Seidenbach's v. Titus Radio Corp.

1940 OK 222, 102 P.2d 168, 187 Okla. 206, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 30, 1940
DocketNo. 29390.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1940 OK 222 (Seidenbach's v. Titus Radio Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seidenbach's v. Titus Radio Corp., 1940 OK 222, 102 P.2d 168, 187 Okla. 206, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 183 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This action was instituted by Titus Radio Corporation, as plaintiff, to recover the sum of $95.23 from the defendant, Seidenbach’s, in a justice of the peace court of Tulsa county. From a judgment in favor of said plaintiff in the amount sued for, the defendant appealed to the court of common pleas of the same county, where the cause was tried de novo upon the same pleadings that had been filed in the justice court.

Plaintiff’s action is conceded to be a suit upon an open account. On the exhibit attached to its bill of particulars as a verified statement of said account, the items of the alleged account are represented by two columns of figures, which purport to be invoice numbers, but no description or anything to indicate the nature of the charges entered opposite the invoice numbers appears on said exhibit except the words “Unearned Discounts” above the first column of figures.

The defendant’s verified answer to the bill of particulars consists of a general denial of the allegations therein contained, together with a special denial of the correctness of the purported statement of account attached thereto.

W. E. Titus, who was in charge of the plaintiff’s business during the period of its dealings with the defendant, was the plaintiff’s principal witness. During his examination, five sheets from the ledger kept by the plaintiff’s bookkeeper were produced and introduced as plaintiff’s exhibits “1” to “5”, inclusive. These exhibits show the debits and credits upon the defendant’s account from December 29, 1934, to and including February 8, 1939, as computed upon a Burroughs bookkeeping machine. The debits are identified on said ledger sheets only by date and invoice number. Titus testified that most of the entries upon the statement attached to the plaintiff’s bill of particulars represented “unearned discounts” upon bills of merchandise rather than the total sale price of any merchandise. In explaining the expression “unearned discounts,” the witness stated that there were certain articles of merchandise sold the defendant by his company upon which a discount of 2 per cent, of the sale price was allowed, if payment therefor was made within 30 days after the date of the invoice upon such sales, and that the entries for unearned discounts represented the amounts of certain discounts that the defendant had not earned because of its failure to make payment within the time allowed for such discounts. The witness also stated, however, that there was no discount obtainable upon some of the merchandise plaintiff had sold the defendant, and he admitted that, in some instances, discounts had been allowed when the payment was a few days late. Titus was unable to state which of the items on his sworn statement represented “unearned discounts” and which represented the sale price of merchandise; and only a few of the items was he able to identify in any manner whatsoever *207 except by invoice number, that is to say, he was unable to relate for what goods or merchandise, if any, the charges were entered. His attempted correlation of the invoice numbers appearing on the sworn statement with those on the ledger sheets revealed the presence of several invoice numbers on the statement that do not appear on the ledger sheets. Titus’ testimony also reveals that toward the end of his company’s dealings with the defendant there was a dispute between the two as to the correctness of the plaintiff’s records of said account, and that after one or two conferences held to reconcile their respective records, the defendant transmitted to the plaintiff checks dated February 2, and February 3, 1938, in the sums of $456.47 and $948.09, respectively. He admitted that his company had delivered no merchandise to the defendant after December 30, 1937, and that the last of the two checks mentioned, when received by his company, had had a remittance statement attached to it bearing a notation to the effect that it paid “all items in full to December 31, 1937”; that notwithstanding this, both checks had been cashed by his company and the proceeds thereof applied on the defendant’s account. He maintained, however, that they were not received in full satisfaction of the balance due on said account.

After the introduction of other evidence, unnecessary here to mention, the plaintiff rested, and the defendant demurred to its evidence. The court overruled this demurrer and the defendant, electing to stand upon its exception to said demurrer, gave notice of appeal to this court.

Thereafter the trial court sustained the plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict and entered judgment for the plaintiff unon the verdict returned pursuant to said direction. After the defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, the present appeal was duly perfected.

The principal question presented herein is whether or not the evidence is sufficient to establish the plaintiff’s alleged cause of action against the defendant. It is asserted on behalf of the defendant that an action of this character can only be sustained by proof of an itemized account showing the kind, quantity, and price of the goods purchased thereon, together with the dates of said purchases, and the credits, if any, on said account. As we have seen, these details were not furnished, either in the statement which the plaintiff attached to its bill of particulars at the commencement of the action or in the testimony of the plaintiff’s principal witness, and our examination of the record discloses that no proof of these matters was ever introduced. That evidence such as is herein presented is wholly inadequate and insufficient to sustain a recovery of money alleged to be due on an open account is conclusively demonstrated by our opinion in the case of Burford et al. v. Richards & Conover Hdwe. Co., 182 Okla. 402, 77 P. 2d 1145. There, as here, the entries on the verified statement attached to the plaintiff’s pleading were mere columns of figures, which had been transcribed from ledger sheets identified by a witness and introduced in evidence. In that case, we said that such evidence “proved exactly nothing against the defendants” and demonstrated that the proof necessary to support a judgment for the plaintiff in such an action must be more than “a string of figures.” Plaintiff’s exhibits in the present case, like those in the cited case, constitute nothing more than a “string of figures.” That the ledger sheets, by which it was sought to explain and substantiate the sworn statement attached to plaintiff’s bill of particulars, bore certain invoice numbers as well as other strings of figures purporting to represent charges, credits, and balances, gave them no additional attribute of the proof required, in the absence of any evidence to explain what kind, quantity, and value of goods or merchandise, if any, was comprehended by such notations.

Counsel for the plaintiff do not directly deny the applicability of our opinion in the Burford Case to the instant case, nor do they cite any authorities repudiating the principles therein followed. It seems to be their opinion, however, that certain evidence tending to show *208 that the defendant did not deny owing the plaintiff a certain balance (though smaller than the one involved herein) on the account at one time, and that statements showing a balance due on said account in an amount identical with the one herein sued for were sent to the defendant and were never replied to nor objected to, is sufficient proof to sustain his cause.

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 222, 102 P.2d 168, 187 Okla. 206, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seidenbachs-v-titus-radio-corp-okla-1940.