J. R. Watkins Co. v. Eaker

244 P.2d 540, 56 N.M. 385
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1952
Docket5472
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 244 P.2d 540 (J. R. Watkins Co. v. Eaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. R. Watkins Co. v. Eaker, 244 P.2d 540, 56 N.M. 385 (N.M. 1952).

Opinion

McGHEE, Justice.

We will refer to the appellant company as plaintiff, to the appellee and cross-appellant, Charles Wm. Eaker, as the defendant, and the defendants and appellees, Mrs. Amanda Eaker, J. T. Fulton and R. L. House, as the sureties.

The defendant had been ordering and selling the products of the plaintiff under contracts similar to the one involved in this action since 1936, and on August 31, 1945, was indebted to the plaintiff on account in the sum of $4,698.80. On that date the plaintiff and defendant entered into a new contract with the new sureties named above. The material paragraphs of this new contract involved in a determination of this case are:

“3. The Purchaser further agrees to pay the Company its current wholesale prices for the goods and other articles sold to him, as herein provided, and also the prepaid transportation charges thereon, if any, by remitting to the Company each week at least sixty per cent (60%) of the amount received by him from his cash sales, and from his collections on sales previously made, at the time and in the manner and in accordance with the provisions of the weekly record blanks of the Company to be furnished to.him; and, at the expiration or termination of this 'agreement, to pay the whole amount therefor then remaining unpaid; or the Purchaser may pay for such goods in cash, less the usual cash discount allowed for such payments; but such payments, or any of them, may be waived or extended by the Company without notice to the sureties herein, and without prejudice to the rights or interests of the Company.
“4. If the Purchaser shall not pay cash for said goods and other articles so sold and delivered to him, and the payments at the time and in the manner hereinbefore provided are insufficient to pay therefor, or if the Purchaser shall fail to pay on the indebtedness expressed herein, amounts satisfactory to the Company, from time to time during said term, the Company may, in its discretion, thereafter either limit the sales herein agreed to be made, or from time to time suspend the same, or require cash with each order, or cash upon delivery, until such indebtedness is, or such indebtednesses are, paid, or reduced, as the Company may require.
“9. It is also mutually agreed that this is the complete, entire and only agreement between the parties, and that it shall not be varied, changed, or modified in any respect except in writing executed by the .Purchaser and by an officer of the Company, and that either of the parties hereto may terminate this agreement at any time, if desired, by giving the other party notice thereof in writing by mail.
“10. The Purchaser promises to pay the Company, at Winona, Minnesota, from time to time, after thirty days from the date of acceptance of this agreement, in amounts satisfactory to the Company, the indebtedness he now owes the Company, and agrees, at the expiration or termination of this agreement, to pay any balance thereof then remaining unpaid, payment of which indebtedness is hereby so extended.
“11. The Purchaser and the Company, for the purpose of settling and determining the amount of the indebtedness now owing from the Purchaser to the Company, hereby mutually agree that the said indebtedness is the sum of Forty Six Hundred Ninety Eight and 80/100 .. .H-I-G.. .W-B... Dollars, which sum the Purchaser agrees to pay and the Company agrees to receive, and payment of which is extended as above provided.”

The contract of suretyship reads:

“In consideration of the execution of the foregoing' agreement by the J. R. Watkins Company, which we have read, or heard read, and fully understand and hereby agree and assent to, and its promise to sell, and the sale and delivery by it, to the Purchaser as vendee, of'goods and other articles, and the extension of the time of payment of the indebtedness owing by him to said Company, as therein provided,' we, the undersigned sureties, do hereby waive notice of the acceptance of this agreement, notice of default or of nonpayment and waive action required, upon notice, by any statute, against the Purchaser; and we jointly, severally and unconditionally promise, agree and guarantee to pay said indebtedness, the amount of which is now written in said agreement, or if not written therein, we hereby authorize the amount of said indebtedness to be written therein; and we jointly, severally and unconditionally promise to pay for said goods and other aritcles, and the prepaid transportation charges thereon, at the time and place, and in the manner in said agreement provided. And we further severally agree that, in case of the death of one or more of us, the undersigned sureties, before the expiration or termination of this agreement, his estate shall continue liable with the surviving surety or sureties for all shipments made to the Purchaser prior to receipt by the Company at Winona, Minnesota, of written notice by registered mail of such death.

Sureties Sign Here In Ink

Name Occupation Address
Mrs. Amanda Baker (Seal) Rooming House__
J. T. Fulton_(Seal) Farmer & Ranching
R. L. House_(Seal) Farmer_”

The plaintiff delivered merchandise to the defendant on credit from shortly after the date of the contract until March 3, 1946, when it refused further credit, and advised the defendant he would thereafter have to send cash with his orders. The defendant continued as such agent without credit until December 5, 1947, when the plaintiff cancelled the contract. During this period the sales of the defendant greatly decreased, and notwithstanding his efforts to get credit for merchandise for which he had large orders from responsible customers, it was denied by the plaintiff. The defendant did not have means or credit to procure the goods elsewhere.

Following the termination of the contract' the plaintiff brought suit against Eaker and his sureties for the balance due on the account of $2,956.87. Eaker admitted the correctness of the account but filed a cross-complaint against the plaintiff for loss of profits because of its breach of contract in, as he said, wrongfully denying him credit when the plaintiff knew he could not purchase like merchandise elsewhere because of his financial condition. The sureties pleaded they were relieved of liability because of the breach by the plaintiff of the contract in that it granted Eaker credit for only six months when the contract extended over a period of forty months, thus preventing Eaker making sufficient money to pay the account in full.

The plaintiff’s first claim of error is the denial of its motion for judgment on the pleadings, which was based principally on the admission of the correctness of the account, plus the execution of the contract by the defendant, and the contract of suretyship by the other defendants. It claimed its decision to withhold credit and cancel the contract at its pleasure could not be questioned by any defendant. For reasons which will be later stated, the motion was properly denied.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P.2d 540, 56 N.M. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-r-watkins-co-v-eaker-nm-1952.