Schuppenhauer v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.

332 N.E.2d 583, 30 Ill. App. 3d 607, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2664
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 3, 1975
DocketNo. 59663
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 332 N.E.2d 583 (Schuppenhauer v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schuppenhauer v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co., 332 N.E.2d 583, 30 Ill. App. 3d 607, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2664 (Ill. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE DEMPSEY

delivered the opinion of the court:

In 1963 William Schuppenhauer filed an action for an accounting against the People Gas Light & Coke Company, for the company’s use of cost-saving ideas allegedly disclosed by him in confidence 30 years earlier to company officers pursuant to an understanding that if his suggestions were employed by the company he would be paid an agreed proportion of the resulting savings. The cause was assigned to a master in chancery to determine the truth of the allegations of the complaint and whether they gave rise to an enforceable obligation by the defendant. In 1966 the master heard the plaintiff’s case which consisted solely of Schuppenhauer’s own testimony, and received in evidence a number of exhibits. He submitted a report in 1969, and a supplemental report in 1971, concluding that the evidence demonstrated the company’s liability. However, the chancellor sustained the defendant’s exceptions to the reports, found that the competent evidence did not make out a prima facie case, and ordered tire cause dismissed with prejudice.

Our disposition of Schuppenhauer’s appeal turns upon the adequacy of his testimony regarding the events of 1933. The company officers with whom he conversed in 1933 were no longer living at the time he testified and his alleged conversations with them were stricken. He raises two issues: (1) whether, if all the conversations were properly stricken, there nevertheless remains in the record evidence of transactions with those officers which proves the creation of an enforceable obligation; and (2), whether the trial court erred in striking his testimony of conversations with and admissions by these agents which took place in the presence of another agent, Frank Griffith, who was living at the time Schuppenhauer testified, but who died after the plaintiff’s case had been completed before the master.

In 1933, the plaintiff, a wholesaler of confections, operated the William E. Schuppenhauer Service from Ms home. TMough the latter operation he promoted a cost-savings plan for firms with large billing operations. The plan was printed on a two-page folder and was summarized in the document’s opening paragraph:

‘Write all drafts, checks, including dividend drafts or checks, invoices, requisitions, statements (not due), notices, etc., wMch are sent by mail in envelopes and can be condensed sufficiently, on postal or post-cards with or without a reply card attached and utilize all possible space thereon to bring about the desired result in conjunction with or without an exact copy for the files.”

The plan envisoned savings in labor, paper and postage costs.

Schuppenhauer testified that beginning in July of 1933 he wrote repeatedly to solicit interviews with several officers of the defendant, including George Mitchell, its president. Carbon copies of several letters were introduced. The text of the July 15 letter to Mitchell is representative of these communications:

“Dear Mr. Mitchell:—
If we stop a profit leak’, — you will increase your net profits.
If you see and adopt our suggestion, our fees will be only a portion of your savings for a short while for our services in bringing our Cost Cutting Plan to you. If you do not adopt our suggestion, YOU OWE US NOTHING. You will be the sole judge of the usefulness of the idea.
Certainly you can’t lose. You can only win.
It costs you nothing to talk it over.
Just have your secretary return the enclosed post card.
Yours for greater net profits.
WM. E. SCHUPPENHAUER SERVICE.”

Schuppenhauer produced two letters from Albert Tossell, assistant to MitcheU. The first said that his letters would be brought to Mitchell’s attention, but the second, dated September 8, said that “* # * this

Company is not interested in the service to which your previous correspondence refers.” Notwithstanding this rebuff, Schuppenhauer testified that his persistence was rewarded when, on September 28, 1933, Mitchell telephoned him and arranged for him to meet Tossell. Schuppenhauer said he met with Tossell on the morning of October 5 and returned the same afternoon to speak to the company treasurer, William Weldon. The following day he described the plan to Moses Reeder, the comptroller of the company, and showed him sample card stock upon which checks could be printed. October 9 he sent copies of the printed plan to Reeder and Weldon by registered mail. He stated that on October 12 he met Reeder and Weldon in Reeder’s office and demonstrated to them the electrical conductivity of graphite markings on card stock to prove its potential for machine processing after marking by meter readers. He suggested that the International Rusiness Machines Corporation possessed the technology to build a processing machine. The group was joined by Frank Griffith, an assistant to Mitchell. In his presence, the others discussed various features of the plans as well as the measure of compensation for Schuppenhauer if his ideas were used by the company. Schuppenhauer later mailed a confirmatory letter to the persons with whom he had spoken, summarizing the discussion of October 12. Copies of this letter were submitted as exhibits. Schuppenhauer recalled that he prefaced every conversation with a reminder that his proposals were made in confidence. He had no further communications with any representative of Peoples Gas, but he claimed that in 1958 he learned that the company had begun postcard billing (mailed in envelopes) in 1951, and that after 1957 it sent its bills bimonthly, via stubbed postcards.

All of Schuppenhauer’s testimony was received subject to the company’s standing objection that it was incompetent because of the Dead Mans Act. The company also objected to the admission of virtually all of the plaintiffs exhibits as self-serving and hearsay, since they consisted of his own notes, printed forms and carbon copies of communications purportedly sent by him to company agents.

It had been agreed by the parties that in order to conserve time the defendant’s objections would not be ruled upon by the master until the close of the plaintiff’s case. The hearings were recessed for that purpose in November 1966, but the master’s report did not issue until January 1969. It had been stipulated that Weldon, Mitchell, Reeder and Tossell — the persons with whom Schuppenhauer negotiated in 1933— were deceased, and the master ruled that they were contracting agents within the meaning of section 4 of the evidence and depositions act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 51, par. 4), and that under the statute Schuppenhauer’s testimony of conversations with them was inadmissible except to show that there were transactions between the parties. The master ruled, however, that the conversation of October 12 would be admitted because Griffith, who witnessed the conference of that date but did not participate in it, was a surviving agent within the meaning of the statute. The master found the plaintiffs documents admissible to show transactions and that, based upon the admissible evidence, the liability of Peoples Gas had been established.

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Schuppenhauer v. PEOPLE GAS LIGHT & COKE CO.
332 N.E.2d 583 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
332 N.E.2d 583, 30 Ill. App. 3d 607, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuppenhauer-v-peoples-gas-light-coke-co-illappct-1975.