Right Printing Co., Inc. v. Stevens

179 A. 209, 107 Vt. 359, 100 A.L.R. 528, 1935 Vt. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 179 A. 209 (Right Printing Co., Inc. v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Right Printing Co., Inc. v. Stevens, 179 A. 209, 107 Vt. 359, 100 A.L.R. 528, 1935 Vt. LEXIS 186 (Vt. 1935).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

This is an action of contract brought to Hartford municipal court, in which the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant for the printing of certain briefs in the ease of Sargent v. Robertson et ux., which was then pending in this Court, and in which the defendant was the attorney of the defendants in that case. There was a trial by court. A finding of facts was made, and there was a judgment for the plaintiff.

The plaintiff is a corporation engaged in the printing business at White River Junction. Alfred T. Wright is the manager of the plaintiff. In all the conversations he had with the defendant hereinafter referred to, and in all other 'things that he did in connection with the matters involved in this case, he was acting for and in behalf of the plaintiff.

In the first line of the first paragraph of the findings where the court uses the word “plaintiff” it refers to Mr. Wright.

The court found as follows:

‘ ‘ Both plaintiff and defendant are men of high standing in the community and both stand unimpeached as to their veracity. It is to be regretted that a law suit should seem to be necessary to determine an issue of no greater magnitude than the one disclosed here. The case resolves itself into a question of the balance of proof, based on legal standards and rules of evidence, the burden of proof being upon the plaintiff to make out his case by a fair preponderance of the weight of the evidence.
“After a careful scrutiny of• the evidence and of the weight to be given to the testimony of the witnesses, the charges and book entries and the ‘job tickets’ which were admitted without objec *362 tions, I find by-a fair preponderance of the weight of all of the.evidence before me, that the plaintiff at all times relied on the name and credit of the said R. E. Stevens for the pay for said printing job and on no one else, and so find.”

The defendant excepted to the last paragraph of the findings as unsupported by the evidence, against the evidence, and insufficient in law to support a judgment.

Two briefs were printed by the plaintiff, a main brief and a supplemental brief. The defendant admits that he ordered the briefs to be printed. He testified that when he ordered the main brief to be printed he told Mr. Wright that he was acting as attorney for Mr. and Mrs. Robertson, and that he was not personally responsible for the payment for printing that brief; that later, when he ordered the printing of the supplemental brief, nothing was said about the payment for printing that brief.

The following facts appear from the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff:

In late December, 1931, the defendant went to the plaintiff’s place of business and inquired of Mr. Wright about the printing of a brief and the price for the same. Later in the same day, after further conversation with Mr. Wright on the subject, the price for printing the brief was agreed on, and the defendant ordered it to be printed. Mr. Wright took the order, and the bookkeeper made out a job ticket. Some time later, the defendant ordered the printing of a supplemental brief in the same case. Mr. Wright and the bookkeeper were both present at that time, and the latter made out a job ticket for that work. Both job tickets were made out in the name of and as being for R. E. Stevens.

When the briefs were printed the bookkeeper charged the work on the plaintiff’s ledger in the name of “Stevens, Roland E.” A bill for the work was then sent to the defendant and monthly statements were thereafter sent to him in his own name. Three or four weeks after the first bill was sent to the defendant he went to the plaintiff’s office and asked Mr. Wright if he would make a bill out for him to Mr. Robertson “so that it would aid him to collect his money.” Mr. Wright complied with his request and had a bill for the printing made out to *363 Mr. Robertson and it was given to the defendant. All entries and charges on the plaintiff’s books were made to the defendant personally. The entries and job tickets were made at the time of the transaction, and they have never been changed or altered. The plaintiff has always relied on the name and credit of the defendant and never relied on anyone else.

When the defendant ordered the printing of the main brief he did not tell Mr. Wright that he would not be personally responsible for the printing of that brief, nor did he ever tell Mr. Wright that the bill for the printing should be made- out to Mr. Robertson. When the printing was ordered by the defendant, Mr. Wright did not know Mr. Robertson or anything about his financial condition or ability to pay, but he did know the defendant. No charge was ever made on the books of the plaintiff to Mr. Robertson for the printing bill, and the plaintiff never sent a bill for the same to Mr. Robertson. After the first bill and the monthly statements were sent to the defendant Mr. Wright met him frequently, but the defendant, up to September, 1932, never made any protest to the work being charged to him nor any denial of the charge, nor did he ever say anything to Mr. Wright that indicated that he was not the proper party to whom the printing should be charged. The defendant never refused to pay for the printing until after he and Mr. Wright had a political argument in September, 1932, when he told Mr. Wright that he did not owe the plaintiff anything and he would not pay the bill.

On several occasions prior to September, 1932, Mr. Wright asked the defendant to pay the bill. On none of those occasions did the defendant deny that he owed the bill, refuse to pay it, or say that it was for his client to pay. On one occasion the defendant told Mr. Wright that he had not received his money from his client, and asked him if he would not wait until he could get it. On another occasion the defendant said that he had not received the money from his client and was short himself, and he asked Mr. Wright if he would not wait; that he expected the money shortly. On another occasion Air. Wright told the defendant that he needed some money, had got to have some, and the defendant replied that he was sorry that he couldn’t let him have it because he was short and hadn’t collected his money from his client; that his client owed him quite a little money and that he had a lien on some property which he *364 expected to get settled “before long,” and when that was settled he would pay.

No other witness than the defendant testified in defense. While many of the facts which the plaintiff’s evidence tends to prove are denied or contradicted by the defendant, it was for the court to pass upon the credibility of the witnesses and to determine what weight it would give to their testimony.

The evidence produced by the plaintiff clearly supports the finding excepted to as against the grounds that it is unsupported by the evidence and is against the evidence. We will consider the other ground of the exception later.-

The defendant requested the court to find:

“1. The defendant was agent and attorney for William L. Robertson and Annie E. Robertson at the time he ordered the brief and supplemental brief to be printed. ’ ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
179 A. 209, 107 Vt. 359, 100 A.L.R. 528, 1935 Vt. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/right-printing-co-inc-v-stevens-vt-1935.