Huling v. Century Publishing & Engraving Co.

108 Ill. App. 549 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1903

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by the Century Publishing and Engraving Company against Madeline E. Huling. Plaintiff declared upon a written contract, and added the common counts. Defendant pleaded the general issue. There was a jury trial, and a verdict and a judgment for plaintiff for $300. Defendant appeals.

Defendant signed and delivered to plaintiff the following instrument:

“ (To be engraved in the style of Emory Cobb but to have a larger vignetted background.)
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY OE ILLINOIS.
To be bound in full morocco and illustrated with fine steel plate and copper plate engravings.
113.
The Century Publishing & Engraving Co., Chicago.
Please execute for me a Steel Plate Engraving of Truman Huling, Dec., (from photograph which I agree to furnish within thirty days from date) and upon receipt of proof impression from the plate I promise to pay you or your order the sum of three hundred dollars ($300).
I hereby authorize you to print, copyright and insert the required number of impressions in volume III Encyclopedia of Biography of Illinois, after which the plate is to be sent to my address.
IT B.
Date, March 30, 1902.
[[Image here]]
E. S. Glover, Associate Editor, Agent.”

There was also on the back thereof, when received at plaintiff's office, in Chicago, the following indorsement, proved to have been in the hand of E. S. Glover, an agent of plaintiff authorized to enter into such arrangements for plaintiff, to wit: “"'One dozen proof - prints to be given with this contract free. - E. S. Glover.” The court sustained an objection by defendant to said indorsement. Plaintiff accepted the proposition so tendered by defendant, prepared a steel plate engraving of Truman Huling, deceased, did many things to make the engraving conform to defendant’s wishes, and in all respects complied with what the written proposition required to be done by plaintiff, unless the engraving was not as artistic and excellent as was called for by the written proposition. Defendant refused to pay the $300.

The first point in dispute is whether the arrangement between the parties was a written or an oral contract. Under the principles laid down in Plumb v. Campbell, 129 Ill. 101, Ames v. Moir, 130 Ill. 582, and Memory v. Niepert, 131 Ill. 623, this was a written proposition, and when accepted and acted upon by plaintiff it became and was a written contract, binding as such upon both parties.

It is argued the court erred in admitting oral proof of the contents of a letter said to have been written by defendant to plaintiff, without sufficient proof of its loss or destruction. Defendant did not abide by her exception to the ruling of the court, but herself offered oral proof of the contents of the letter, and we think she thus waived her exception. She can hardly give oral proof of its contents herself, and still urge it was error to admit oral proof thereof. Her version did not materially differ from that given by plaintiff’s witness. The letter only showed defendant objecting to the proof sent her, and asking for certain alterations, and the other correspondence introduced and all the oral proof was in agreement that she did object at every stage of the transaction after the first proof was submitted, and did call for various alterations at different times. Regardless of the question whether a sufficient foundation was laid for oral proof of the contents of this letter, we hold the objection was waived, and the oral proof so admitted was not harmful to defendant.

Defendant testified that she delivered two photographs of Mr. Huling, marked exhibits B and G, to the agent who took the order, and intrusted him to make the steel plate engraving from exhibit B, except the mouth, and to make the mouth from exhibit O. Defendant called I. W. Powell as a witness, who testified he was a photographer and had been since 1888; that he had examined and enlarged steel engravings in different ways and at different times; that he had been in the enlarging business and had teams on the road for over nine years; that he had never been in the business of making steel plate engravings, nor made a study of it, and knew nothing about how the work of making steel plate, engravings was done except what he had read in photographic journals. He was then shown said photograph exhibit B, and the last steel plate engraving plaintiff submitted to defendant, and was asked to state whether in his opinion and judgment the steel plate engraving was a fairly correct representation of the photograph, with the exception of the mouth. The court sustained an objection to this question. The witness had shown that he was not an expert on steel plate engravings. Further, the contract did not require that the engraving should be a fairly correct representation of the photograph. What the contract required was that the engraving should be made from a photograph defendant was to furnish, and that the picture should be engraved in the style of an engraving of Emory Cobb, but to have a larger vignetted background. There is no proof in this record that a steel plate engraving can be so made as to be “ a fairly correct representation of a photograph.” No doubt plaintiff was bound; to make a steel plate engraving which should be a fairly correct representation of Mr. Huling’s features and expression, engraved in the style of the engraving of Emory Cobb, and its artists were to derive their information solely from the two photographs, and the engraving of Mr. Cobb. But this question, which made no reference to the engraving of Mr. Cobb, was, we think, improper.

While it is possible to so construe instructions numbered one and three, given for plaintiff, as to make them leave it to the jury to decide whether there was a written contract between the parties, yet that was not their purpose. The first told the jury that if plaintff had complied with all the conditions of the contract to be performed by it, and defendant had not performed her part, they should find for plaintiff. The third was that the measure of damages, if any, was' the sum called for by the contract, and was not the worth or value of the services to be rendered, or articles to be furnished by plaintiff. These instructions were correct upon those points. If they incorrectly left it to the jury to determine whether there was a written contract, yet as there was a written contract, and the jury decided that way, no harm was done by any such inaccuracy. Defendant’s instruction number six, refused, was inaccurate, and so far as it was correct it is embodied in instruction number two, given at defendant’s request. Defendant’s refused instruction number seven sought to impose requirements not contained in the written contract.

We see no reason for disturbing the conclusion of the jury upon the controverted question of fact. The judgment is therefore affirmed.

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