 gallons or more.

As yet we have run across no filter which will perform this work successfully for us. If you have such a filter we will be glad to hear from you at the very earliest date possible.

Tours truly,

The Peruna Drug Meg. Co.,

Per J. G. Steele.”

November 10, 1906, was Saturday, and it may be assumed the letter of that date reached the International Filter Company on Monday, November 12. It was not answered at that or any other time. On Tuesday, November 13, 1906, however, the filter company received the following telegram.

“Columbus, Ohio. Nov. 13, 1906.

International Filter Co.,

17th Street and Wabash Avenue.

Express us at once three of your largest size filters, same construction as smaller one sent us.

The Peruna Drug Meg. Co.”

On the same day the drug company wrote to the filter company as follows:

“We wired you today as follows: ‘Express us at once three of your largest size filters, same construction as smaller one sent us’, and hope that you were able to make shipment at once, as it is absolutely necessary that we should have these filters in our possession by Wednesday or Thursday at the latest. We want the same style of filter that you sent us about a year ago, with the same arrangement of discs, only we desire the largest size that you manufacture.

We hope you have these filters in stock and that prompt shipment was made upon receipt of our telegram. If for some reason, however, shipment has been delayed a day later, see to it without fail that the filters are expressed to us Wednesday.”

In answer to the telegram the filter company wrote, calling attention to the very large capacity of their No. 10 filter—“twenty-two times as great as that of the No. 1 filter yon are now using”; also to the fact that they had No. 5 filter, “six or seven times the capacity of the No. 1,” and No. 3 filter, “three times the capacity of the No. 1 size.” The letter also gave prices of the different sizes of filters in differing materials, and concluded, “We have ready for immediate shipment two No. 3 Filters, Brass Block tinned; three or more No. 3 Iron Galv., three or more No. 5 Iron Galv., one No. 5, Brass-Block tinned, and two No. 10 Iron Galv. If you will telegraph us in the morning just which filter we shall ship you and whether by express or freight, also whether Iron Galvanized or Brass Block tinned, we will follow your instructions and get the filters off at once. If you prefer, you can call us up by long distance telephone, but in any case, if you wish the filters shipped tomorrow would advise thát you communicate with us as early as possible.”

The answer to this letter was a telegram, as follows:

“Columbus, 0., Nov. 14, 1906.

17th and Wabash Ave.

When can you ship number ten brass block tinned filter? Answer wire.

The Peruha Drug Meg. Co.”

On the receipt of this telegram, Mr. Engel, the secretary of the filter company, called up the Peruna Company on the long-distance telephone and had a conversation with Mr. Baker, the general manager of the Peruna Company. Engel told Baker that they could not deliver a brass block tinned No. 10 filter for two months, but that they had a galvanized iron No. 10 filter that they could ship immediately. Baker said that the galvanized iron one would do, and ordered it shipped by freight. Engel told Baker that if later it was desired to exchange the galvanized iron one for a brass one, it could be arranged.

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Bluebook (online)
141 Ill. App. 239, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-filter-co-v-hartman-illappct-1908.