Knowles Foundry & Machine Co. v. National Plate Glass Co.

21 N.E.2d 913, 301 Ill. App. 128, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 599
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 28, 1939
DocketGen. No. 38,426
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 21 N.E.2d 913 (Knowles Foundry & Machine Co. v. National Plate Glass Co.) 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
Knowles Foundry & Machine Co. v. National Plate Glass Co., 21 N.E.2d 913, 301 Ill. App. 128, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 599 (Ill. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice John J. Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal by defendant, the National Plate Glass Company, seeks to reverse a judgment for $40,314.60 rendered against it in favor of plaintiff, Knowles Foundry & Machine Company, in an action brought by the latter for damages claimed to have been suffered by reason of defendant’s alleged breach of contract. The verdict of the jury fixed plaintiff’s damages at $59,745.40. Because of an error in computation plaintiff voluntarily remitted $1,797.60 from the amount of damages assessed by the jury and in order to avoid the court’s allowance of a new trial to defendant consented to an additional remittitur of the sum of $17,632.80, thus reducing the amount of damages for which the judgment was entered to $40,314.60. Plaintiff filed a notice of cross appeal averring that the court erred in requiring it to file the remittitur reducing the judgment to $40,314.60 and praying that this court “will reverse, vacate and set aside the said judgment of the Superior court of Cook county and enter a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for such larger amount as the Appellate court shall be of opinion is justly due the plaintiff.”

This cause was before us on a prior appeal from an order of the trial court sustaining defendant’s general demurrer to plaintiff’s amended declaration as amended and in determining the question then presented, which was whether said declaration stated a prima facie cause of action, we were called upon to construe the contract declared upon in the light only of such surrounding facts and circumstances as were well-pleaded in the declaration, the material allegations of which were fully set forth in the opinion filed on said prior appeal. (Knowles Foundry & Machine Co. v. National Plate Glass Co., 274 Ill. App. 570.)

In holding on the former appeal that plaintiff’s declaration stated a cause of action, we said in Knowles Foundry & Machine Co. v. National Plate Glass Co., supra, at pp. 574, 583, 584:

“Plaintiff contends that, under the contract, defendant was required to take and pay for ‘three large and seven small Runner Bars or approximately 10,900 pounds a day’ for a period of two years.

“Defendant’s theory is that the contract entered into by the parties, and set forth in the amended declaration, is a pure requirement contract, and that, inasmuch as the amended declaration and the amendment thereto fail to show that defendant did not take all of its runner [bar] requirements from plaintiff, no breach of the contract is alleged.

“The question, therefore, is squarely presented as to whether under a proper construction the contract is determined to be for requirements only or for a specific quantity of runner bars daily for two years.

C C

“We are constrained to hold that plaintiff’s amended declaration, with the amendment thereto, stated a good cause of action on the contract without alleging that defendant had failed to take its ‘entire requirement’ of runner bars for the two years covered by the contract.” In an additional opinion filed in that appeal denying defendant’s petition for a rehearing, we said at p. 584:

“In a petition filed for rehearing in this cause it is suggested that the trial court should not be foreclosed from reaching a conclusion different from that reached by us as to the construction of the contract involved, if such conclusion is reasonably and logically justified by all of the evidence received upon the trial.

“Our conclusion is predicated upon the pleadings only, and we are not holding that, upon a trial, evidence may not be presented to show that another and different interpretation was given to the contract by the parties themselves. That question was not presented for our determination on this appeal. ’

Upon remandment of the cause the trial court overruled the demurrer to the declaration as directed and defendant filed a plea of the general issue, notice of special defenses and an affidavit of merits. Defendant’s affidavit of merits set forth in detail facts and circumstances surrounding and subsequent to the execution of the contract and alleged that the contract, viewed in the light of such surrounding facts and circumstances and in the further light of the interpretation placed upon it by the parties themselves, admitted of no reasonable construction other than that it covered defendant’s requirements only. The affidavit of merits then averred that after defendant had sold its Ottawa plant to the Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company, plaintiff entered into a contract with the latter company effective as of July 1, 1931, to supply its “requirements of runner bars” for one year, which contract expressly canceled and superseded the “old contract” between plaintiff and defendant. It was further averred:

‘ ‘ That throughout the expressed term of the contract no one, on behalf of the plaintiff corporation, ever requested the defendant corporation to take up any deficiency in runner bars; no one ever called upon or requested of the defendant corporation a decision as to whether it would ever take up the alleged deficiency, nor, during the period beginning July 21, 1929, and ending in July, 1932, did anyone representing the plaintiff corporation claim that any deficiency existed; that no tender was ever made, on the part of the plaintiff of the bars making up the said alleged deficiency; that no representative of the plaintiff corporation ever applied to a representative of the defendant corporation and stated that the said plaintiff corporation was then and there ready, willing and able to fabricate the said runner bars and tender the same to the defendant corporration.

‘1 That the defendant corporation has taken and paid for its entire requirement of runner bars from the plaintiff corporation, and defendant took no runner bars from any other source.”

Defendant’s theory as stated in its brief is as follows :

“(a) The proper construction of the contract sued upon is to be made by the court, in the light of all of the surrounding circumstances, aided by proof of acts of the parties thereunder. That when thus viewed the contract merely required the defendant to purchase from the plaintiff all of its requirements of runner bars, and it is admitted that the defendant did so purchase all of its requirements of runner bars from the plaintiff. It is admitted that the defendant did give all its business to the plaintiff and did not breach its contract in any particular, except in so far as the breach arises out of the differing viewpoints of construction.

“(b) A further and additional defense, assuming that the construction of the contract contended for by the plaintiff is the proper construction, is, that the declaration does not aver, (a) either a compliance with the conditions precedent in law on its part, to the defendant’s liability, or (b) a valid excuse for such noncompliance, and that therefore there is no cause of action stated. Nor does the evidence disclose any such compliance.

“(c) That in any event, and as of July 1, 1931, the defendant sold its Ottawa properties to Libbey-OwensFord Glass Company of Toledo, Ohio; that the prospect of said sale was known to the president of the plaintiff corporation, Mr. F. S.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E.2d 913, 301 Ill. App. 128, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knowles-foundry-machine-co-v-national-plate-glass-co-illappct-1939.