Sexton v. Barrie

102 Ill. App. 586, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 571
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 2, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 Ill. App. 586 (Sexton v. Barrie) 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
Sexton v. Barrie, 102 Ill. App. 586, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 571 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit brought by appellees to recover upon three alleged contracts in and by which it is claimed appellant purchased and agreed to pay for three separate sets of books in course of publication by appellees. It is stated in the latter’s brief, that appellees “ make subscription editions of standard works. Their books are printed on expensive paper, illustrated by great artists, and are sold at prices that rich people can afford to pay.”

It is not necessary to recite the'contracts in full. They are set out at length in the declaration and are introduced in evidence as exhibits attached to the deposition of one Bika Salzer, the agent who obtained appellant’s alleged subscriptions. It is sufficient here to refer to so much of them as may indicate the nature of the controversy. The first of them in the order of their introduction as exhibits, consists of a preliminary statement containing a partial description of an “ Edition Rationale of Victor Hugo’s novels,” to be issued in fourteen volumes at $20 a volume, and contains a provision that only the printed conditions and no other conditions or representations will be binding upon the subscribers or publishers. Beneath is the following:

“ Messrs. George Barrie &■ Son :
On the above noted conditions I subscribe for one copy of Victor Hugo’s novels, Edition Hationale, to be delivered to me in fourteen volumes, polished levant, extra tooling, gilt top, as issued, for which I will pay on delivery $20 each.
Mrs. P. J. Sexton,
Date Feb’y 25, 1898. 988 Sheridan Drive,
Waukegan, 111.”

Upon this document are certain pencil additions. One of these is an insertion of the words “ 3 years, with dramas and poems ” before the word “ novels ” in the first part or preliminary statement of the conditions of the contract, and another consists of the words “ JSTapoleon Green, Monogram A. L. S., Anna Long Sexton,” written in the margin of the same part of the alleged contract. Appellees’ agent states that appellant wrote the words “ 3 years with dramas and poems.” This appellant denies. The same agent testifies that she, the agent, wrote, with appellant’s acquiescence, the other words on the margin. Appellees sent to appellant twenty-one volumes of Hugo’s works, including the fourteen volumes subscribed for by the terms of the order, and the insertion in pencil of the words “with dramas and poems” is claimed to be the authority for so doing, and thus adding to the order seven more volumes at a price of $20 each.

The second of these contracts purports to be a subscription for “twenty volumes, Japan vellum edition of Historical Romances of William Harrison Ainsworth,” for which the subscriber agrees “to pay on delivery $10 per volume.” This is signed in pencil, “ Mrs. P. J. Sexton, 988 Sheridan Road.” On the margin are the words, also in pencil, “Bound flexiahle at 17.50 a xmiume. A. L. S.” Appellant testifies that she never signed this alleged contract and that she did not write the above words, nor any words on the margin, nor elsexvhere on said alleged contract. She is contradicted in this by the agent, Salzer, and is charged by appellees xvith $17.50 a xmlume instead of $10, the price stated in the body of the document. Appellant repudiates the whole alleged contract, disclaiming any knowledge of it whatever.

The third contract calls for “ a complete copy in txvelve volumes, Japan vellum edition, of Historical Memoirs,” to be paid for at $10 a volume. On the margin of this are the xvords “ Bound flexiable at 17.50 a volume per.” Appellant testifies that these words have been added, since she signed the contract, without authority from her. She is charged by appellees with the additional $7.50 per volume.

These contracts are specially declared on, and by the verdict and the judgment of the trial court, appellees have recovered full damages for alleged failure to compty with, their terms and conditions as set forth in the declaration. It is contended in behalf of appellant that the evidence does not justify such recovery.

It is conceded that appellees’ evidence was all introduced under the special counts, and that it is necessary to entitle them to recovery for appellees to prove performance on their part in substantial accordance with the terms and conditions of the contract. Appellant urges that not only was this not done, but that appellees’ evidence affirmatively shows noncompliance in material respects. To this appellees’ attorneys reply that the evidence shows appellant accepted and retained twenty-nine of the sixty-three volumes sold under the contracts, retaining some of them nearly a year, and urge that she is precluded from alleging that the books were not according to contract. The contracts are dated February 28, 1898. About two months later the first books, two volumes of the “ Memoirs,” were delivered, and in May twenty-one volumes of the works of Victor Hugo. In September two additional volumes of the “ Memoirs ” were sent, in February, 1899, two more of the same set, and also two volumes of the “ Historical Romances,” which appellant claims she never subscribed for, never signed the contract for and knew nothing about. It was after the receipt of the first two volumes under this alleged contract last referred to, that appellant’s husband, March 27th, wrote that appellant would not receive any more books, and that those sent were subject to appellees’ order. They were subsequently shipped back to appellees.

It appears, therefore, that appellant did not receive and had never accepted all the books covered by the alleged contracts. Her acceptance of part-of them, if such acceptance there was, and payment on account, can not be construed as a waiver of her right to insist upon compliance by appellees on their part with the terms and conditions of the contracts, and bound her to pay no greater price than she contracted to pay. So far as we are advised no acceptance is proved of any of the books delivered under the alleged contract for the “ Historical Romances,” which appellant wholly repudiates, nor is there any acquiescence shown in the extra price charged for the “ Memoirs,” which makes a difference of $7.50 on twelve volumes, for which appellant testifies she agreed to pay only $10 instead of $17.50 a volume. If appellees are to recover under the special counts setting up the contracts they must prove performance or readiness to perform on their part in accordance with the terms of the instruments. This they have not attempted to do, except in part. They are not seeking to recover on the common counts for goods sold and delivered, but solely under the special counts.

We need not review the evidence bearing upon the controversy whether appellant executed the contract for the “ Romances ” which she repudiates; nor whether she authorized the marginal additions in pencil to the other contracts which she also repudiates. These marginal notations as interpreted by the trial court have increased the price she is now called upon to pay, by the addition of seven volumes of Hugo at $20 per volume, and by an extra charge of $7.50 a volume over and above the original contract price for the “ Memoirs,” an increase of $230 on those two contracts alone.

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Bluebook (online)
102 Ill. App. 586, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sexton-v-barrie-illappct-1902.