112 A. 639 | Conn. | 1921
The plaintiff's case is founded on his claim as originally presented to the defendant, that he had "information of value in the operation of the defendant's road" which he offered to communicate for a valuable consideration. It was agreed that if he would communicate the information to the defendant and the defendant used it, the plaintiff should receive five per cent of the receipts derived from such use. Plaintiff did communicate his information and the defendant used it, making thereby large sums of money, but has not paid the plaintiff his commission. The information communicated, pursuant to this proposition, was, as stated in *707 the complaint: "the selling of advertising space by the defendant and the displaying by it of advertisements on its railway stations, depots, rights of way, cars and fences." This all appears from the complaint, to which the demurrer was filed and upon which judgment was rendered.
Under the plaintiff's proposition to furnish "information of value," what should the defendant look for, what should it be entitled to learn in return for the conditional five per cent? Clearly information of value in the operation of the road. What did it get? The bald proposition "sell advertising space." The defendant in its demurrer, set out in full in the statement of facts, claims that this information furnishes no consideration for the claimed contract, because the idea was not new nor exclusively within the plaintiff's knowledge, but was perfectly obvious and well known to all men, and that it could have no market value so as to form the consideration for a contract; that it did not appear that the plan suggested was not already known to the defendant and a matter of common knowledge, and that the idea was not property, nor did it constitute consideration for a promise.
"Information" is defined to be knowledge communicated concerning some particular fact, subject, or event; and its synonyms are "intelligence," "news." Oxford Dictionary, by Murray. In Webster's New International Dictionary it is defined as "news; advices"; . . . "knowledge communicated by others or obtained by personal study and investigation; intelligence; knowledge derived from reading, observation, or instruction." An "informant" is one who "gives information." When information is proffered as the consideration for a contract, it is necessarily implied — is indeed of the essence of the proffer — that the information shall be new to the one to whom it is proffered. *708 A statement to one of what he already knows is not as to him information, but merely a statement of a fact already known. The imparting of information, in a situation like this, must involve an active process resulting in arousing or suggesting ideas or notions not before existent in the mind of the recipient; otherwise it is not information in the true sense of the term, although it may be a statement of fact.
When the representatives of the defendant met the plaintiff and made the agreement, they were entitled to assume that before they could be bound, or in any way obligated to the plaintiff, they were to obtain information in the true sense of the word, and, further, to assume that it would be a statement of something which they did not know and which was not generally known in the railway world. If the information in fact furnished by the plaintiff does not come up to the standard of his proposition, it counts for nothing.
The defendant was not to be precluded from the use thereafter of any common or well-known idea without payment to the plaintiff of a royalty or commission, merely because he chose to impart it as the information of value he had proposed to furnish and on the faith of which the defendant had entered into this agreement. In fact, there was nothing new or novel, nothing valuable in the abstract proposition, "sell advertising space." No way or method was suggested by the plaintiff of making the idea effective or valuable. No system of selling or of reaching advertisers was devised by the plaintiff or explained to the defendant. His proposition gave the defendant no more information than if he had said: "Carry more passengers or haul more freight."
We take judicial notice that the idea of selling advertising space is in the common knowledge and use of the people of this country as well as of foreign countries. It appears from the encyclopaedias that wall *709 space, natural or artificial, has been used for advertising purposes at least from before the destruction of Pompeii to the present time. To such an extent has this use gone that many attempts have been made to stop its abuse. See article "Advertising," New International Encyclopaedia. It is said that in England posters and placards in railway stations and upon public vehicles still embarrass the traveller who desires to find the name of a station or the destination of a vehicle. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Ed. (1910), article "Advertisement." Nothing, in fact, is better known than the use of space wherever available and obtainable for the display of advertisements, whether it is inside of buildings or on the outside, on billboards erected for the purpose or on the natural rock, the only limitation, apparently, being that it shall be open to a more or less extensive public view. We can recall no mercantile or trade practice — a practice also often extending to the inculcation of political and religious doctrines — more universally practiced and known than this of the use of space, necessarily wall space, natural or artificial, for advertising purposes. To communicate this idea gives no new knowledge, no information in the sense in which that word must be used in the present case.
"To take judicial notice is a function, and to apply it to the decision of causes a right, which appertains to every court of justice, from the lowest to the highest, and in the exercise of appellate no less than original jurisdiction." Arthur v. Norfield Congregational Church,
The plaintiff contends that advantage cannot be taken upon demurrer of the defect of want of consideration due to common knowledge and use. We do not see why. If the record shows a proper subject of judicial notice, it is as much in the case and as much part of the record as though specifically alleged.
The plaintiff further says: "There is no rule of law that one can refuse to pay for what he has agreed to pay because it tells him nothing." And counsel say, well enough, one cannot refuse to pay for a book he has ordered because it tells him nothing new. But suppose, as here, that the agreement to pay is based on a condition implied in the nature of the proposition made, that information of value is to be furnished and the information furnished is not such because long known to everybody and suggestive of nothing new; then what is offered as consideration for the agreement turns out to be no consideration, and the agreement falls. It is like the case of the book ordered because it is represented that it will give certain specific information, and may be rejected for false representations.
Perhaps the most plausible argument of the plaintiff is, that the defendant had for several decades been running a railroad without carrying into effect the plan outlined by the plaintiff, that it received the plan from the plaintiff, agreeing to pay for it if used, and at once availed itself of the plan with financial benefit to itself. The fallacy here is that the plaintiff furnished no plan within the meaning of the proposition. The proposition to sell advertising space on defendant's property is an idea pure and simple. The plaintiff, assuming that the idea was his, the result of his studies, observation and experience as brakeman and baggage-master for fifteen years, attempted to protect this idea by the contract in question. An idea may undoubtedly be protected by contract. Haskins v. Ryan,
We cannot fail to notice that the plaintiff's argument largely proceeds upon the theory, implied at least, that *712 the nature of the information was before the defendant when it made this contract. Directly the contrary was true. The agreement was conditional upon receiving information of value. As shown above, such information was not received.
Finally, the plaintiff claims novelty and originality for his idea, because it was applied to steam railroads. We can see no such distinction between wall space and billboards on steam railroad property and on street railway and other property as will justify the claim. The situation is analogous to the often-cited case ofBrown v. Piper,
The defendant bases its demurrer, in part, upon the indefiniteness, uncertainty and vagueness of the alleged contract, but in the disposition of the case already made it is unnecessary to discuss that phase of the demurrer.
The contract alleged is fundamentally defective for want of consideration.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.