International Text-Book Co. v. Anderson

162 S.W. 641, 179 Mo. App. 631, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 283
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 641 (International Text-Book Co. v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Text-Book Co. v. Anderson, 162 S.W. 641, 179 Mo. App. 631, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 283 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for the balance due-on a written contract for a course of instruction. The finding and judgment were for defendant and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.

The balance due on the contract is only forty-six dollars, and the case originated before a justice of the-peace but found its way by appeal to the circuit court.

It appears plaintiff is an incorporated company with its home office in the State of Pennsylvania, and engaged in the business of instruction by means of correspondence through the mails. Defendant is a native of Sweden, residing in St. Louis, and, at the time he entered into the contract with plaintiff, was engaged as a shoe worker in one of the factories here. While at his work in the shoe factory, he was approached by plaintiff’s agent, who solicited him to contract for a course of instruction. At that time defendant was twenty-two years of age and had resided in this country about nine months. It appears he was endeavoring to learn the English language and could write his name and some other words therein. His-foreman, Loftis, told him the proposed course of instruction was a good thing and to sign the contract [634]*634for it. Defendant signed the written contract whereby he bound himself to pay fifty-six dollars in installments of five dollars per month for the course in the several English branches therein named. At the same time he paid plaintiff’s agent the first installment of five dollars and a month thereafter paid him a second installment in the same amount. The contract was ■signed by defendant on March 16th and received by plaintiff at its home office a few days thereafter. Immediately, and in due time, plaintiff transmitted do defendant, through the mail, some books for study and instructions how to proceed. Defendant went about the studies but it seems he did not care to pursue that in arithmetic and, therefore, on April thirtieth, or six weeks after signing the contract, wrote plaintiff as follows:

April 30, 1906.
Gentlemen:
I do not care to keep up my arithmetic any longer. What I want to learn most of all is reading, writing .and spelling. It is very hard for me to write when I do not know the language. I will still continue to pay my monthly payments promptly, so kindly send my books on grammar.
Tours truly,
Adolph Anderson,
St. Louis, Mo.

Defendant says this letter was written for him by a friend at his instance and request and that he personally signed and mailed it to plaintiff. Answering this letter, plaintiff wrote defendant urging him to continue the course as marked out in the contract, but it seems defendant became dissatisfied and dropped it entirely. Pie refused to pay further installments on the contract and discontinued the studies, though plaintiff urged him to continue them and offered to perform all of the conditions of the contract on its part. As before said, the contract provides for the [635]*635payment of a total sum of fifty-six dollars in monthly installments of five dollars per month and plaintiff paid two of such installments. The contract provides furthermore that, “In ease default be made in the payment of any one of said installments, or any part thereof, when due and payable, I hereby agree that the whole amount remaining unpaid shall thereupon, •at your option, become due and payable.” After the time stipulated for all of the payments had elapsed .and defendant’s refusal to pay, this suit was instituted by plaintiff for‘the balance due on the contract — that is, forty-six dollars.

A jury was waived and the case tried before the •court. No instructions were given or refused and none were requested, and, of course, if the evidence supports the judgment of the court in any view, such judgment should be affirmed, for all presumptions and intendments are in aid of it. But if it appears from the admissions of defendant that he contracted and ■owes the debt and that it is unpaid, of course, the judgment may not be sustained. Though the answer pleads that the contract sued upon was procured through fraud, practiced on defendant by plaintiff, there is not a suggestion in the evidence to sustain this •charge. No word is given in testimony to the effect that plaintiff’s agent made any false representations to plaintiff or practiced any trick or artifice upon him whatever. The substance of defendant’s testimony is to the effect that he was at work in the shoe factory when plaintiff’s agent approached him and suggested that he take the course of instruction. Defendant testified that the agent “told me' that that would teach me; . . . I thought it would he my teaching; that Is what I understood.” This he reiterates several times; so it is clear defendant knew it was a contract for instruction.

Defendant appears to he a bright and intelligent young man. He was twenty-two years of age at the [636]*636time and endeavoring to learn the English language. He had progressed along this line far enough that he could write his name and other English words and figures. Besides writing his name to the contract, with his own hand, defendant wrote his address thereunder as follows: “Adolf Anderson, 1447 N. 12th-St., St. Louis.” Pie also wrote in the contract opposite the word “Occupation,” the English words or term “Shoe Worker.” He also wrote his age “22”' in our numerals. He admits writing these words and figures in the contract hut says this*is all he knew how to write at the time. It appears from his own. statements that he knew the contract was for instruction to teach him in the English language and that he was to pay five-dollar installments thereon. The following question and answer appear: “Q. You knew you were going to get a course of instructions t A. Yes, sir.” Several other portions of his. testimony are to the same effect. He paid the first installment at the time and paid the second a month later-. But he says he did not know that he was to pay in all fifty-six dollars for the course of instruction. His testimony is, that he did not read the contract himself and no one read it to him, hut, as before said, there is-not even a suggstion that any misrepresentation touching the matter was made by anyone.

Prom the testimony of defendant it appears that he understood the contract well enough, except he did not know it required him to pay a total of fifty-six dollars, and he says he signed it because his foreman said it was “a good thing” and told him to sign it. Obviously this constitutes no defense to the suit, for in the absence of fraud, accident or mistake defendant is conclusively presumed to know the contents of the-contract and if he could not read it himself it was his-duty to have some one read it to him before signing it. The mere fact that Loftis, his foreman in the shoe-factory, told him it was a “good thing” and to sign it. [637]*637•evinces nothing as against the rights of plaintiff here, for it does not appear that he was representing plaintiff in any respect or that the contract was secured as a result of duress imposed on the part of the foreman.

A person who is competent to contract is conclusively presumed to know the contents of the contract he signs and the fact that he does not read it does not rebut this presumption. It is only where fraud, accident or mistake intervenes that one may be relieved in such circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 641, 179 Mo. App. 631, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-text-book-co-v-anderson-moctapp-1913.