Vogel v. Bushnell

221 S.W. 819, 203 Mo. App. 623, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 207
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 819 (Vogel v. Bushnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogel v. Bushnell, 221 S.W. 819, 203 Mo. App. 623, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 207 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is a suit for libel. Plaintiffs recovered a verdict and judgment for $2500 actual and $2500 punitive damages and defendant has appealed.

The publication of the libelous matter grew out of the following circumstances:

On. August 30, 1916, defendant, being an owner of an automobile, purchased a tire of plaintiffs who were at the time partners engaged in the business of selling tires at retail in Kansas City, Missouri, as local distributors of the “Knight” tire. ' Plaintiffs guaranteed the tire to run 8000 miles “if properly kept inflated and not abused. ’ ’ The tire ran 4617 miles when it was worn out. This was in the early part of March, 1917. At that time defendant took up with plaintiffs the matter of an “adjustment” of the tire. An adjustment consisted of an allowance on the purchase price of a new tire, the value of the unused mileage on the old. When plaintiffs examined the old tire they found that it had not been kept properly inflated and had otherwise been abused by the use of mud chains thereon on a dry roadway. However, plaintiffs told defendant that they would take up the matter of adjustment with the factory, which they did and reported to defendant that the factory would reimburse plaintiffs if they desired to adjust the tire on the assumption that it had gone the mileage claimed and that it had not been abused as aforesaid. The price of tires had risen about 17% per cent, between the time defendant purchased the old tire and its wearing out. Thereupon plaintiffs offered defendant a new tire of the price of $41.45 for $31.08, the difference being represented by the value of the unused portion of the old tire. *625 Defendant refused to accept' the proposition claiming that, according to his way of figuring the adjustment, he was entitled to a new tire upon the payment of $16.28. There was a material difference between plaintiffs’ and defendant’s method of calculating the adjustment.

Defendant became incensed that plaintiffs did not adjust the matter on his basis and threatened to send out letters to plaintiffs’ competitors reflecting upon plaintiffs’ business integrity if plaintiffs did not adjust on defendant’s figures. Plaintiffs, in order to satisfy defendant so that he would not send out the letters, offered a new tire for $29.11, and this not being satisfactory to defendant, plaintiffs offered to give defendant a new tire for $25, and then for $20. All these offers were refused by defendant during the month of March, 1917, and, finally, plaintiffs refusing to make any better offer and to come to defendant’s terms, the latter, on April 21, 1917, sent to plaintiffs ’ competitors the following letter, upon which this suit for' libel is based:

“Telephones Home 1449 Main, Bell 2754-X Grand. All agreements are contingent upon strikes, accidents and delays beyond our control.
Established 1886
A. Bushnell
903 Broadway
Red Cedar Shingles, Pacific Coast Lumber, Oak Lumber, Piling, Telegraph Poles & Posts.
Wholesale. Yellow Pine Lumber, Oak Bridge Timbers A Specialty.
' C. H. BUSHNELL,
Manager Yellow Pine Dept.
Kansas City, Mo., April 21st, 1917.
To whom it may concern:
This is to certify that I purchased last Pall a Knight Tire, from the distributing Company in Kansas City, of the Knight Tire and Rubber Co., guaranteed by them in writing to run 8,000 miles. The tire proved worthless after running 4,617 miles and the Knight Tire and Rub *626 ber Co., and their distributors refused to make good the guarantee.
If You*Want to Pay a High Price for a Worthless Tire, on a Worthless Guarantee, Buy a Knight Tire.
The worthless tire and the worthless guarantee can be seen at my office.
(Signed) A. Bushnell,
903 Broadway, City.”

It is not shown how many of these letters were sent out by defendant. He threatened to send out three thousand of them and admitted that he sent out twenty-one. Prior to the sending out of the above letter, defendant’s landlord desired to buy some Knight tires but defendant told him that “he had better wait and see what those fellows” (meaning plaintiffs) “guarantee amounted to before he bought them.” Defendant wrote plaintiffs, “Let me know what you propose to do about it,” (accepting defendant’s figures) “as I would like to inform my landlord whether you are straight or crooked down there.” Defendant wrote the Knight Tire and Rubber Company, the manufacturer of Knight tires, about his controversy with plaintiffs and stated: “I think . . . that your company ought not to have persons that misrepresent your tires and then not stand for their guarantee.” The Knight Tire Company refused to assume any responsibility in the matter saying, in effect, that the contract of guarantee was between defendants and plaintiffs. Defendant then wrote the Knight Tire and Rubber Company “If the representatives of the Knight tire are going into the Kansas City market and tell what the Knight tire will do and put their guarantee in writing and then both they and the Knight Tire and Rubber Company repudiate the guarantee which I have in writing, I propose to send a copy of this guarantee to every Rubber tire company in Kansas City and explain what the Knight tire guarantee amounts to and tell them that the Knight tire, from my experience, is no better than any cheap tire that can be *627 got for half the money.” In another letter to the manufacturer defendant wrote:

“It seems peculiar that the Knight Tire and Rubber Company which has a high rating in R. G. Dunn would get the 336 Tire Service Company” (this was the plaintiffs’ firm name) “which is such a worthless concern as to have no rating at all not even a low one in R. G. Dunn to g’et out and make false representations and give worthless guarantees, about the Knight Tire and keep them at the same office at 1528 Grand Avenue and then say they are not responsible for anything they sáy about the Knight Tire or anything they may guarantee. ’ ’

Later defendant wrote the branch manager of the manufacturer in Kansas City inclosing a copy of “the letter, supra, that he afterwards mailed out on April 21st, and said that a letter of which the inclosed was a copy would be sent out to every one who handled tires in Kansas City unless an adjustment was made by April 18th on his figures. The manufacturing company protested that the letter defendant threatened to send out must be amended so that it would apply to the distributors only, whereupon defendánt wrote it,—

“I am not afraid of your legal department in the least as in my younger days I practiced Law for five years and I know when I have a good tire and when I have not got one, and if you want any - notoriety and want to crawfish out of your guarantee or your distributors ’ guarantee and sue me for damage I will see that you get all the notoriety you want and see that your tire men are on hand when this case comes up.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gover v. Cleveland
299 S.W.2d 239 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1957)
Simpson v. Steen
127 F. Supp. 132 (D. Utah, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 819, 203 Mo. App. 623, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogel-v-bushnell-moctapp-1920.