Rankin v. Sharples

69 N.E. 9, 206 Ill. 301
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 N.E. 9 (Rankin v. Sharples) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rankin v. Sharples, 69 N.E. 9, 206 Ill. 301 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

Appellant, in his brief in this court, in speaking of the opinion of the Appellate Court as to the amount found to be due from appellant, says: “We have never made any point in that court or the trial court as to the amounts in the hands of Davis & Rankin or the amount of the recovery. The question is, can there be any recovery; and secondly, was the case properly tried; that is, was it fairly presented to the jury under the rulings and instructions of the trial judge?”

The Appellate Court, in considering the case, said, in part:

“An examination of the contract shows that this fifteen per cent was retained by Davis & Rankin to indemnify them against any loss, expenses or damages that might come to them (1) ‘in defending any suit brought against Davis & Rankin because of their purchasing or selling said separators;’ (2) and also to protect and indemnify them against any loss, expenses or damages that may be caused them ‘by reason of any guaranty given by said Davis & Rankin to any person or persons * * * to indemnify said persons from damages recovered * * * in any fully litigated case * * * instituted against said persons on account'of their using said separators purchased of said Davis & Rankin.’ Said contract further provides, ‘that Davis & Rankin shall give immediate notice to said Philip M. Sharpies of any and all suits instituted against Davis & Rankin on account of their purchasing or selling said separators, and also shall give immediate notice of any and all suits instituted against any person or persons on account of said person or persons using said separators which were sold to said person or persons by said Davis & Rankin.’ It is further stipulated therein ‘that said Davis & Rankin, at the expiration of one year after all litigation has been Anally settled which in any way affects the right of said Davis & Rankin to purchase or sell said separators, or in any way affects the rights of any person or persons in using any of said separators which said person or persons have purchased of said Davis & Rankin, they shall ■pay over to said Philip M. Sharpies said Afteen per cent of said list price retained by them, with interest, for the purposes herein set forth. ’ Then follows a proviso that such payment need not be made' unless Sharpies shall Arst make good to Davis & Rankin" all loss, expense and damage, if any, which they have suffered by reason of any such suits instituted against them or on account of any such suits brought against persons to whom Davis & Rankin have sold said separators.

“There is apparently no dispute but that Davis & Rankin purchased twenty-six separators from appellee prior to 1891 and retained in their hands Afteen per cent of the list price thereof. The bill of particulars filed with the declaration sets forth the sale of twenty-four Sharpies separators from appellee to Davis & Rankin in the years 1889 and 1890 for the sum of $9625, fifteen per cent of which amounts to $1443.75,—the .principal sum claimed in this action. * * *

“When appellant was on the stand he was asked as to certain licenses, and the number of them, tendered to him by appellee. He answered: ‘Later he brought in some,. I would say eight or nine documents, that purported—or there might have been twenty-six of them, so far as I know now,—showing and purporting to be an individual license for each machine we had purchased. ’

“Interest for the term of one year upon the sum claimed herein was paid by appellant, and credit was given therefor by appellee. The jury were therefore fully justified in finding that Davis & Rankin, at the time this suit was begun, had in their hands $1443.75 of the money of appellant, and that upon this sum interest was due from April 3, 1891.

“The court instructed the jury upon the assumption that the number of Sharpies separators sold to Davis & Rankin was twenty-six. The foregoing evidence tends to support the instruction in that particular, and it is beyond question that the number of separators so sold, and from the price of which Davis & Rankin had retained fifteen per cent, was at least twenty-four. Upon the assumption that the instruction should have stated the number of such separators at twenty-four instead of at twenty-six, that error did no harm, as the damages found by the jury were confined to fifteen per cent upon the selling price of twenty-four separators.

“The question remaining is, was this sum of $1443.75 due and owing at the time suit was brought?

“The .evidence shows no notice given to appellee by Davis & Rankin, at any time, of any suit or suits brought against them or against any person to whom they had sold a separator. It was the duty, under the contract, of Davis & Rankin to ‘give immediate notice’ to appellee of such suit or suits. Without the giving of such notice Davis & Rankin would have no right to be protected from or to be indemnified for any loss, expenses or damages that might be caused to them by the bringing or the prosecution of such suit or suits. In the absence of the notice thus required the jury were justified in the finding, which is inherent in their verdict, that no suit or suits, of which notice should have been given, were ever instituted. Again, this record does not show that Davis & Rankin ever gave ‘any guaranty’ to any person to whom they sold a Sharpies separator. If they sold a separator to anyone without giving to the purchaser their guaranty to indemnify him ‘from damages recovered * * * in any fully litigated case * * * instituted’ against him on account of his using such separator, appellee is not concerned therein. The beginning or the existence of such a suit would not bar recovery in this action.

“Appellant, to show that this suit was prematurely brought, interposes the records, or partial records, in seven suits concerning separators. But none of these suits were against Davis & Rankin or against any person to whom they had sold a separator, hence such litigation did not affect ‘the right of Davis. & Rankin to purchase and sell said separators,’ nor did it affect ‘the right of any person or persons in using said separators’ purchased from Davis & Rankin.

“There were but two patents which are said to be infringed upon by appellee involved in these suits. They are Ño. 293,314, granted February 12, 1884, owned by the Aktiebolaget Separator Company, of which the DeLaval Separator Company was the sole licensee. December 24, 1891, such owner and sole licensee of the one part, and appellee of the other part, entered into an agreement, whereby appellee and his vendees were released from all liability, whether for past or future infringement under said patent. As to the Thompson-Houston patent No. 239,659, owned by Serena Berger, and of which the Philadelphia Creamery Supply Company was the sole licensee, the latter company, on December 31, 1892,"on the request of appellee, released Davis & Rankin ‘from all liability of every kind whatsoever, ’ by reason of the ‘sale, use or ownership of twenty-six’ separators sold by appellee to them prior to March 24, 1890. ■ This release was offered to appellant not later than the year 1892. When offered to him, the appellant refused to accept it, either in its then form, or when, shortly afterwards, it was presented to him in the shape of individual licenses covering each machine he had purchased from appellee. David T.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.E. 9, 206 Ill. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rankin-v-sharples-ill-1903.