Kansas City Pants & Skirt Co. v. Cohlmia

1929 OK 329, 280 P. 611, 138 Okla. 151, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 510
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 17, 1929
Docket19164
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1929 OK 329 (Kansas City Pants & Skirt Co. v. Cohlmia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Pants & Skirt Co. v. Cohlmia, 1929 OK 329, 280 P. 611, 138 Okla. 151, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 510 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

TEEHEE, C.

Plaintiff in error, Kansas City Pants & Skirt Company, referred to as plaintiff, sued defendant in error, Frank Cohlmia, referred to as defendant, to recover the sum of $830.85, as a balance due plaintiff for merchandise sold to defendant between the dates of August 9, 1923, and February 14, 1924, at AVaynoka. The original account was for $1,682.40, whereon defendant, on various dates from December 17, 1923, to January 21, 1924, had paid a total sum of $851.55. A verified statement of the account was attached to the petition.

By his answer defendant denied the account, and further defended against the suit with a plea of a breach of contract by plaintiff, wherein he alleged, in substance, that on or about August 1, 1923, plaintiff’s agent represented to him that plaintiff was the manufacturer of a special and exclusive line of ladies’ coats and dresses, and desired to place said line in Waynoka where defendant conducted a store, and that if defendant would purchase said merchandise, defendant should have the exclusive market therefor in said place of business; that, acting upon said representations, he agreed to handle plaintiff’s merchandise, and thereby was induced from time to time to make purchases from plaintiff until he discovered that plaintiff had breached its agreement with him, in that it had sold to another merchant in Waynoka the same line of coats and dresses, whereupon he notified plaintiff of such breach, and that plaintiff thereupon advised him that its agent would call and make full explanation of the transaction thus complained of; that without such representations and agreement for an exclusive market he would not have purchased such merchandise from plaintiff; that upon plaintiff’s advising him that its agent would call and fully explain in the premises of his complaint, and soon thereafter, he returned to plaintiff the merchandise on hand which at the invoice price thereof was in the value of $464.50, leaving a balance of the account sued on in the sum of $366.35, which he tendered and offered ten said plaintiff and by it refused, which return of goods and tender and offer of payment discharged his liability under his agreement with plaintiff, and which sum he tendered into court for the use and benefit of said plaintiff. Upon trial there was a jury verdigt and judgment thereon for plaintiff in the amount of the cash tender maae by defendant.

Of the judgment plaintiff complains on the grounds that the court gave an erroneous instruction to the jury, and that the court failed “to instruct on the limitations upon the right to rescind, and the affirmative duty of the rescinding party to acc promptly, and to restore whatever has been received by virtue of the contract,” which grouncTs may properly be considered together.

At the threshold we are met with defendant’s contentions that, in the state of the record, the questions submitted by plaintiff for a reversal of the judgment cannot be considered by this court for the reason that certain requisites for the presentation thereof have not been complied with. In the view that we shall take of the merits of the cause, we deem it to be unnecessary to determine the points thus urged by defendant, which, in effect, are the equivalent of a motion to dismiss the appeal. We, therefore, pass to the merits of the cause.

The instruction complained of is No. h, and is as follows:

“If you believe from the evidence, facts and circumstances that on or about the 1st day of August, 1923, the said plaintiff, through its traveling salesman, approached the defendant and represented and stated to him that the plaintiff was a manufacturer of ladies dresses and coats of a particular and exclusive line; that the plaintiff desired to place the said line of dresses and coats in Waynoka, Okla.; and desired to have the said defendant carry said line of goods; that if the defendant would purchase said line of dresses and coats, the plaintiff would not sell the said line of dresses and coats to any other merchant in the town of Waynoka, so long as the defendant would purchase the said line of goods from the said plaintiff; that the said defendant, believing the said representa *153 tions and statements, and especially the one to the effect that so long as the defendant purchased the said line of goods from the plaintiff, the said plaintiff would not sell the said line of dresses and coats to any other merchant in the town of Waynoka, and relying thereon was induced to and did purchase from time to time the said line of goods from the said plaintiff; that if the representations, and especially the one to the effect that so long as the defendant purchased the said line of goods, wares and merchandise from the said plaintiff, the said plaintiff would not sell the said line to any other merchant in the town of Way-noka, had not been made, the said defendant would not have purchased from the said plaintiff any of the said goods, wares and merchandise; that the said plaintiff, in violation of the said representations, statements and agreement, sold the line of dresses and coats to another merchant in the town of Waynoka, while the said defendant was still purchasing the said line of goods and dresses from the said plaintiff; that upon discovering the violation of the said agreement, the said defendant returned to the said plaintiff all of the said line of dresses and coats he had on hand remaining unsold, which he had formerly purchased from the plaintiff, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff for the difference between the amount and value of the goods and merchandise so returned and the amount of the account unpaid before the return of such goods.
“If you believe from the evidence, facts and circumstances that the plaintiff did not represent and state to the defendant that it was a manufacturer of ladies' dresses and coats of a particular and exclusive line, and that if the defendant would handle the said line he would be the merchant in Waynoka who would have the said line exclusively, then it follows that the defendant wouic have no right to return any of the goods unsold by him, and that plaintiff would bo entitled to recover the whole amount sueu for.”

Plaintiff contends that the instruction is materially erroneous, in that it does not express the correct rule of law applicable to this class of cases, and further that it did not advise the jury of the conditions and limitations upon the right ■ of rescission as fixed by sections 5077-79, C. O. S. 1921, there being no other instruction relating to the right of rescission.

Of the several cases relied on in plaintiff’s argument hereunder, Springfield Seed Co. v. Walt, 94 Mo. App. 76, 67 S. W. 938; Tufts v. Weinfield, 88 Wis. 647, 60 N. W. 992; and Tichnor Bros. v. Evans, 92 Vt. 278, 102 Atl. 1081, L. R. A. 1918C, 1025, in point of fact have a direct bearing upon the points thus urged.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fine v. H. & H. Pioneer Savings Stamp Co.
1942 OK 404 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)
G. A. Nichols, Inc. v. Hainey
1942 OK 31 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 329, 280 P. 611, 138 Okla. 151, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-pants-skirt-co-v-cohlmia-okla-1929.