Victor Products Corp. v. Edwards

18 P.2d 1045, 172 Wash. 1, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 752
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1933
DocketNo. 24357. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 1045 (Victor Products Corp. v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victor Products Corp. v. Edwards, 18 P.2d 1045, 172 Wash. 1, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 752 (Wash. 1933).

Opinion

*2 Millard, J.

Plaintiff sought recovery of judgment against defendants upon four causes of action. The first and second causes of action were upon promissory notes executed by defendants in favor of the plaintiff. The third cause of action was upon an open account between the parties. The fourth cause of action was upon an agreement guaranteeing payment of the promissory notes and the open account upon which the first, second and third causes of action were based. For its fourth cause of action, plaintiff alleged :

“That heretofore and on, to-wit, the 4th day of June, 1931, the said defendant, A. E. Edwards, for a valuable consideration to him in hand paid, made, executed and delivered to this plaintiff his guaranty agreement, in words, letters and figures as follows:

“ ‘Victor Products Corporation • June 4, 1931

366 Madison Avenue

New York, N. Y.

Gentlemen:

“ ‘Our account with you as of this date, representing approximately in open account twenty-five hundred ($2,500), and also two notes, one dated December 30, 1930, in the amount of $835.18, and one dated December 31, 1930, in the amount of $835.19, which open account is subject to some adjustments on account of merchandise yet to be returned.

“ ‘In consideration of proposed extension of time for settlement of the above mentioned open account and notes, I hereby agree to the following:

‘ ‘ ‘ That the two notes above mentioned shall be paid in full with interest from their date, within sixty days from the date of this memorandum.

“ ‘That the balance on open account determined after cheeking and return of merchandise shall be paid by my execution of four notes for equal amounts covering a period not exceeding six months from July 15, 1931, and I hereby unconditionally, personally, guarantee the payments of the notes above mentioned now in existence and notes to be created in settlement of *3 open account, the notes to he given as above mentioned bear interest at the rate of 6% from tbeir date to time of payment. Yours very truly,

“ £A. E. Edwards/

££(4) That the notes therein mentioned as theretofore given are the notes herein sued upon and the same were not paid within sixty days from the date of the said guaranty, or at all.

“(5) That the four notes therein mentioned to be given to cover the balance on open account mentioned in plaintiff’s third cause of action herein, were neither given'nor paid and plaintiff is entitled to recover judgment from said defendant A. E. Edwards individually, on account of the notes mentioned in plaintiff’s first and second causes of action, and likewise is entitled to judgment against said A. E. Edwards, individually, in the sum represented by the open account sued on herein in plaintiff’s third cause of action as being the same sum for which said defendant A. E. Edwards guaranteed the execution of notes for and the payment thereof.”

By amended answer, defendants denied that any sum in excess of a designated amount was a reasonable attorney’s fee to be allowed in the first and second causes of action; admitted, as to the third cause of action, '

". . . that plaintiff within three years last past, at the special instance and request of defendants, sold and delivered to said defendants goods, wares and merchandise and state that they do not have sufficient knowledge upon which to form a belief as to the truth of the allegation that the total value of said merchandise so sold was $17,248.41 and admit the credits set forth in said paragraph and deny each and every other allegation in said paragraph not herein expressly admitted.

"(4) For answer to Paragraphs I, II, III and IY of said fourth cause of action, admit the same and the whole thereof.

"(5) For answer to Paragraph Y of said fourth cause of action set forth in said plaintiff’s amended *4 complaint, defendants admit the following: ‘That the four notes therein mentioned to be given to cover the balance on open account mentioned in plaintiff’s third cause of action herein, were neither given nor paid’ and deny each and every other allegation in said paragraph contained not herein expressly admitted.”

For a further answer, and by way of cross-complaint and counterclaim, defendants alleged that, in November or December, 1929, plaintiff falsely represented it had a listing with a company through whose chain of stores in the territory assigned to defendants the sales of plaintiff’s products averaged twenty-five to forty dollars per store per month; that, if defendants would undertake to buy and distribute plaintiff’s products, defendants would receive all of the business from that chain of stores.

“(6) That defendant and cross-complainant relied upon said representations and believed the same to be true and was thereby induced to purchase and did purchase from plaintiff a stock of its rubber goods, and that the notes and guaranty agreement sued upon by plaintiff herein were given in payment for and concerning such merchandise so purchased in reliance upon said representations, and that in reliance upon such representations said defendant and' cross-complainant did undertake the distribution of plaintiff’s rubber products throughout the Pacific Coast and that plaintiff assigned to defendant and cross-complainant the exclusive right to sell its rubber products in the following territory . ...

“ (8) That the representation made by the plaintiff through its president and agent, E. J. Funkhouser, that the sales of plaintiff’s rubber products to the average Woolworth store on the Pacific Coast was from $25 to $40 per month per store was false and untrue and was known by plaintiff and its said president and agent to be false and untrue at the time said representation was made, and that instead of said sales to an average Woolworth store being from $25 to $40 per store per month said sales did not average over the *5 sum of $4 per month; and that in January, 1931, the. listing of plaintiff with the F. W. Woolworth Co. was cancelled for the Pacific Coast, and that thereafter it was impossible for defendant and cross-complainant to sell any goods whatsoever to said Woolworth stores.

“(9) That if the purchases of plaintiff’s products by the Woolworth stores on the Pacific Coast had been as represented by plaintiff this defendant and cross-complainant would have sold $49,500 worth of plaintiff’s products to-the F. W. Woolworth Co. during the year 1930 and would have realized therefrom a net profit of 10%, or $4,950, but that because of the false and fraudulent representations of plaintiff as herein-before set forth, the sales of defendant and cross-complainant to the F. W. Woolworth Co. were only $4,928.95. . . .”

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 1045, 172 Wash. 1, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-products-corp-v-edwards-wash-1933.