Laclede Power Co. v. Stillwell

71 S.W. 380, 97 Mo. App. 258, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 226
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 380 (Laclede Power Co. v. Stillwell) 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
Laclede Power Co. v. Stillwell, 71 S.W. 380, 97 Mo. App. 258, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 226 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

— On August 19, 1898, the Zenas Varney Carriage Company, a corporation, made the following contract with the appellant corporation, to-wit:

“St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 19,1898.
“To the Laclede Power Co. of St. Louis,

Room 808 Bank of Commerce Building:

“Ton are hereby ordered to connect your underground electric power service to building No. 2017 Morgan street, ready for connection to inside wiring, for which,we agree to pay you a service charge of $--; and it is agreed to take from you a capacity of seven and one-half electric horsepower. Should a greater, power capacity be taken from your lines at any time, an additional price will be paid therefor as hereinafter provided.
“It is agreed to take from you our entire require[260]*260ments for power supply for the term or terms of five years and under the conditions hereinafter specified.
“Regular bills will be rendered on the first day of each month and are payable at the company’s office on or before the fifth day of same month. Bills remaining unpaid after the fifth inst., are subject to an addition of five per cent, and in the event all bills due the company from the applicant or applicants hereto' are not paid by the fifteenth inst., the supply of power may be shut off by the company until the bills are paid, without thereby vitiating this contract.
“Authorized agents of the company shall have access to the premises at all reasonable times for the purpose of examining motors, meters and wires, or for the purpose of disconnecting the wires for non-payment of bills when due, or for the removal of its property.
“This contract shall be in force from and after date, and shall continue for periods of five years until either party shall at the expiration of any period of five-years give written notice of its desire to discontinue this arrangement. The electric current furnished is to be used for power purposes only, and is to be charged for at said company’s prevailing rates.
“This contract does not contemplate the supply of power for lighting, and the power supplied under this contract shall not be used for such purposes without the written consent of the company.
“Minimum charges per month under this contract are at the rate of two dollars net per horsepower, and are based upon the maximum power capacity .required or used at any time, but in no case shall the total payments during each year of the period or periods of this, contract be less than $180, excepting that a proportionate allowance shall be made for such time as may elapse between date hereof and the date of first service connection to building or tender of service connection.
“Meters are to be furnished at the option of the consumer or the company, in which case a deposit will be made by the undersigned with the company to- cover their cost.
[261]*261“If at any time the Laclede Power Company shall be compelled, by act of God, by governmental authority, national, state or municipal, or by other cause, to discontinue, in whole or in part, the operation of its lines for the supply of power, then it shall not be liable for any failure to supply power thereby incurred; but in all eases the said company shall use its best efforts to resume the operation of its lines.
“Rate $15 net per month to cover use of power to operate freight elevator not more than fifty-two hours per month.
“J. Varney Carriage Co.,
“Fred Dopp, Prest.
“Accepted for the Laclede Power Company of St. Louis.
“By William Fay.”

Pursuant to the contract, appellant furnished to the carriage company electric power in varying amounts until January 7, 1899, for which.the carriage company made monthly payments. On January 27, 1899, the carriage company made a voluntary assignment of its effects to respondent, R. T. Stillwell, for the benefit of its creditors. Stillwell qualified and took possession of the assets of the assignor.

After the assignment the carriage company failed to take or pay for any of the electric power of appellant.

On April 15, 1899, the appellant presented to the assignee a claim for $795 damages on account of the alleged breach by the carriage company on its contract with appellant for electric power and asked that it be allowed against the estate. The assignee rejected the claim and appellant appealed to the circuit court where, on a hearing anew, the appellant was forced to take a nonsuit. A motion to set aside the nonsuit and for new trial proving of no avail, the cause was appealed to this court.

The petition for the allowance of the claim presented to the assignee alleged, as a breach of the con[262]*262tract, that appellant “had at all times been, and now is, ready, willing and able to continue to furnish power to the carriage company; that the assignee has refused to take the power according to the terms of the contract and that the carriage company is insolvent and has transferred its property to the assignee for the benefit of creditors.”

The questions presented for solution by the record are, first, whether the carriage company bound itself to take the power during the life of the contract, or was it only bound to take the power when and at such times during the contract period as it might require; second, if the carriage company was bound to take the power during the entire period of five years, are the damages due to the breach of the contract by the carriage company making its assignment for the benefit of its creditors, provable against the assigned estate? On the strength of the following paragraph of the contract, to-wit: “It is agreed to take from you our entire requirements for power supply for the term or terms of years and under the conditions hereinafter specified,” it is contended by respondent, and was SO' ruled by the circuit court, that the carriage company was at liberty to take or refuse to take electric power from appellant at any time, provided it did not take electric power or other power from some other concern. If this paragraph stood alone and did not refer to other conditions of the contract, and if it was in no way controlled by other provisions of the contract, and if the situation of the parties was such as to lend countenance to a literal interpretation of it, then we think the contract might fairly be construed to bind the carriage company to take the power at such time as it might require and that’ it was at liberty at any time during the life of the contract to discontinue the taking of the power if it did not require the use of it. But the further conditions to which the paragraph is made subject are such as to' refute the argument that the carriage company was only bound to take power when and as it required.

[263]*263The further conditions of the contract, and to which reference is made and to which the paragraph is subject, provide that the contract shall continue for periods of five years until either party shall, at the expiration of any period of five years, give written notice of its desire to discontinue the arrangement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 380, 97 Mo. App. 258, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laclede-power-co-v-stillwell-moctapp-1902.