Robertson v. Southwestern Co.

206 S.W. 755, 136 Ark. 417, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 355
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 11, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 755 (Robertson v. Southwestern Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Southwestern Co., 206 S.W. 755, 136 Ark. 417, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 355 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This action was originally instituted in the circuit court of Pulaski County by appellee to recover the amount of a debt alleged to be due on contract for the sale of books, but the cause was, without objection, transferred to the chancery court and proceeded to final decree in favor of appellees.

The action is against Charles R. Robertson, the obligor in the contract of sale, and against W. E. Harrington and J. S. M. Cannon as guarantors of said purchaser. Appellee is a foreign corporation doing business at Nashville, Tennessee, and the contracts in suit were executed in the city of Little Rock. The contract between appellee and Robertson, dated January 5, 1912, provided for the sale of books by appellee to Robertson during the year 1912, and ‘4 as much longer as can be mutually agreed upon,” the books being purchased by Robertson for resale in certain territory in this State assigned to him by a stipulation in the contract, and he agreed to engage in the business of selling books in that territory for the period mentioned and to handle the publications of appellee to the exclusion of all others. The written guaranty signed by Harrington and Cannon as sued on, bears date of January 5, 1912, and reads as follows:

4 4 The Southwestern Company, Nashville, Tennessee. Gentlemen: I, we, hereby become responsible to you for the payment for books and for cash furnished or other goods shipped by you to Charles R. Robertson, according to his orders from time to time, provided the said Charles R. Robertson shall fail to make payment therefor at Nashville, Tennessee, within a reasonable time after date of each shipment or item furnished; and provided, further, that the indebtedness for which I, we, hereby become responsible at any one time shall not exceed five hundred ($500) dollars. I, we, hereby waive both notice of acceptance of this letter of credit and notice of default in payment as above provided. ’ ’

It is alleged in the complaint that the total indebtedness of Robertson to appellees under the contract is the sum of $787.95, and judgment was prayed against him for that amount and against the guarantors for the amount of the bond. The decree was in accordance with the prayer of the complaint.

It is first contended that appellee should be denied relief on the ground that it is a foreign corporation .and has not complied with the statutes of this State with reference to filing with the Secretary of State articles of incorporation and obtaining authority to do business here.

The contract is not entirely free from ambiguity, but no effort was made by either party to clear up the ambiguity, and, considering the instrument as a whole in connection with the contract of guaranty, it should, we think, be interpreted as a contract for the sale of goods, and not for the creation of the relation of agent between Robertson and appellee for doing business in Arkansas. A contract for the sale of merchandise to be shipped from appellee’s place of business in Tennessee to the purchaser here does not constitute doing business in this State so as to bring the transaction under the ban of our statute, which prohibits a foreign corporation from doing business here without first filing copies of its articles of incorporation and obtaining permission to do business. Gunn v. White Sewing Machine Co., 57 Ark. 24.

No other defense is insisted upon here in behalf of appellant Robertson, and the decree against him is, therefore, correct.

The other appellants, Harrington and Cannon, present the additional defense that there was an alteration of their contract after they signed the instrument and that for that reason they are not bound. The contract between appellee and Robertson and the guarantors was negotiated and consummated on the part of appellee by its agent, J. S. Phillips. Appellee furnished Phillips with printed blanks both as to the form of contract with the purchaser and with the guarantors, and Phillips signed the contract with Robertson for his principal and accepted •the contract with the guarantors. The printed blanks for both of the contracts are now in the form they were when delivered, except that the original blanks were prepared' so as to provide for payment to be made by Robertson within thirty-five days after date of each shipment, and the contracts were changed so as to provide for payment within a reasonable time after each shipment. The words “thirty-five days” in the printed blanks were erased by running a line through them, and the words ‘ ‘ a reasonable •time” were substituted and written in ink. This was done in the written contract between Robertson and appellee as well as in the separate contract with the guarantors. Harrington and Cannon both testified that they signed the contract of guaranty without the alteration having been made and delivered the same to Robertson, and that they did not consent to any change. Robertson testified that Phillips made the alteration in each of the writings. Phillips testified that he altered the contract with Robertson by the insertion of the substituted words, but he denied that he changed the contract of guaranty, and testified that the substituted words were in the handwriting of Robertson. The original instruments were introduced in evidence, and were brought up for our inspection, and we can not say that the chancellor erred in finding that the alteration in the contract of guaranty is in the handwriting of Robertson, and not in the handwriting of Phillips. Still, it is clearly established by the evidence that the alteration was made in the contract of the guarantors after it left their hands and without their knowl- . edge or consent, and that the alteration of the blank form of contract between Robertson and appellee was changed by Phillips so as to conform to the agreement reached between him and Robertson in the negotiations. The alteration by erasure is an obvious one, and, while we cannot say that there is a preponderance of the testimony against the finding of the chancellor to the effect that Robertson made the alteration, we are of the opinion that Phillips, the agent of appellee, was chargeable with notice of the change, and that he, in fact, changed the blank in the contract with Robertson to conform to the same language used in the guaranty contract. There is no presumption of unauthorized alteration from the fact that the erasure appears on the face of the instrument itself so as to put the burden of proof on the party who offers the instrument in evidence (Klein v. German National Bank, 69 Ark. 140) but the obvious alteration in the instrument was sufficient, under the circumstances of this case, to put the party who accepted the instrument on^ notice. Phillips admits that he changed the form of the contract before it was signed, and he was bound to take notice of an obvious change in the wording of the instrument signed by the guarantors, and he should have inquired whether or not the alterations were made before the instrument left their hands. He could not shut his eyes to the obvious alteration and allow his principal to take advantage of his ignorance.

Now, it is contended in the first place by learned counsel for appellee that the change is an immaterial one, and, therefore, does not absolve the guarantors from liability, but in this contention we think counsel are clearly mistaken. The substitution of the other words changed the time and method of performance by the principal whose obligation was guaranteed.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 755, 136 Ark. 417, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-southwestern-co-ark-1918.