Quarton v. American Law Book Co.

121 N.W. 1009, 143 Iowa 517
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 2, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 121 N.W. 1009 (Quarton v. American Law Book 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
Quarton v. American Law Book Co., 121 N.W. 1009, 143 Iowa 517 (iowa 1909).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

On or about March 17, 1901, one George E. .Clarke entered into a written contract with the defendant, a law publishing house, which contract reads as follows: “The American Law Book Company, 120 Broadway, New York. Algona, Iowa, 3 — 17—1901. Please send me O. O. D., carriage paid, as published, the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure, in (law sheep) binding, for which I agree to pay you $6.00 per volume upon delivery. The publishers guaranty to complete said work in not to exceed thirty-two Poyal Octavo volumes, or to furnish free of charge any volumes in excess of that number necessary to complete the same. The publishers further agree to publish annual annotations to said work, which' will keep the same up with the current decisions of the courts of last resort, and to furnish the said annotations to subscribers at the annual rate of twenty cents for each published volume of the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure, and subscriber agrees to take said annotations at said price. All representations by agents, to be binding, must be written on the face of the contract. Subscribers may have either binding mentioned above. Erase the one not desired. [Signed] Geo. E. Clarke, Agent J. A. Yeager.” Shortly thereafter the first volume of the work was published, and, pursuant to order, delivered to the purchaser, who paid for the same upon delivery. In the same year another volume was issued and delivered to Clarke, and in the year 1902 volumes three and four were issued and delivered. Pay[520]*520ments were not made for theáe last three volumes, and defendant about July 18, 1902, wrote Clarke asking him to remit therefor, and advising him that from four to six volumes would be published each year. Hearing nothing from Clarke, defendant again wrote him about February 11, 1903, saying that if he could not pay for volume 2 they would accept his note for thirty days for the amount, and they inclosed note for him to sign. No response was received to this, and again on March 16, 1903, defendant wrote, saying that Mr. Clarke was owing $18 for volumes 2, 3 and 4, calling his attention to some promises he had made their representative, stating that they had paid a large advance commission on his order, and had themselves to that date received nothing. Receiving no response to this or to former letters, defendant on November 11, 1904, again wrote Clarke, stating that as they had had no responses to their former letters, and as he had failed to meet his payments as provided in his contract, they from that date considered his contract null and void. .On the same day they wrote upon the face of the contract in red ink, “Canceled November 11, 1904,” and made the same notation upon their subscription registers after Clarke’s name. Nothing was ever heard from Clarke in response to any of these demands, notifications, or requests.

In the later part of the year 1904, defendant enlarged the number of volumes which it proposed to issue from thirty-two to thirty-six and in January of the year 1906 again raised the number from thirty-six to forty and advanced the price from $6 to $6.50 per volume, and on June 1, 1907, it increased the price from $6.50 to $7 per volume. About January 1, 1907, Clarke orally assigned his contract to the plaintiff herein. Some time in December of the year 1906, defendant placed its claim for the $18 against Clarke in the hands of a mercantile agency for collection, and a local attorney for said agency at Algona, Iowa, presented the same to Clarke. We now quote from [521]*521the agreed statement of facts upon which the case was tried, as follows:

That said Swetting [the local attorney] made demand upon Geo. E. Clarke for the payment of said $18 on account of volumes two, three and four of Cyc., and on or' about January 5, 1907, the plaintiff herein paid said bill to E. V. Swetting, and took a receipt therefor, showing the payment by Geo. E. Clarke of volumes two, three and four of Cyc., and the plaintiff herein, at the time of paying the $18 to the said E. V. Swetting, demanded of the said E. V. Swetting that he furnish the balance of the volumes of the Cyc. then published, and offered to pay therefor in cash under the terms pf the Clarke contract. That the said E. V. Swetting conveyed said request and demand to Wilber Mercantile Agency, and said Wilber Mercantile Agency conveyed said demand and request to the defendant herein, and the defendant refused to furnish any additional volumes to the plaintiff herein, or to Geo. E. Clarke under said contract with the said Geo. E. Clarke entered into in 1901. That on January 5, 1907, W. B. Quarton, for himself and Geo. E. Clarke, paid to E. V. Swetting for and on behalf of the defendant $18 for volumes two, three and four of said Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure.

Defendant at all times refused to deal with plaintiff as an assignee of the contract, claiming that it had been canceled and annulled, and that in no event was it assignable by Clarke to any other person. This action was commenced December 5, 1907, and upon trial plaintiff was granted the relief prayed. Eor a reversal appellant contends: That the contract was not assignable; that it was cancelled and forfeited before the attempted assignment was made; that Clarke, the assignor, by reason of his conduct after notification from defendants of the cancellation of the contract, is barred and estopped from enforcing the said contract; and that plaintiff is not entitled to damages for defendant’s failure to deliver subsequent volumes.

[522]*5221. contracts specific formancev by assignee. [521]*521Upon some of these propositions there is a decided [522]*522conflict in the authorities. We shall assume that under our statute (Code, section 3044) the contract in suit was assignable; but the assignee of such contract has 110 greater rights under the assignment' than his assignor would have had, had he brought the action in his own name and right. Steele v. Mills, 68 Iowa, 406; Miller v. Hansen, 104 Iowa, 307.

2. Sales contracts : delivery by instalment:breach by buyer: cancellation by seller. What, then, would have been the situation of Clarke had he attempted to enforce the contract in view of the facts above recited? Plaintiff claims: That the contract was never forfeited; that it could not have been forfeited, although Clarke had failed, neglected, and refused to pay for the books a*reacv delivered to him; that, m receiving pay for the books already delivered, the contract was restored; and that, .after such restoration, Clarke might have enforced the same by a suit either at law or in equity. The exact point here is that, where there is a contract- for the saló of goods to be delivered in installments which are to be separately paid, and the buyer neglects or refuses to pay for one or more installments, there is no ■such renunciation or repudiation of the whole contract as justifies the seller in canceling or avoiding it. Upon this proposition the English decisions are in conflict, and the courts of our own country are not agreed. See: Withers v. Reynolds, 2 Barn. & Aid. 882; Hoare v. Rennie, 5 Hurl. & N. 19; Honck v. Muller, 7 Q. B. Div. 92. Contra: Jonassohn v. Young, 4 Best. & S. 296; Simpson v. Crippin, 8 Q. B. (L. R.) 14. Also: Norrington v. Wright, 115 U. S. 188 (6 Sup. Ct. 12, 29 L. Ed. 366); Pope v. Porter, 102 N. Y. 366 (7 N. E. 304); King v. Slater, 12 R. I. 82 (34 Am. Rep. 603); Rugg v.

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121 N.W. 1009, 143 Iowa 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quarton-v-american-law-book-co-iowa-1909.