Western Advertising Co. v. Crawford

276 P. 813, 128 Kan. 145, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 4, 1929
DocketNo. 28,381
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 276 P. 813 (Western Advertising Co. v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Advertising Co. v. Crawford, 276 P. 813, 128 Kan. 145, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 278 (kan 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

This is an action on a contract for advertising. The jury answered special questions and returned a verdict for plaintiff. Defendants have appealed.

Generally speaking, the facts are as follows: Defendants own and operate the Gayety theater in St. Louis. The title to the property was in the name of a corporation, the stock of which is owned by defendants. The corporation leased it for operating purposes to a company, which was really a partnership composed for the most part of defendants. The partnership employed C. W. Daniels as manager of the theater, and, aside from the booking of plays, he was in full charge of the business of conducting the theater in St. Louis, employed and discharged the help, prepared advertising matter, and made contracts for advertisements in newspapers, on billboards, by printed circulars, or otherwise, collected and handled all receipts, paid the operating expenses, and remitted the balance to his employers with a detailed statement of receipts and disbursements..

The plaintiff is an advertising company, and had made a contract with the street-car company of St. Louis, by which it paid that company a stated sum for the' privilege of advertising in the 228 street cars of St. Louis by cards placed in the cars. The space so contracted by it from the street-car company it sold to various cor[146]*146porations, firms or individuals who desired to use advertising of that kind. On March 27, 1919, Daniels, as manager of the Gayety theater for defendants, executed a written contract with plaintiff, by the terms of which he purchased for defendants certain advertising space in the street cars of St. Louis, for which he, on behalf of defendants, was to pay plaintiff $177.84 per month, the advertising to begin in August, 1919, and to continue for forty weeks, covering what is generally spoken of as the theatrical season. This contract was fully carried out and the payments made thereunder. On March 19, 1920, Daniels, as manager of the Gayety theater for defendants, executed a written contract with plaintiff for similar advertising space in the 228 street cars of St. Louis for a term of forty weeks beginning August 22, 1920, at $177.84 per month.

While Daniels had been a theater manager for defendants for several years, and had managed the Gayety theater for three years, he was in fact employed for but one year at a time, and for the theatrical season beginning in August and extending to May or June. At the close of the theatrical season each year the question of his employment was taken up by him with defendants and he was each year employed for another theatrical season. This continued until in June, 1920, at which time he was not reemployed for the theatrical season beginning in August, 1920. The partnership which had leased the theater from the corporation owner and was managing it through Daniels, as manager, was composed almost entirely of the L. M. Crawford family. There was a change in this partnership, in the summer of 1920 occasioned by the death of a son of L. M. Crawford, when a daughter' took the son's place in the partnership, and as between them there was also a change of the division of the net receipts from the operation of the theater. On August 11, 1920, the defendant, L. M. Crawford, wrote plaintiff as follows:

“N. Y. office desires to cut out all adv. (except newspaper) and will make no appropriation towards billboards or street cars. We have arranged to carryout this policy and look to you to cancel any existing contract. Personally, we have always beliéved in billboards and street cars, and it is just possible that we may want to be with you folks again later on. Mr. Daniels (former mgr.) has not arranged to be with us this season and had no authority to contract for anything this season. Yours truly, L. M. Crawford.”

At the time this letter was written there was no “existing contract” between the parties except the one which forms the basis of this action. The prior similar contract of March 27, 1919, had been [147]*147fully carried out. The statement, “N. Y. office desires to cut out all adv. (except newspaper) and will make no appropriation towards billboards or street cars,” was in the nature of camouflage. The evidence disclosed there was no New York office, and no one there who had any interest in the controversy, or authority to make or refuse to make appropriations.

This letter was followed by correspondence in which plaintiff referred to its contract, expressed the view that it should be carried out, and defendants denied any responsibility for the contract, and contended that Daniels had exceeded his authority in executing it, asked plaintiff to discontinue the advertising Daniels had contracted, and stated defendants would not pay for it. Defendants declined to furnish any copy for the advertising, and plaintiff placed in the space contracted for by Daniels a card, “This space reserved for the Gayety theater, 14th and Locust street.” This card was carried by plaintiff in all of the street cars of St. Louis for the time covered by the contract made with it by Daniels. Defendants declined to pay for any of this advertising, and plaintiff brought this action to recover the contract price of such advertising.

On behalf of appellants it is contended, first, that Daniels, under his employment as manager of the theater, had no express authority to execute for defendants the contract sued upon, and that if he had authority to contract for any advertising he had no authority to make a contract for advertising to begin after the end of Daniels’ own term of employment. In answer to special questions the jury found that Daniels in March, 1920, was employed as manager of the Gayety theater for the theatrical season ending May, 1920, and that he was authorized to contract for street-car advertising for the theatrical season commencing in August, 1920; that he was so authorized by the defendants verbally at the time of his employment.

.It is argued by appellants that there is no evidence to support these findings of the jury. It is true there is no evidence as to the exact words used at the time of Daniels’ employment respecting any specific authority for making contracts for street-car advertising, nor is there anything in the record to disclose that this specific question was discussed at that time. There is evidence, however, that he was general manager of the theater, in full operating charge of it; that he prepared the copy and made contracts for all advertising for the theaters in newspapers, on billboards, by circulars and handbills, [148]*148and that the year before the contract in question he had executed and carried out a contract with plaintiff identical, except as to the time of its performance, with the contract in question, and that his acts and conduct in respect to all of this advertising were fully reported to defendants and the expense thereof charged to the business and accounted for in such repoi’t. We think that evidence justifies the answer made to the special questions by the jury. (2 C. J. 566, 643; Banks Bros. v. Everest & Waggoner, 35 Kan. 687, 12 Pac. 141.)

Much of the argument of appellants is based on whether Daniels’ act in executing the contract in question rests upon his implied authority, or the apparent scope of his authority, and is coneededly not appropriate if Daniels had express authority to execute this contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 P. 813, 128 Kan. 145, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-advertising-co-v-crawford-kan-1929.