164 Ind. 13 | Ind. | 1904
Action by appellees against appellant, the Tnthill Spring Company, for damages for breach of contract to deliver merchandise. The Lincoln Carriage Company and the firm of W. Hare & Sons were made garnishees in a proceeding in attachment incidental to the principal case. The complaint was in eleven paragraphs. Demurrers were sustained to the sixth and seventh paragraphs, and overruled as to the others. Answer in eighteen paragraphs. Reply in denial. Trial by the court, and special finding of facts, with conclusions of law thereon. Motions for a new trial overruled. J udgment for $2,126.74 in favor of appellees and against appellant, Tuthill Spring Company. Judgment against garnishees. Motion for modification of judgment overruled.
Errors are assigned upon the rulings on the demurrers to the third, fourth, fifth, eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh paragraphs of the complaint, the conclusions of law, and on the motions for a new trial and for a modification of the judgment.
1. We can not consider the objections.to the complaint. Counsel for appellants have failed to include in their brief a condensed statement of the contents of the several paragraphs of that pleading, as required by rule twenty-two of this court, and, because of their failure to comply with the rule, the supposed errors in the rulings on the demurrers are not available. Chicago Terminal, etc., Co. v. Walton (1905), 165 Ind. —.
The finding of facts is very long, and it would serve no useful purpose to set it out in detail. Its substance was as follows: At the dates named in the complaint the plaintiffs were partners under the firm name of W. J. Holliday & Co., and carried on the business of wholesale jobbers and
In the regular course of business, R. K. Carter & Co., being desirous of obtaining the right to sell on commission the product of the Tuthill Spring Company, at certain prices, on September 24, 1898, presented to the Tuthill Spring Company their written proposal to. the effect that said company should enter their orders as they should send them in, at the prices named in said proposition, and on the terms named therein, the said R. K. Carter & Co. to be paid a commission of five per cent, on sales, and stipulating that the prices named should remain in force so long as R. K. Carter & Co. should sell; thirty days’ notice of any change to be given by R. K. Carter &. Co. to the Tuthill Spring Company. Thereupon the Tuthill Spring Com
Acting under these agreements, R. K. Carter & Co-, made sales and contracts of sale of carriage, wagon and seat springs to various persons, taking such contracts in their own name, notifying the Tuthill Spring Company of all such sales and contracts, with the names of the actual purchasers, and giving shipping directions; and.the Tuthill Spring Company filled such orders and contracts, and charged, billed and shipped such goods to such actual purchasers accordingly, receiving payment from them, and payipg R. K. Carter & Oo. five- per cent, commission on such sales. At all times in the finding mentioned, the business of the plaintiffs’ firm of W. J. Holliday & Co. was of the kind and class of trade referred to in the Tuthill Spring Company’s letter of December 5, 1898, as the special heavy hardware trade. In 1897, R. K. Carter & Co., in the course of their business, sent to the subscribers there
January 12, 1899, R. K. Carter & Co. sent to their subscribers, including W. J. Holliday & Co.,, a price list as follows: “Carriage and Wagon Springs. Seat I1/4x2x24 at 28 cts. pair. I%x2x25 at 28 cts. pair. 11/2x2x26 at 28 cts. pair. 11/2x2x28 at 33 cts. pair. I%x3x28 at 48 cts. pair. F. O. B. Chicago. Terms, 60 days, 2 per cent. 10 days and usual confidential beyond. Carriage — Black at $2.75; Half Bright, $2.85 ; Bright, $3.10. E. O. B. Chicago. Terms, 4 months or 3 per cent, cash 30 days, and our usual confidential beyond. On large orders can make special prices.”
These prices were those fixed by the appellant by its contract with R. 3L Carter & Co. of September 24, 1898, as modified and increased by appellant’s letter to R. K. Carter & Co. of.December 5, 1898. February 28, 1899, W. J. Holliday & Co. sent R. K. Carter & Co. their written order for 500 pairs of seat springs, one and one-half inches wide, two plate, twenty-six inches long, at twenty-eight cents per pair, and twenty-five pairs seat springs, one and one-half inches wide, three plate, twenty-eight inches long, at forty-eight cents per pair. This order, with special shipping directions and memorandum of terms of payment, was sent by R. K. Carter & Co. to appellant, which ac
On June 15, 1899, W. J. Holliday & Co. sent to- the appellant a written order for a lot of springs, part of which were rubber head springs, and the remainder open head springs. The rubber head springs were shipped to-, and received and paid for by W. J. Holliday & Co. The price for the rubber head springs was three and one-half cents per pound. On receipt of the order of W. J. Holliday & Co., appellant wrote them that it would not accept the order for the open head springs at the prices at which they were ordered, but offered to furnish them at four and three-fourths cents per pound free on board cars at Chicago-, Illinois, which offer was accepted by W. J. Holliday & Co. Hone of the springs so contracted for to be sold and delivered by appellant to W. J. Holliday & Co., mentioned in the eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh findings was furnished or delivered by appellant to W. J. Holliday & Co., excepting
The conclusions of law were as follows“(1) That valid and binding contracts were entered into- between the plaintiffs and defendant, the Tuthill Spring Company, for the manufacture, sale, and delivery by the latter, for and to the former, of all the springs mentioned in said findings eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh; (2) that said statute of the state of Illinois does not apply to nor make invalid the said contracts; (3) that actionable breaches of said contracts were committed by said defendant in the failure to make and deliver the said portions of said springs as stated in the findings; (4) that plaintiffs are entitled to recover of said defendant, as damages for said breaches of said contracts, the sum of $2,126.14, together with all their costs herein, with'relief; (5) that the proceedings in garnishment have been sustained, and that plaintiffs are entitled to have applied in payment on said judgment the said sum of money paid into court by said garnishees Hare & Sons, and are entitled to judgment against said Lincoln Carriage Company, as garnishee, in the sum equal to the remainder of their recovery against the principal defendant, to wit, $1,642.06 and costs.”
The propositions on which counsel for appellant mainly rely for a reversal of'the judgment are (1) that it appears that its contracts were with E. K. Carter & Co.,
2. The special findings were fully sustained by the evidence, which is clear and conclusive upon every fact found. Hothing could be plainer than that R. K. Carter & Co1, were the brokers and agents of appellant, and that they were so treated and recognized by them until the present controversy arose. - The statement of the appellees, W. J. Holliday & Co., that they would hold R. II. Carter & Co. responsible, did not alter the relation of R. K. Carter & Oo. to the appellant nor to W. J. Holliday & Co. Whether they could hold R. K. Carter & Co. responsible or not is immaterial. Appellant’s contracts for the sale and' delivery' of the goods in controversy were with W. J. Holliday & Co., and R. K.. Carter & Go. had no^ interest in them, beyond their commissions which appellant had agreed to pay them for obtaining the orders. Appellant had the privilege of changing the prices of springs, but, under the corrected agreement of December 5, 1898, it could do this only after thirty days’ notice to R. K. Carter & Co., and no such notice was given. The evidence shows no violation of the agreement by W. J. Holliday & Co., and their refusal to agree to pay increased prices wrongfully demanded by appellant was not a breach or violation of their contract.
3. The agreements of the appellant with W. J. Holliday & Go. were not such as were prohibited by the laws of lili
We can hardly conceive of a case where the right of the plaintiff to recover damages could be clearer. The nature of the transaction set forth in the proof is perfectly simple. The appellant, by its duly authorized agents, made a lawful contract with the appellees W. J. Holliday & Co. to deliver certain merchandise. It failed and refused to perform its agreement, and the appellees were damaged by such failure to the amount stated in the finding, the conclusions of law and the judgment. W. J. Holliday & Co. fully performed the contract on their part. The conclusion arrived at by the court upon the evidence was inevitable, and was clearly right.
Hone of the rulings complained of were erroneous. The judgment is affirmed. ■