Kraft v. Jefferson

150 Ill. App. 110, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 556
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 28, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,568
StatusPublished

This text of 150 Ill. App. 110 (Kraft v. Jefferson) 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
Kraft v. Jefferson, 150 Ill. App. 110, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 556 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of the first class under section 28 of the Municipal Court Act, brought in the Municipal Court by appellee against appellant, to recover, with interest, the balance of an account claimed to be due from appellant to appellee. Appellee filed a declaration consisting of the common counts and a statement of account, showing a balance due of $1,857.52. To this declaration appellant interposed. a plea of the general issue, and upon these pleadings the cause proceeded to trial before the court with a jury, resulting in a verdict for $1,950.39, upon which the court, after overruling motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, entered judgment, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

The amount of the judgment is not in dispute. The trial judge instructed the jury orally, and in so doing said, among other things: “In this case the plaintiff claims that the defendant owes him something like $1,900 for printing done. On the other hand, the defendant does not dispute the amount of the account.” After the court had concluded his instructions to the jury, counsel for appellant, in requesting the court, to give additional instructions tendered in writing, said: “I have no objections at all to the instructions given.” *' * * An examination of appellant’s evidence brings our minds in accord with that of the trial judge, and we think the assent of appellant is clearly inferable from the remark of his counsel, last quoted, and that by such action of acquiescence he is now precluded from disputing the amount of the judgment.

Appellant’s defense rested in a repudiation of any liability to appellee because, as he contended, the contract and the service rendered thereunder was made with and performed for Winchester & Hall, a corporation, or for himself and one J. B. Taylor, as partners. The facts attendant upon the relations of the parties are, in substance, that appellant was engaged in Chicago, Buffalo and elsewhere, in furnishing theater programs to various theaters in those cities, the advertising on which he controlled, which advertising was the source of his profit. Appellee was a printer in Buffalo. Such was the business of the parties in July, 1902, and so continued during all the time of their dealings involved in this controversy. Some of appellant’s business was, during this time, conducted in the names of Winchester & Hall, a corporation, and J. B. Taylor & Co. There is little reason to doubt that appellant was practically Winchester & Hall, and used the corporation name for his own convenience, and that all the business transacted in the corporation name was in fact the business of appellant, and that J. B. Taylor & Co. was J. B. Taylor, the Buffalo representative of appellant. The dealings of the parties were established and continued in virtue of the following letter written by appellee, in Buffalo, to appellant at the latter’s dictation, viz:’

“July 2nd, 1902.
Balph Jefferson, Esq.,
Genessee Hotel, Buffalo, New York.
Dear Sir: I wish to make you the following proposition on printing any or all of the theatre, programmes which you control in the city of Buffalo.
It is understood that you furnish the paper for the covers and also for the insides of such programmes. The work to be done will be charged according to the following scale of figures:
First composition not to exceed $1.25 per page.
Setting of the cast of characters, synopsis and other matter furnished by theater manager and which changes at each attraction, to be charged at $2.00 for one change per week, but a second change in the same week $1.50.
Time work in changing advertisements 50 cents per hour.
Press work to be charged as follows:
Four page form 75 cents per M.; Eight page form $1.00 per M.; Twelve page form $1.00 per M.; Sixteen page form $1.50 per M.; Twenty-four page form $1.50 per M.
Programmes to be folded, inserted in covers, wire stitched and trimmed for 50 cents per M. programme.
Should gallery slips be used, I will furnish same at 50 cents per M., including paper.
I agree to do this work in satisfactory manner "and deliver programmes to the various theatres in ample time and in manner satisfactory to the various theatre managers with whom you have.
Yours very truly.”

From that time forward, as the numerous letters in evidence conclusively establish, all the printing of theatre programs by appellee was done for appellant, and all the accounts rendered for the same were made through the Buffalo office to appellant. Payment of many of these accounts was made by appellant to appellee. Appellant, during all the time covered by the dealings in controversy, maintained a business office in Buffalo. When Winchester quit, Taylor was installed in his place. That Winchester represented appellant seems indisputable from appellant’s action in writing appellee that “I am going to send a man named Taylor to take charge of my business.” This was when Winchester quit. On December 20, 1905, appellant wrote a letter to Taylor, introducing Hugh Mottschall as his private secretary, in which letter he wrote that Mottschall had “charge of all the correspondence and reports from the other cities,” and requesting Taylor to let Mottschall go over the books, wherefrom he could make a report of the condition of the Buffalo business. Thereafter, when appellant did not sign his letters to appellee, they were signed by Mottschall for him. There is an abundance of evidence in this record sustaining the finding of the jury that appellant was indebted to appellee in the amount of his claim, and that the amounts covered by the account in suit arose out of dealings between them in accord with the terms of the letter of July 2, 1902. Even were the evidence in sharp conflict upon this point, we would not be warranted in disturbing the conclusion reached by the jury and concurred in by the trial judge, unless we were convinced that such finding was manifestly contrary to the weight of the evidence. The evidence fails to so convince us. Threshing Machine Co. v. Stein, 133 Ill. App. 169; C., C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Johnson, 99 ibid. 400.

The contention that appellant and Taylor were partners, was one of fact for the jury, and with their solution we see no just reason for onr dissent or interference. Pardridge v. Ryan, 14 ibid. 598.

Whether the books proffered and received in evidence were admissible, is of no consequence, as the amount of the indebtedness found due by the verdict is not controverted.

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Related

Morton v. Pusey
86 N.E. 601 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Stein
133 Ill. App. 169 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
150 Ill. App. 110, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraft-v-jefferson-illappct-1909.