Taylor v. Scott, Foresman & Co.

178 Ill. App. 487, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1080
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 26, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,124
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 178 Ill. App. 487 (Taylor v. Scott, Foresman & 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
Taylor v. Scott, Foresman & Co., 178 Ill. App. 487, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1080 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Graves

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, the author of “A Brief History of the American People,” sometimes known as the “Model History,” designed for use in schools, and who was the owner of the copyright thereon, in January, 1879, entered into the following contract with George Sherwood & Company, viz.:

“We hereby agree in consideration of the exclusive right to publish and sell a certain work entitled, ‘A Brief History of the American People,’ by Edward Taylor, to pay to'the said Edward Taylor or his assigns the sum of four cents (4 cents) on each, and every copy sold by ns.

“It being provided, however, that no copyright or royalty shall be paid on said book or any of said books that are given away; or supplied at specially reduced rates for first introduction into schools.

‘ ‘ Copyright payments are to be made semi-annually as follows:

“The account of sales are to be made up to the first of January and first of July of each and every year and the amount found due the said Taylor as per this agreement is to be paid respectively on the first day of May and first day of November of each and every year during the continuance of the copyright. That is to say, the amount found due for sales to Jany. first shall be paid May first following and the amount found due July first shall be paid first of November following.
“Chicago, January 23, 1879.
“Geo. Sherwood & Co.
“I accept from George Sherwood & Company the above mentioned copyright, under the conditions specified, as an equitable compensation to me for their use of my late work, ‘A Brief History of the American People’. I hereby confirm this contract, and make it binding upon myself, my heirs, and my assigns.
“Edward Taylor.
“Gifford, Iowa, January 27, 1879.”

Under this contract the work was published and sold by Sherwood & Company until sometime in 1895, when appellant, Scott, Foresman & Company, purchased the business of Sherwood & Company and took over the above contract with the consent of appellee, and assumed all the obligations of Sherwood & Company thereunder, and from then until February 17, 1897, published and sold the work and reported to and paid appellee in accordance with the terms of that contract. On the last named date appellee and appellant, through E. H. Scott, its president and general manager, entered into a verbal agreement at Indianapolis, Indiana, by which the parties attempted to modify the terms of the former agreement in certain particulars. The terms of this verbal agreement, as found and declared by the court, were “that the royalty on said books in the future should be 5% of the selling price.” At the time this verbal agreement was entered into the book had become practically a dead proposition, the sales during the year previous having netted appellee little or nothing. The new or verbal agreement was entered into for the purpose of making the royalties proportionate to the selling price in case the selling price should be lowered, in order to obtain a market, and there is some evidence tending to show that appel-land had in mind at that time competing for the adoption in the schools of the State of Kansas of the book under a uniform school text book law then being considered by the legislature of that state. At all events the contemplated law was passed in the State of Kansas and the book was adopted there for a period of'five years beginning with the 1st day of September, 1897. During the five years next following September 1,1897, something more than 91,000 copies of the work were sold and something more than 31,000 copies were exchanged in the State of Kansas, and outside of that state 567 copies were sold. Those disposed of in Kansas brought fifty cents each for those sold outright and twenty-five cents each and an old book for each one exchanged. Those sold outside of Kansas brought eighty cents each.

After the verbal agreement was entered into at Indianapolis a controversy arose over what its terms were. The discussion concerning that agreement was carried on by correspondence between the parties. In this correspondence both appellant and appellee, not only recognize the oral agreement as having been made, and express a willingness to be bound by what they respectively claimed its terms were, but insisted that the other should do the same. The bone of contention between them was not whether the Indianapolis verbal contract was made, or whether it was binding, but was concerning what, in fact, tbe agreement was. Tbe parties later and on June 28, 1898, signed tbe following written agreement to submit to arbitrators for determination tbe differences between tliem:

“A difference baying arisen between tbe undersigned regarding, first, tbe amount of royalty to be paid on each copy of the Model United States History, second, tbe payment of royalty on tbe exchanges of books sold in the State of Kansas, and, third, tbe payment of Mr.. Prentiss for writing- tbe supplement on tbe History of Kansas, — it is hereby agreed that said differences shall be submitted to arbitrators who shall decide between tbe parties hereto, on tbe points mentioned above. In making their decision tbe arbitrators shall be guided solely by a contract made in writing between Geo. Sherwood & Company, and Edward Taylor, in 1879; and by an oral agreement subsequent to this written agreement, which oral agreement was made at Indianapolis in February, 1897, between E. H. Scott, for Scott, Foresman & Company, and Edward Taylor. The substance of such agreement is evidenced by the correspondence of the parties hereto.’’

Evidence was presented to the arbitrators chosen under the agreement and they, on July 21, 1899, made a report containing the following findings:

“* * * First: In accordance with the spirit of said contract and subsequent verbal agreement, said Edward Taylor is entitled to a royalty of 'five per cent on all copies of ‘The Model United States History’, sold at the full contract price in the State of Kansas. (It being understood said price is fifty-five cents per copy.)

‘ ‘ Second: In the matter of exchanges, we find that said Edward Taylor is entitled to five per cent royalty on all cash received for sale of new books, together with the amount received from the sale of old books, after deducting all expenses of handling said old books.

“Third: We find that the expense incurred for writing the supplement of the ‘History of Kansas,’ should not be borne by said Edward Taylor. * * *”

Appellee refused to abide by the first and second findings of the arbitrators, because these findings did not follow the arbitration agreement in that the first finding was limited to sales in Kansas, when it should have covered the whole United States, and the second finding covered the whole United States, when it should have been limited to the State of Kansas.

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178 Ill. App. 487, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-scott-foresman-co-illappct-1913.