Sisemore & Kierbow Co. v. Nicholas

27 A.2d 473, 149 Pa. Super. 376, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 12, 1942
DocketAppeal, 173
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 473 (Sisemore & Kierbow Co. v. Nicholas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sisemore & Kierbow Co. v. Nicholas, 27 A.2d 473, 149 Pa. Super. 376, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

Judgment for $1529.56, plus interest and 15% collection fees, was entered by confession on March 20, 1939 in favor of “Sisemore & Kierbow Co., Inc., now to the use of The Bastian-Blessing Company”, against L. F. Nicholas, on a judgment exemption note for that amount. The note was dated June 22, 1938, and ivas payable in monthly instalments of $42.50 each on the 25th day of each month, beginning August 25, 1938, until July 25, J.9Jfl, when a last payment of $42.06 was due; “with interest at 6% per annum on unpaid balance from maturity until paid”. It contained a clause providing that upon non-payment of any instalment at its maturity, the remaining instalments, at the option of the holder, should become immediately due and payable, ¿nd confession of judgment was authorized for such amount as might appear to he unpaid.

The note, signed by L. F. Nicholas, this defendant, was made payable to the order of Sisemore &. Kierbow Co., Inc., and by it endorsed “to the order of The Bastian-Blessing Co., Chicago, Ill.” It contained a full printed page of conditions, not here material.

After a writ of fi. fa. had been issued, the judgment was opened on the petition of the defendant, and an issue awarded — the plaintiff in said issue to be “Sise-more & Kierbow Co., Inc., now to the use of The Bas-tian-Blessing Co.,” and the defendant to be L. F. Nicholas — to determine “what, if any, amount is the use-plaintiff entitled to.”

*379 On the trial of this issue, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for $1734.52. A new trial was refused and judgment was entered for the plaintiff on the verdict. The defendant appealed..

The judgment will be reversed and a new trial awarded.

The evidence in the record shows that on the same day the note was given, Sisemore & Kierbow Vo., Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation having its principal office in Philadelphia, (hereinafter called Sisemore), acting as ‘Distributor’ or sales agent for certain products manufactured by the Bastian-Blessing Company, (hereinafter called Bastian), procured an order from L. F. Nicholas for the purchase on a conditional sale contract of certain ice cream freezing equipment for the price of $1758.31, which included interest in the amount of $23.3.31. The order recited that the buyer had given his check for $228.75 as a down payment, and had executed and delivered the judgment note in suit. This conditional sales contract contained the same provisions as to payment as the note in suit, and provided for the retention of title in Sisemore “until the purchase price, or any notes or renewal or judgment for same shall be paid in full.” It was accepted by Sisemore on June 23, 1938.

The same day the contract was accepted by Sisemore, it executed a form of assignment printed on the back of the Conditional Sale Contract, selling, assigning, etc., the said contract and all right, title and interest in and to the property therein described, to The Bastian-Blessing Company of Chicago. This assignment is printed in the margin. 1 The words printed in italics *380 were inserted in the printed form. The black letter portion was not emphasized in the original.

In its letter 2 of June 23, 1938 to Bastian enclosing Nicholas’ order and conditional sale contract, Sisemore wrote, inter alia: “This order is for $15'25, 228.75 with this order, the balance in 36 months, interest included in this contract is $233.31, making the total amount $1758.31. The above owns his farm, also has two ice cream trucks with which he delivers ice cream, and we feel sure that you will find his credit to be okay. We *381 are enclosing landlord’s waiver, summary, note, copy of Dun & Bradstreet inquiry. The above wishes delivery on Thursday of this coming week, so it will be necessary that this freezer be shipped on Monday. According to the card we received from the factory [that is, Bastian’s factory], the freezer that was to he shipped to our show-room can he used on this order. We would appreciate if you would rush all possible in getting us good delivery.” [In pencil]: “As soon as the above’s [appellant’s] check clears our bank, we will forward you the down payment, but do not let this hold up acceptance on this order, as we will wire you as soon as the check is clear” (italics supplied).

Pursuant to this, after Bastian had learned from Sisemore that Nicholas’ check for the down payment was good, and after the receipt on July 1, 1938 of the down payment from Sisemore, Bastian, on July 15, 1938, shipped from its factory in Grand Haven, Michigan, direct to Nicholas the ice cream equipment referred to in the letter; and on August 11, 1988 notified Nicholas that the note and contract had been assigned to it.

Immediately thereafter Nicholas complained to Bas-tian, by letter dated August 18, 1938 — received by it the next day — that the equipment, which had been installed by Sisemore on July 20, did not work. On October 11, 1938, Bastian wrote to the appellant that their District Manager had recently called in company with Mr. Kierbow, president of Sisemore, and looked over the ice cream freezing equipment, and had made a report to Bastian, and that the latter was demanding full payment of the balance of the appellant’s contract (126a). By letter of November 9, 1938, Bastian wrote to the appellant, admitting that the equipment purchased by him was guaranteed by Bastian-Blessing Co., as manufacturers, for a period of twelve months from the date of shipment from their factory, against defects in material and workmanship, hut stating the guarantee *382 was made only to Sisemore & Kierbow Co., Inc.” (127a-128a — Italics supplied).

We have gone into the facts this fully because, in connection with other matters hereafter referred to, they tend, in our opinion, to support the contention of the appellant that the relation between Bastian and Sisemore, in the sale of this equipment, was not one of simple seller and buyer, but justified the inference that in making this sale Sisemore was acting as the agent of Bastian rather than as the owner of the equipment covered by the contract, and that the elaborate ‘Distributor Franchise Agreement’ (77a-97a) — also called ‘Sales Agreement’ — with its ‘riders’ was contrived with the purpose and intent of retaining in Bas-tian full control over sales made for it by the ‘distributor’ ('Sisemore), but, at the same time, of escaping liability for defects and imperfections in the equipment sold. Of course, it makes no difference what the agreement called the selling agent, if such a sales agency was actually created and Bastian retained control over the sales made by Sisemore. The law looks through the form to the substance.

It will be noted at the outset that the judgment was not entered in favor of the holder of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 473, 149 Pa. Super. 376, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sisemore-kierbow-co-v-nicholas-pasuperct-1942.