Steeg Printing & Publishing Co. v. Auto-Lec Stores, Inc.

138 So. 899, 18 La. App. 477
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1932
DocketNo. 13883
StatusPublished

This text of 138 So. 899 (Steeg Printing & Publishing Co. v. Auto-Lec Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steeg Printing & Publishing Co. v. Auto-Lec Stores, Inc., 138 So. 899, 18 La. App. 477 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Plaintiff sues defendant for the sum of $2,736.66, the alleged balance due for printing and furnishing certain catalogues under the provisions of a written contract entered into by the parties on September 27, 1928.

The petition alleges that 326,351 catalogues were delivered to the defendant, for which there was due the sum of $14,236.66, and that the defendant paid on account the sum of $11,500, leaving a balance of $2,736.66; that a dispute arose as to the correctness of the charges for the balance claimed, and defendant declined to make further payment on account. The petition then sets forth in detail the respective items that make up the total amount claimed to be due under the contract.

The defendant answered admitting that it had entered into the contract with the plaintiff ; that all the catalogues had been deliv•ered; that a number of the items claimed, aggregating $903.47, were correct and due plaintiff; but denied the correctness of seven items claimed by the plaintiff in its petition.

There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $2,254.49, and defendant appealed to the Supreme Court. That court transferred the appeal to this court on the ground that it did not have jurisdiction, since the ámount in dispute-was less than $2,000. Steeg Printing & Pub. Co. v. Auto Lee Stores, Inc., 172 La. 565, 134 So. 746. Plaintiff has answered the appeal asking that the amount of the judgment be increased to the sum of $2,686.66.

The record in this case is voluminous, involving a maze of figures and considerable conflicting testimony, but we shall endeavor to digest and present the issues in as simple and logical a form as possible.

We shall now discuss the respective disputed itehis according to the paragraph number given them in plaintiff’s petition.

In paragraph 17 of the petition the plaintiff claimed that it was entitled to receive for original composition $7.90 per page, and, as the catalogue contained a total of 114 pages, including the index and the covers, there was due plaintiff the sum of $900.60. Defendant claims that there were in the catalogue 112 pages, which, at $7.90 a page, amounts to [901]*901$881.80, and that, as it furnished certain-nickel-plated plates for the purpose of printing the covers, plaintiff is not entitled to recover for them. The trial judge was convinced by the evidence that the two covers should be classified as two pages of the catalogue, and allowed $7.90 each for them.. The fallacy in defendant’s argument is that no allowance is made for the printing of \the covers at all. The evidence shows that it took just as much effort and time to compose and print the covers as it did to compose and print the pages, and therefore we conclude that the trial court properly allowed the sum of $900.60.

In paragraph 18 of the petition plaintiff claims the sum of $820 for furnishing 160 electrotypes at $2 per page. Defendant resists payment of this charge on the ground that the contract provides that electros shall be charged for as follows: “Electros, $2,00 per page,” and claims that the correct charge should have been $216, covering the final 108 printed catalogue pages. The trial court allowed the sum of $320.

What do the words “Electros, $2.00 per page” mean? From the testimony of Mr. Egerton, an expert in such matters, we gather that- it is customary to use two or three electrotypes in printing an order of 826,000 catalogues, because they wear readily and cause the printing to become blurred, and that the number of electros used by the plaintiff was in keeping with the usual experience in fulfilling a contract of the proportions as the one under consideration. In the light of the evidence in the record as to the custom of the trade, we have reached the conclusion that “Electros, $2.00 per page” means $2 per electrotype page and not $2 per printed cata-logue page. We find that the sum of $320 is due.

In article 19 of the petition plaintiff claims $97 for furnishing fifteen bound copies of catalogue page proofs. This item is not covered by the contract, and recovery is sought on a quantum basis. Defendant refused to pay this claim on the ground that a charge of $50 would be adequate and reasonable. Plaintiff undertook to prove by one of its employees that it required 44.54 hours, at the original charge of $2.50 an hour-, to collect and bind these fifteen copies. Defendant attacks the accuracy of the testimony of this witness on the ground that other work was done during the time that he was supposed to have worked upon these bound copies. A careful consideration of the evidence on this point leads us to believe that it required that amount of time to do this work. The only evidence offered by defendant on this issue was the testimony of Mr. Stern, who.stated that the defendant had gotten bids from two other printers, who bid $46 and $49, respectively, for similar work. The issue is not whether the defendant could have gotten the work done cheaper through competitive bidding, but whether or not the charge that the plaintiff has made, where there was no competitive bidding, is reasonable. The evidence supports the finding of the trial court in allowing the sum of $97 as fair and reasonable, and we see no reason to disturb it.

In article 20 of the petition the plaintiff claims the sum of $9.50 for mounting sixteen largo cuts for catalogues. The only defense to this item is that these cuts were ordered through Grelle-Egerton Engraving Company, and not from the plaintiff, but the evidence shows that the plaintiff did furnish them and that a charge of $9.50 is reasonable. We note that this item is feebly contested. The trial judge allowed it, and the record bears out his conclusion.

In article- 21 of the petition plaintiff claims the sum of $1,243.67 for alterations and' changes in composition made by defendant, alleging that it required 537.47 hours to make these changes and that it is entitled under the contract to charge $2.50 per hour therefor. Defendant denied that plaintiff was entitled to charge on the basis of changes for the services in question, but admitted that plaintiff was entitled to charge on the basis of new pages of composition at the contract price of $17.90 per page, and, in addition thereto, for' any changes and alterations in composition with reference to these new pages.

The record shows that the catalogue originally contemplated was to be printed in the fall of 1928. Plaintiff printed 112 pages furnished and approved by defendant and was prepared to print the catalogue in final form, but the defendant took advantage of a clause in the contract and delayed the printing of it for 120 days.

During this interim defendant desired to make such drastic alterations and changes that out of the original 112 pages only 18 were retained intact. New pages qf approved composition, consisting largely of material taken from the original 112 pages, were furnished by defendant, amounting to 86 pages. These 86 pages, together with the 18 pages of the orginally contemplated catalogue, amounted to 104 printed pages, and constituted the cata-logue which plaintiff printed in final form for defendant in the spring of 1929.

It further appears that defendant had the right to compose as many new pages as it desired and to pay for them at the rate of $7.90 per page, as provided in the contract, and also the right to discard as many pages as it wished and to have the accepted pages combined into a catalogue. Mr.

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Related

Steeg Printing & Publishing Co. v. Auto Lec Stores, Inc.
134 So. 746 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 899, 18 La. App. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steeg-printing-publishing-co-v-auto-lec-stores-inc-lactapp-1932.