White Sewing Machine Co. v. Gilmore Furniture Co.

105 S.E. 134, 128 Va. 630, 1920 Va. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 18, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 105 S.E. 134 (White Sewing Machine Co. v. Gilmore Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White Sewing Machine Co. v. Gilmore Furniture Co., 105 S.E. 134, 128 Va. 630, 1920 Va. LEXIS 124 (Va. 1920).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in assumpsit to recover $1,500, by the White Sewing Machine Company, a corporation, against Gilmore Furniture Company, a corporation, a balance claimed for the purchase price of a carload of 150 sewing machines. The case was tried upon the plea of non-assumpsit and two special pleas. The special pleas alleged false representations and fraud on the part of the vendor and its agent, and claimed consequential damages of $5,038.48, and sought to recover the difference against the plaintiff. The plaintiff demurred to the defendant’s evidence. The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,500 and in favor of The defendant for $2,850 damages, subject to the judgment of the court upon the demurrer to the evidence. The court overruled the demurrer, entered judgment in favor of the defendant for $1,350, the difference, and of this the White Sewing Machine Company is here complaining, but has failed to specify and assign errors in its petition for the writ of error with that particularity which is required.

■ The facts appearing are substantially these: In June, 1910, N. L. Massey, as the sales agent of the White Company, approached John A. Gilmore, president of the Gilmore Company, for the purpose of making a sale Of ', a large [635]*635number of sewing machines. Massey stated that the White Sewing Machine Company had adopted a new plan for disposing of their machines; that they had assembled a corps of efficient honest salesmen, who would come as soon as the machines arrived, and that for a commission of $6.25 on each machine they could promptly sell them, but the Gilmore Company would have to pay the board of the salesmen and furnish them with horses and buggies. Gilmore told Massey that he did not understand the sewing machine business, while Massey emphasized the fact that the honest men who were thus available would need no watching, and that he (Massey) had represented the White Company for a number of years. Then before the sale was finally consummated, Massey produced numerous letters of recommendation from Southern merchants, written on their letter heads, stating in substance that they had bought similar machines from him, and had salesmen of the sewing machine company sell them to advantage. Among other statements made by Massey was that the machines were never sold for less than $26.00 by the manufacturer. Thus induced, Gilmore signed an order for 150 machines at $26.00 each, and then seeing that the plan for selling them had not been stated in the order, called Massey’s attention to this omission, to which he made this reply: “It makes no difference. This is the plan of the White Sewing Machine Company, but I will give you my personal guarantee that the plans outlined to you will be carried out.” Then Massey signed a paper reading thus:

“I personally agree to furnish the Gilmore Furniture Company two salesmen to sell 150 machines, this day purchased, for them, they to pay said salesmen $6.25 commission for each machine sold and expenses and board and furnish horses and wagons, and to furnish W. T. Fitzpatrick free for one week, they to pay his board and to give demonstration of White with Art Exhibit.
“N. L. Massey.”

[636]*636The sewing machines came, but the honest reliable agents to sell them did not appear, for they had not been assembled either by or for the White Company. Some salesmen were sent by Massey in response to Gilmore’s request, but they were inefficient and in many instances dishonest. The letters which were produced from the Southern merchants in some instances were shown to be forgeries, and in one instance to have been prepared and obtained for' purposes of deception — that is, under these circumstances: A controversy had arisen between the White Company and the People’s House Furnishing Company, of High Point, N. C., upon representations by Massey in, some respects similar to those he made to the Gilmore Company, and the vendee finding the representations false and the transaction entirely unsatisfactory, denied liability, and compromised his controversy with the company. As an incident of this compromise, Massey wrote a letter for the signature of the general manager of the People’s House Furnishing Company, in which this is stated: “It affords me great pleasure to testify to the superior merits of the White machine. You may rest assured that we expect to continue to handle and push the sale of the White. We can cheerfully recommend the White Company to any one desiring to engage in the machine business and desire to say that our dealings with you and your representative, Mr. N. L. Massey, have been entirely satisfactory.” This letter was proposed to the signer by Massey, and was signed, as he testified, because the controversy was concluded by Massey for the White Company, and allowed his company to return the machines which they had agreed to buy, and paid rent for this six months his company had stored the machines; and that he signed this letter containing these false statements at the request of Massey. He testified in this case that the statement in that letter to the effect that his dealings with Mr. Massey were satisfactory was untrue, and that it was only [637]*637made because of Massey’s suggestion and in order to secure a settlement for his company in closing the transaction which had proved entirely unsatisfactory. This letter was exhibited to Gilmore before the sale which is here in controversy was made. It is also shown by the evidence in this case that machines had been sold to other dealers for less than $26.00. That these were the usual methods which Massey pursued, in order to sell machines for the White Company and that they were known to that company is perfectly apparent, because fifteen dealers from various parts of the South are introduced and showed that similar inducements in many respects had been held out to them, and in each instance the representations had proved to be deceptive and the transactions unprofitable and entirely unsatisfactory. In all of these instances there had been correspondence with the White Company, and in several cases litigation had resulted.

The Gilmore Company, in their efforts to dispose of the machines, encountered many difficulties, incurred expense, spent much time, and then finally notified the White Company that they would decline to pay the balance claimed and would claim damages because of these false representations under which they had been induced to enter into the contract.

[1-3] Much of the discussion grows out of the fact that the order which the Gilmore Company gave when the machines were purchased contains this clause: “It is understood that no claim of any understanding or agreement, of any nature whatsoever, between this company and its dealers will be recognized except such as is embraced in written orders, or in writing, and accepted by said company in writing from its home office at Cleveland, 0.”

It is alleged that the court erred in permitting the introduction of the personal agreement signed at the same time by N. L. Massey, upon the ground that it varies and con[638]*638tradiets the written contract with the White Company. This, however, entirely misconceives the true nature of the Gilmore Company’s claim. The pleas under which the defense is made in substance allege, that the contract under which the. machines were purchased was induced by the false and fraudulent statements which N. L. Massey made as the agent of the White Company.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.E. 134, 128 Va. 630, 1920 Va. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-sewing-machine-co-v-gilmore-furniture-co-va-1920.