Wallace Studios, Inc. v. Brochstein's, Inc.

297 S.W.2d 218, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 1956
Docket5092
StatusPublished

This text of 297 S.W.2d 218 (Wallace Studios, Inc. v. Brochstein's, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace Studios, Inc. v. Brochstein's, Inc., 297 S.W.2d 218, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2424 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

WALKER, Justice.

Brochstein’s, Inc., as seller, sued Wallace Studios, Inc., as buyer, upon a written contract to recover the balance of the purchase price of certain chattels, with other items incidental to this demand, and to foreclose a lien on these goods which the contract provided in seller’s favor. It is not necessary to state the pleas of the defendant buyer. The trial court rendered judgment in behalf of the plaintiff seller for the balance of the price alleged to be owing and for foreclosure of the lien, and from this judgment the defendant buyer has appealed.

The contract is not merey one for the sale of chattels. The plaintiff was engaged in the 'business of designing and manufacturing fixtures and articles to be used in mercantile and other establishments, maintaining a factory in Houston for this purpose, and the contract with the defendant buyer was one of a number which the plaintiff seller had made with business concerns to stock with fixtures a certain store for the sale of merchandise to the public which was to be established by a corporation named Mays of Houston, Inc. This store was to be in Houston. It was to be operated in the name of Mays and was to occupy the first three floors of a certain building. It was to be a department store and some of the departments were to be occupied and conducted by independent concerns to whom Mays had granted the privilege of so doing, under agreements between Mays and these concerns. The defendant was one of these concerns and was to operate a photographer’s shop in the store. The plaintiff seller made agreements with Mays and with the various concerns which were to operate departments in the store to plan the location and internal arrangement of the departments and of the fixtures to be used in the store and to design and manufacture or provide these fixtures, and the contract in suit was one, or a part of one, of these agreements. The plaintiff seller put in evidence plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, the drawing which was the floor plan of the defendant’s shop, or department, showing among other things the location and appearance of various fixtures, and the defendant put in evidence defendant’s Exhibit 1, the drawing which was the plan of *220 the entire second floor of the store. Both of these drawings were made by the plaintiff. In the list of goods which is a part of the contract, reference is made to plans of these articles but these were not proved.

According to defendant’s Exhibit 1, the defendant’s shop was to be in the northwest corner of the second floor of the store, and the plaintiff seller’s vice president estimated the area of the shop as about 2% of the area of the floor.

The plaintiff seller knew at least the general nature of the agreement between defendant buyer and Mays and that the right of the defendant buyer to occupy the space set aside for it by the floor plan we have referred to depended on Mays’ right to occupy the store building, and the plaintiff thought that Mays had a lease on this building. We note, for instance, in addition to all the circumstances we have listed, that plaintiff’s vice president who made the contract with defendant testified that he knew, when the contract was made, that Mays had a lease from the owner of the building, that defendant buyer had an arrangement for a sublease from Mays, and that whether defendant buyer could use that space depended on whether or not Mays retained their lease.

The contract between the plaintiff and defendant was dated December 7, 1951. Its meaning is uncertain and the construction which the parties have placed on it has materially assisted us in interpreting it. So construed, this contract obligated the plaintiff to provide the fixtures which the defendant was to use in its shop, or department, on the second floor of the store and to install these fixtures in this shop, all as the plans made by the plaintiff located and marked out that shop and provided designs for these fixtures. For all of these acts to be done by the plaintiff seller, the defendant buyer was to pay to the plaintiff the unitary sum of $3,219.60 in two installments. The first of these accrued on December 15th, one week after the date of the contract. The defendant buyer contends that the second installment became due when the fixtures had been installed. The plaintiff seller does not deny that this construction is right, and on consideration of the entire contract we agree with the defendant.

The description of the goods, typewritten, is: “fixtures per revised plan, elevations and itemized list.” Plaintiff’s vice president said that “plan” meant the numbered plans referred to on the “list”, of goods which was a part of the contract. These numbered plans were not put in evidence, as we have stated; we infer from the vice president’s testimony that they were drawings and specifications of the various items which defendant was to buy. “Elevations”, then, must refer to plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, the floor plan of defendant’s shop, which the plaintiff’s vice president said was “the plan and elevation of Wallace Studios at Mays of Houston”, and perhaps to defendant’s Exhibit 1 which was the floor plan of the second floor of the store, where the defendant’s shop was to be. We note that on plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, various parts'of this plat are entitled “elevations”. This being the meaning of “elevations”, the word must have been intended to guide the plaintiff in installing the goods; otherwise its use seems unnecessary.

Following the description are these typewritten statements:

“Total Price $3,219.60 (Three Thousand Two Hundred Nineteen and 6%oo dollars)

“Terms: $1,000.00 December 15th — Balance when completed.

“F.O.B. Delivered and installed.”

We think that the words “balance when completed” should be referred to the description and thus to “elevations” and should be given the meaning “balance when completed according to elevations”; and these “elevations”, we have concluded, were the floor plans of defendant’s shop and perhaps that of the floor on which the *221 shop was to be. Bearing in mind, then, that plaintiff was to install the goods and had included a charge for this service in the “total price” stated above, the words “balance when completed according to elevations” would seem to mean payment when the goods had been installed as said “elevations” provided. This also seems to be implied by the words “F.O.B. Delivered and installed”. Ordinarily, the letters “F.O.B.” mean “free on board” and signify that the goods are to be put in place by the seller free' of expense to the buyer. See Williston on Sales, Rev.Ed., Sec. 280 et seq.; “Words & Phrases”, Vol. 42, Texas Digest. Of course this meaning could not have been intended in the contract in suit because the plaintiff undeniably did make a charge for installing the goods; so, if “F.O.B. Delivered and installed” has any meaning it must be one affixed by the parties, and the only meaning we can think of these words having, apart from one perhaps concerning the place of delivery, is that the buyer was to be at no expense (in addition to the first installment) until delivery and installation had been made, thus implying payment of the second installment when the goods have been installed. This meaning, as we have stated, is consistent with our interpretation of the words “balance when completed”.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.2d 218, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-studios-inc-v-brochsteins-inc-texapp-1956.