Lannom Manufacturing Co. v. Strauss Co.

15 N.W.2d 899, 235 Iowa 97, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 17, 1944
DocketNo. 46495.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 899 (Lannom Manufacturing Co. v. Strauss Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lannom Manufacturing Co. v. Strauss Co., 15 N.W.2d 899, 235 Iowa 97, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 472 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Miller, J.-

Plaintiff’s petition, filed January 5, 1940, asserted that on or about July 28, 1939, plaintiff sold and delivered to defendant 117 pairs of shoes at a price of $2 per pair and demanded judgment for $234, with interest and costs. The answer was a general denial. Trial was had to the court without a jury. The court found that there had been a breach of contract, but that plaintiff’s remedy was for damages, not for *98 the contract price; that there was no basis in the pleadings or the evidence for a judgment for damages because plaintiff made no attempt to plead or prove specifically what damages it suffered. Accordingly, the court dismissed the action. Plaintiff secured the necessary certificate from the' trial court and appealed to this court, asserting that, under the evidence, it was entitled to .judgment for the contract price.

The evidence showed that plaintiff is the assignee of the Hildebrand Shoe Company and stands in its stead. We will treat them as though but one entity were involved herein. On May 22, 1939, defendant placed a written order with plaintiff for 131 pairs of shoes at $2 per pair to be delivered August 1, 1939, with payment of the contract price due sixty days later. Plaintiff’s letter of acceptance, dated May 24, 1939, incorporated a form letter which contained a stipulation that it would not be possible to consider cancellations after shoes have been cut. On June 10, 1939, all of the shoes ordered by defendant had been cut except Stock No. 1414 (14 pairs). On that day defendant advised plaintiff to cancel the entire order. Six days later defendant advised plaintiff to reinstate the entire order. On July 24, 1939, plaintiff received a letter from defendant again canceling the entire order, to which plaintiff replied by letter dated July 26, 1939, as follows:

“In accordance with our. previous correspondence, we proceeded with the balance of your order for fall shoes. We now find that all styles except No. 1414 have been cut, and of course we are unable to cancel that portion of your order. We are, however, cancelling No. 1414 and will make delivery of the balance as soon as the shoes are ready.”

On July 28, 1939, the shoes were shipped to defendant, reaching defendant’s place of business on August 2, 1939. Defendant refused to accept delivery. The only reason given was that the order had been canceled. The' carrier notified plaintiff of the refusal of defendant to accept delivery. Plaintiff refused to have anything to do with the merchandise. The shipment was held in storage by the carrier and at the time of trial storage charges of about $84 had accumulated.

*99 G. S. Lannom, general manager for plaintiff, testified, in part, as follows:

“The shoes were to be made for the Strauss Company on that order.' They were made on. that order and they were shipped out according to that order. * * * The account of two hundred thirty-four dollars, as above described, is an indebtedness of the Strauss Company. Said account is now the property of the Lannom Manufacturing Company and has not been paid. * * * We carried no stock at that time. The shoes in connection with this account were made up specially for the Strauss Company on their order. * * * These shoes were not what is known as standard shoes. We make up a line of samples which we offer to the trade. They could make any changes; in fact, build their own shoes. The shoes represented in this order were not shoes that were carried by us as standards. We had no stock and no standard shoes. * * * Q. Are there any peculiar sizes in that order? A. Yes, narrow width; extreme in sizes. Large and small size extremes. Q. It is an average order for that many shoes, isn’t it? A. Yes. * lS * The shoes in controversy were shipped to Crestón on July 28th, 1939. Prior to the time they were shipped, we received a letter cancelling that order. * * * Q. On July 24th the rest of those shoes weren’t completely ready for shipment, were they? A. A good portion of them were. Q. Do you know of your own recollection what portion was ready for shipment? A. It takes approximately two weeks from the time shoes are started in production to be packed. We made complete shipment of the order on July 28th, four days after the cancellation notice was received, so a good many of them must have been completed. * * * By the term ‘put in process’ we mean that as soon as we cut a piece of leather, the skin, with a die, it is in process. We can’t withdraw it after that without a loss. Then the operation of making the shoe proceeds and it is put in process until it is completed. The shoes that we made up in connection with the claim here were made up according to the way they were ordered. They were merchantable goods. * * * By ‘merchantable goods’ we mean salable generally, and the goods shipped out July 28th, 1939, were a shipment of goods that were salable to the general public as of that time.”

*100 Mr. Lannom further testified that the extra-narrow widths in plaintiff’s order could not be readily sold at wholesale and that plaintiff did no retail business. He stated:

. “ It is customary in the shoe, business,- instead of trying to do the thing you are talking about, to put these styles on a close-out list and go to a merchant and say, ‘I have a certain number of pairs of shoes. Here are the size runs. As an inducement to buy the size run as is shown on this list we will make a reduction in price.’ * * * we make the reduction in price because he has to take the sizes you offer. He hasn’t a free selection of sizes and widths.”

He also testified that no attempt was made to dispose of defendant’s order in any such fashion; that it was questionable what their loss would have been; defendant ordered 12 pairs of AAAA last, which plaintiff no longer handles.

Paul Brink, office manager for plaintiff, testified that, at the time of trial, the shoes shipped defendant- would probably be. worth more than the contract price, that he was not in a position to say what they were worth and that could only be determined by offering them for sale as an odd-lot stock of shoes; that plaintiff had not entertained any thought of doing that and would not take them back under any circumstances; as far as plaintiff was concerned, the shoes belonged to defendant; they were made specially for defendant and were a type of shoe that plaintiff never had in stock; they were always made up on the order of a customer.

The trial court inferentially determined that the contract was not subject to cancellation and that there was a breach thereof by defendant. The . decisive question was the proper measure of damages. Plaintiff insisted that it was entitled to the contract price. Defendant insisted that the only remedy available was an action for damagés. The trial court agreed with defendant’s theory, and, since plaintiff had not asked for damages and had made no effort to-introduce any evidence which would support a judgment for damages, the action was dismissed at plaintiff’s costs. While several assignments of error are presented to us, the vital issue still remains: Is plaintiff entitled to recover the contract price herein?

*101 I.

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15 N.W.2d 899, 235 Iowa 97, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lannom-manufacturing-co-v-strauss-co-iowa-1944.