Worthington Pump & Machinery Corp. v. Northwestern Iron Co.

186 N.W. 156, 176 Wis. 35, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 139
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 186 N.W. 156 (Worthington Pump & Machinery Corp. v. Northwestern Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worthington Pump & Machinery Corp. v. Northwestern Iron Co., 186 N.W. 156, 176 Wis. 35, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 139 (Wis. 1922).

Opinion

Doerfler, J.

The writings and correspondence requested may be grouped as follows: (1) Those pertaining to the attempted cancellation of the contracts in December, 1918, and the early part of 1919; (2) the cancellation of the contracts by the defendant in December, 1919; (3) those relating to the reduction of the price of the undelivered tonnage to $26.75 per ton; andt(4) as to the withholding of shipments after May 19, 1919.

To entitle a party to an inspection or. production of such writings it is necessary that they should be in the possession or control of the adverse party. 6 Ency. PI. & Pr. 794, and cases cited in note.

If, therefore, it appears clearly that all of the correspondence material to the inquiry was produced, the objects to be accomplished by the statute are fully met. It is also indispensably essential to this -right that the production or inspection sought is material to the issues involved and that it affects the merits of the action. 6 Ency. PL & Pr. 795. A general allegation of materiality and necessity is not sufficient, but facts must be stated showing how and why the discovery or inspection is material. 6 Ency. PI. & Pr. 804, 805. An order for production or inspection will be denied where the application appears to be made solely .for fishing purposes. 6 Ency. PI. & Pr. 792, and cases cited in note 2.

We will first consider the attempted cancellation of the contracts in December, 1918, and the early part of 1919. [42]*42Saeger, the secretary of the defendant, while under adverse examination produced what purported to be the written memorandum and the correspondence upon that subject, and it appears conclusively from such data that early in December, 1918, the plaintiff requested a cancellation of the contracts, and that some correspondence was had between the agent and the defendant pursuant to the said request; that the defendant wrote its agent and expressed its willingness to cancel the contracts upon the'payment of the sum of $7.50 per ton by way of adjustment. This offer, of the defendant was communicated by its agent to plaintiff, but was never accepted or acted upon. It also appears clearly from the adverse examination of Mr. Saeger that no agreement between the parties as to an adjustment was ever arrived at, and he further testified that when the contracts were canceled by the defendant on December 6, 1919, it was not based on the negotiations, started early in the year, which provided for an adjustment of $7.50 per ton upon the undelivered portion of the iron under the contracts. Under the evidence referred to, the ineffectual attempts at cancellation early in the year 1919 can have no bearing or materiality as to the issues involved in the action and need not be further, considered here.

We will now take up the letters, etc., above referred to under headings 2 and 3, namely, the cancellation of the contracts by the defendant in December, 1919, and the reduction of the price of the undelivered tonnage to $26.75 per ton.

Saeger, secretary of the defendant, made and filed herein an affidavit which among other things avers the following:

“That at or about the time of the commencement of the above entitled action this defendant caused a thorough and careful search to be made by its agents, Pickands, Brown & Company, for all papers and correspondence in the possession or under the control of its said agents in any way relating to the transactions referred to in said action, and all of [43]*43such papers and correspondence to be turned over to it, the defendant, for consideration in connection with the controversy out of which said action arose, and thereafter all of such papers and correspondence, including all papers and correspondence in the possession of the defendant itself, in any way relating to said action or to the transactions referred to in the complaint were turned over by the defendant to Charles F. Fawsett, as its attorney, and ever since have been in the possession of said attorney, subject at all times to the inspection and examination of the defendant that since the commencement of the proceeding by the plaintiff to obtain an inspection of correspondence which passed between the defendant and its said agents, in respect to transactions referred to in said action, and since the proceedings for the examination of this affiant by the plaintiff as the secretary of the defendant under sec. 4096 of the Statutes, and in connection therewith this affiant has carefully gone through and examined all of said papers and correspondence and says that all of the letters, telegrams, memoranda, or any communications whatever in writing passing between the defendant and said Pickands, Brown & Company between the 5th day of August, 1918, and the 28th day of December, 1919, in any way relating to or connected with the cancellation of the contracts referred to in the complaint, or either of them, on the basis of the plaintiff paying the defendant $7.50 per ton, and also relative to the cancellation of said contracts, or either of them, on the basis of $6 per ton, or relating to the reduction of the price of iron under said contracts, or either of them, to $26.75 per ton, which this affiant was able to find or has since been able to find, were produced by this affiant upon his examination under sec. 4096 . . . and are as shown in the record of said examination on file in this action. That a thorough search has been made for all such correspondence or papers, and this affiant verily believes that said correspondence and papers so produced upon said examination are all of such papers and correspondence in any way relating to said subjects.”

Subsequent to the adverse examination of Saeger, referred to under heading 1, and in reply to a question of the witness by plaintiff’s counsel, Mr. Fawsett, defendant’s counsel, who concededly was in possession of all of the [44]*44correspondence between the defendant and its agent, made this statement: “We don’t find any more correspondence on the subject of canceling, passing between the Northwestern Iron Company and Pickands, Brown & Company.” The examination of Mr. Saeger was thereupon abandoned upon the subject of cancellation.

Seymour Wheeler, the vice-president and treasurer of the agent, testified that he wrote a letter of date of December 8, 1919, to the plaintiff, in which the plaintiff was advised of the cancellation of the contracts as to the tonnage undelivered under them. In the adverse examination he stated that he wrote this letter under the instructions of the defendant, but did not remember when he had received the instructions, or who had given him the same, or. whether they were in writing or oral. On the same examination he was also referred to a letter of date of December 27, .1919, signed by himself as treasurer, of the agent, and with respect to this letter the witness testified that he wrote the letter under instructions from the defendant, but that he did not know whether the request was in writing or oral, or which officer of the defendant requested the witness to write such a letter.

Mr. Fawsett, defendant’s counsel, at the close of the argument in the circuit court, presented this statement in open court, which the court stated it would receive to the same effect as though it were verified.:’

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Bluebook (online)
186 N.W. 156, 176 Wis. 35, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worthington-pump-machinery-corp-v-northwestern-iron-co-wis-1922.