Thurner Heat Treating Co. v. Memco, Inc.

30 N.W.2d 228, 252 Wis. 16, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 442
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 30 N.W.2d 228 (Thurner Heat Treating Co. v. Memco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thurner Heat Treating Co. v. Memco, Inc., 30 N.W.2d 228, 252 Wis. 16, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 442 (Wis. 1947).

Opinion

Fairchild, J.

Neither on the appeal to the circuit court nor on this appeal has issue been taken with the trial court’s finding that the gears in question were defective by reason of the respondents’ neglect and failure to treat them according to specifications. The appeal is concerned only with the extent of .respondents’ liability for their negligence. Each of the lower courts found that the respondents were liable only for the cost of heat-treating the defective gears, but each based its conclusion on a different theory, and both of those theories are attacked by the appellant. It is contended that no trade usage limiting liability was proved and that the parties at no time contracted that the respondents’ liability should be a limited one.

Neither of these issues was raised by the pleadings, but the evidence upon which the lower courts reached their conclusions is in the record and is to be considered in determining whether *21 either or both of those conclusions are supported by the evidence.

The chief evidence on the matter of limited liability was the printed matter at the bottom of the invoices sent by respondents to their customers. One of the respondents and a Mr. Graham,, who was called as a heat-treating expert, both testified that the information printed on the invoices was printed by fifty-one concerns which were members of a Metal Treating Institute. Mr. Graham, however, estimated that there were about one hundred recognized heat treaters in business in the United States. This is the extent of the testimony which bears on the question of a trade .custom, and we hold that it is not sufficient to prove the existence of a custom or usage.

In Power v. Kane (1856), 5 Wis. 265, 268, it was said:

“It is not denied that usage may enter into and become a part of the law of trade, or that the law is to be applied to the transactions of parties, contracting and doing business in view of, and in reference to such usage. . But it is not readily adopted by courts, and the proof of such usage must be clear and explicit, and the usage so well established, uniform, and SO' notorious that the parties must be presumed to know it, and to have contracted in reference to it.”

In another early case, Lamb v. Klaus (1872), 30 Wis. 94, 97, it was said:

“It [the usage] must appear to be so well settled, so uniformly acted upon, and of so long a continuance, as to raise a fair presumption that it was known to both contracting parties, and that they contracted in reference to it and in conformity with it.”

The rule as set forth in these early cases still prevails. Farmer v. Pick Mfg. Co. (1938) 227 Wis. 99, 102, 277 N. W. 668; Lemke v. Hage (1910), 142 Wis. 178, 181, 125 N. W. 440. In the case, at bar the evidence does not show a custom well settled and uniformly acted upon. The proof upon that point is not positive and clear as the rule requires.

*22 We do not agree with the circuit court in its holding that the provision limiting respondents’ liability, which appeared on the. invoices, was a part of the contract. It is true that the record shows that the defendant had submitted orders to the respondents on numerous occasions prior to the transaction involved, here. Presumably when each of those prior orders was.delivered a delivery slip or an invoice was sent by respondents to the appellant, each including the printed notation that appeared on the invoices here. The notation appeared only on papers that were sent by respondents to its customers after the work ordered had been completed. There was no evidence to show that respondents, notified their customers of that limited liability before accepting the order. No attempt was made to call the provision to appellant’s attention, and it appears that appellant in fact had not seen the statement printed on the invoices.- The appellant was justified in relying on the terms of the original contract in the absence of a direct statement by respondents to the contrary. The notation was a nullity so far as affecting the rights of appellant. Fair dealing and the genera] rules controlling contracts as to the intent of the parties prevent one from seeking to escape liability and from having so great an advantage as the respondents claim by the use of so little effort after a relation or contract was once established.

A New Jersey case very similar to the instant case has been called to our attention. It is Dale v. See (1889), 51 N. J. Law, 378, 380, 382, 18 Atl. 306, 14 Am. St. Rep. 688, 5 L. R. A. 583. That case involves defective workmanship by the defendant on silk delivered to him to be dyed. The defense was that the delivery of the dyed silk to the plaintiff was accompanied by a bill with the printed notation, “all claims for deficiency or damage must be made .within three days from date,.otherwise not allowed.” • It appears that there, as here, the plaintiff had received bills with similar notations, in. previous transactions' with the defendant. In that case the court said:

*23 ■ “Upon a bailment of goods for work and labor upon them, the contract between the parties arises immediately upon the delivery of the goods to the bailee, and upon the completion of the work for which the bailment was made it is the duty of the bailee to return the goods to the owner. He cannot prescribe the conditions under which he will perform that duty. Notice by the bailee, with the return of the goods, or with his bill for the work done, qualifying his liability for defective workmanship, are terms of his own dictation. ...
“From what has already been said it is apparent that no one of these notices of itself constituted a contract with respect to the work to which the bill on which it was printed was applicable. When the first bill was sent to the plaintiff the notice on it was a nullity. So with the second, and so with each of the bills in the series. . . . Each of these notices being in itself a nullity, it is inconceivable how, upon any legal principle, the frequency with which they were repeated could create out of them a contract on the part of the plaintiff without a scintilla of evidence of assent to the terms expressed in them.”

This is in line with the general rule expressed in 6 Am. Jur., Bailments, p. 274, sec. 178, as follows:

“. . . the general rule supported by the modérn authorities appears to be that the bailor, unless his attention is called to the fact that such conditions are intended as a part of the contract, is not charged with notice, where he has no actual knowledge, of provisions limiting liability which appear upon something not apparently related to the contract itself, or given to the bailor ostensibly for some other purpose. There is authority which justifies the rule on the ground, among others, that the bailee, if he wishes to qualify his contract, should do so in an unmistakable manner, and it is not reasonably to be expected, nor is the bailor required to anticipate, that important terms of a contract will be found upon what is accepted merely' as a means of identification or for some other purpose which to a reasonable man would not appear to be germane to the agree-mentitself.”

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.W.2d 228, 252 Wis. 16, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurner-heat-treating-co-v-memco-inc-wis-1947.