Wyler Watch Agency, Inc. v. Hooker

280 S.W.2d 849, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 148
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1955
Docket7325
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 280 S.W.2d 849 (Wyler Watch Agency, Inc. v. Hooker) 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
Wyler Watch Agency, Inc. v. Hooker, 280 S.W.2d 849, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 148 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Wyler Watch Agency, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as Wyler Watch), with its principal office in the City of New York, sued defendant, Harbert D. Hooker, for $2,914.55 on a running account for Wyler watches sold to defendant. In his answer, defendant admitted purchase of the- watches at “the pric'es” charged in plaintiff’s statement - of .account, which “were .reasonable and proper.” But, “by way of an affirmative! defense,” .defendant *851 averred “that said merchandise was to he paid for out of the proceeds realized from the production and sale of an invention of defendant, which' plaintiff agreed to market for the mutual advantage” of both plaintiff and defendant. As described in defendant’s patent application, his' invention (hereinafter referred to, as did the parties in their testimony, simply as the machine) was a mechanical device “which will automatically subject a watch'or other article to repeated impacts against an 'abutment or backstop and immersion in a water-filled container, intermittently withdrawing the watch from the container and returning it to its initial position.”

In his counterclaim, defendant averred that one Samuel Bitkower of Chicago, a sales representative of Wyler Watch, after seeing “a working model” of the machiné, “requested he redesign Said machine into a smaller and more compact model and then, if defendant could ■ obtain a patent thereon, plaintiff would buy the machine for sale to their dealers”; that defendant “accordingly did redesign and perfect a smaller model” which, after it had been patented, was exhibited to'Alfred'Wyler, President of Wyler Watch, in New York; that thereafter in May, 1950, Bitkower “requested permission to'take the machine to. Chicago to see what it would cost to have them, made”; that Bitkower subsequently advised defendant that “he (Bit-kower) had employed a firm to rriake' the plate's and molds for the machine and that he could have them manufactured for * * $37 each, and that plaintiff would pay all expense of labor and material in developing the machine and deduct such expense from the sale thereof when production was under way, * * * to which proposition defendant agreed”; and, that defendant expended $3,000 “in the developing, redesigning, patenting and other matters incident to the production of the machine in accordance with the agreement with plaintiff, as aforesaid.” (All emphasis herein is ours.) Defendant further averred that plaintiff, through Bitkower, made false, fraudulent and malicious representations to defendant “concerning the manufacture and marketing of his invention,” by reason of which defendant also sought punitive damages of $10,000. •

Following trial, judgment for $2,914.55 was entered on plaintiff’s petition. In respect to defendant’s counterclaim, the court found that “defendant was led to believe by the actions of the plaintiff that said Bit-kower was their agent and representative in the matter of the perfecting, manufacturing and * * * sale of said machine”; and that, relying thereon, “plaintiff ’ made numerous trips securing pa.rts and to perfect the machine and much time and effort * * * to make a finished model,” for which “he should be compensated.” Finding also that plaintiff “through its agent Bitkower wrongfully and wilfully deprived defendant of his money, his time, his efforts and have failed to perform their part of the agreement and have misled the defendant and maliciously caused him dam.age,” the court entered judgment on defendant’s counterclaim for $1,984 actual damages and $2,500 punitive damages, directed that the judgments on the petition and counterclaim be offset, and authorized execution against plaintiff for $1,569.45. Significantly, the judgment did not .indicate what "the agreement”' was.

The primary issue in this- case is as to the nature and scope of Bitkower’s agency as a sales .representative of Wyler Watch. Defendant', owned, and operated - jewelry stores at Poplar Bluff, Missouri,. an(l at Piggott and Rector, Arkansas. When salesman Bitkower first called on defendant (at a time in 1947 or 1948 not fixed definitely in the record), he saw the fir-st working model of . a shock resistance demonstrator, which however was, as defendant stated it, “too large and bundle-some and wouldn’t be practical”; but; according to defendant, Bitkower then sa.id “if I (defendant) could develop something that would be useful and practical that Wyler Watch Agency would be glad to buy it from me.” Defendant “finally got a model entirely different from the first, but for the same purpose.” That was the machine patented. After defendant had perfected the machine, he wrote Wyler *852 Watch in New -York on August 22, 1949, describing the perfected machine and suggesting that '“if you or any of your men are coming this way I would like to sell the machine to. you as I do not have finances to manufacture them and to put them on the market.” On August 26, 1949, Paul Wyler, Vice-President and Treasurer of Wyler Watch, replied that, since “we do not exactly know what it is all about, we would like you to wait until our sales representative passes through Poplar Bluff, in order that he may send us ra full report in the matter.” During the Fall of 1949, Bitkower called on defendant in Poplar Bluff. “On this particular trip he just told me (defendant) he couldn’t do anything, and suggested that I take the machine and go to Washington and get it patented * ⅜ *. They was already working on the patent and it would increase the speed to go there.” Thereafter, defendant went to Washington, D. C., in connection with his patent application and then proceeded to New York, where he talked with Alfred Wyler, President of Wyler Watch, about the perfected machine. When asked whether “you were in hope that Wyler would buy your patent,” defendant answered, “that was my business up there”; and, to the specific inquiry as to whether Alfred told him then that Wy-ler Watch “would buy the patent,” defendant replied “no, said they wanted the brother (Paul Wyler) to see it.” Paul was ■gone that day and defendant returned to Poplar Bluff without seeing him.

“Some 'few days” later, defendant received a telegram from Alfred Wyler (not offered in evidence) asking “where the machine was, they wanted to see it.” Defendant told Alfred Wyler that the machine was in Poplar Bluff, and Alfred is reported to have said that “they would have someone come and see about it.” In May, 1950, Bit-kower came to Poplar Bluff again. On that occasion, Bitkower’s “proposition” was, as stated in defendant’s testimony, “that he (Bitkower) wanted to take the machine to Chicago where they could get * * * them manufactured cheaper and then we would make an agreement — he would -take the machine to .Chicago, and would try to see whát he could get the plates and molds made for, and get the machine manufactured for, and he left with the machine.”

In August, 1950, Bitkower told defendant in a long distance telephone conversation “that the forms and molds (for use in commercial production of the machine) had been made and six machines were ready and he was bringing one of them” to Poplar Bluff.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W.2d 849, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyler-watch-agency-inc-v-hooker-moctapp-1955.