Court Opinion

ID: 8012711
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:00:05.224813+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:44.284953
License: Public Domain

Barclav, P. J.
This action was brought to recover $5,000 damages for alleged breach of a contract. The plaintiffs are the firm of D. May & Company who carry on the mercantile establishment in St. Louis, generally known by the name of “Famous.” The defendants, D. Crawford & Company, have a large department store on the same street as plaintiffs and nearly opposite to plaintiffs’ store.
In January, 1894, both of the firms were operating these large stores when the contract in suit was made between them for the purposes expressed in it. The price which defendants paid for the goods they acquired under the agreement was about $46,000. The plaintiffs still retained a large stock, amounting to the cost value of over $350,000, and were competitors of defendants in various lines of retail trade. The goods sold by plaintiffs to defendants consisted of black and colored dress goods, silks, satins, velvets, plushes, linens, white goods, domestics, woolens, cotton goods, lace curtains, draperies, portieres, upholstery, blankets, comfortables, lap robes, linings, notions, leather goods (except boots and shoes), art needlework, fancy goods, *396jewelry, perfumes, soaps, toilet articles, kid gloves, fabric gloves, silk mittens, woolen mittens, dress trimmings, mohair goods, silk braids, buttons, buckles, laces, embroideries, handkerchiefs, veilings, ruchings, ladies’ neckwear, muslin underwear, corsets, lace caps, silk caps, infants’ wear, sewing machines, and various et ceteras of a similar kind, kept in the departments into which these 'various goods had been distributed. The goods retained by the plaintiffs, in the store called “Famous,” after making this sale to the defendants, consisted of the clothiug, the house furnishing goods, the china and crockery, the men’s furnishing goods, and hats, caps, trunks, and valises. They sold to the defendants all the goods in the departments above described, and went out of business so far as those lines were concerned, but continued business in their departments containing the goods last enumerated. After this sale the plaintiffs ceased to be competitors with the defendants, in respect.of the goods so sold to them, but continued to be competitors in respect of the goods retained by themselves.
The principal parts of the contract are as follows, after a recital of agreement by plaintiffs to sell to defendants certain goods, etc., “which D. May & Company have on hand in their store at the close of business on the ninth day of January, 1894, situated in the building of the Famous Shoe & Clothing Co,, on the northwest corner of Broadway and Morgan street, in the city of St. Louis, viz.: black and colored dress goods kept and sold in department F; silks, satins, velvets and plushes, kept and sold in department (?; linens and white goods, kept and sold in department R; domestics, woolen, cotton goods, etc., kept and sold in department I; lace curtains, draperies, portieres, upholstery, blankets, comfortables, laprobes, etc., kept and sold in department J-, linings kept and sold in *397department K; notions, leather goods, art needlework, fancy goods, jewelry, perfumes, soaps, toilet articles, etc., kept and sold in department N; kid gloves, fabric gloves, silk mittens, woolen mittens, etc., kept and sold in department 0; dress trimmings, mohair, silk braids, buttons, buckles, etc., kept and sold in department P; laces, embroideries, etc., kept and sold in department Q-, handkerchiefs, veilings, ruchings, ladies’ neckwear, etc., kept and sold in department R; muslin underwear, corsets, lace and silk caps, infants’ wear, sewing machines, etc., kept and sold in department S. It being the intention of said D. May & Company in selling, and said D. Craw-, ford & Company in buying', the merchandise in the aforementioned departments, that said transfer of merchandise shall include any and all other articles kept and sold by said D. May & Co. in said departments not heretofore particularly and -individually mentioned.” Then follows a statement of the method by which the value of the goods shall be arrived at, and then the contract proceeds, beginning a paragraph, as follows:
“The receipt of five thousand ($5,000) dollars is by these presents acknowledged by D. May & Co. from said D. Crawford & Co., as a part payment on the purchase price of said merchandise hereinabove enumerated; it being understood that the balance that maybe found to be due D. May & Co., upon the completion of the invoice by them, shall be paid them in cash, without discount or deduction, upon said completed invoice being tendered D. Crawford & Co. and prior to the removal of the goods herein sold. It is mutually agreed and understood, as a condition of this sale, that D. Crawford & Co., the purchasers herein, are by these presents restricted and prohibited from in any way, ■ directly or indirectly, by means of the public press, *398posters, circulars (mailed or distributed), of by any other public means of any kind or nature whatsoever, from using in their advertisements of the purchase of the above mentioned merchandise, the general term, ‘dry goods,’ ‘house furnishing goods,’ ‘chinaware,’ ‘shoes,’ ‘clothing,’ ‘shirt waists,’ ‘cloaks,’ ‘wraps,’ ‘suits,’ ‘furs,’ ‘fur trimmings,’ ‘men’s and boys’ hats and caps,’ ‘ribbons,’ ‘millinery,’ or anything pertaining thereto. It being distinctly agreed and understood that the said D. Crawford & Co. shall be permitted to advertise no other articles as having been bought by them from the said D. May & Co., or ‘Famous,’ than those actually sold and delivered to them by D. May & Co., and enumerated as sold and kept in the departments mentioned in the first portion of this agreement. As a penalty to insure the faithful carrying out of this provision of this agreement said D. Crawford & Co., individually and collectively for themselves, their heirs, administrators, successors, and assigns, bind themselves forever in the penal sum of five thousand dollars, lawful money of the United States, to be paid said D. May & Co., as liquidated damages, in lieu of all other damages, for their breach or breaches of the above provision, which said D. May & Co. may be entitled to recover by suit brought in any competent court.
“In order that this agreement pertaining to the purchase and delivery of the merchandise herein enumerated may be faithfully carried out by both of the parties hereto, it is understood and agreed that if the said D. May & Co. shall fail to deliver the said goods, wares and merchandise herein described, to said D. Crawford & Co. at the time and price herein agreed upon, then the said D. May & Co. shall forfeit to the said D. Crawford & Co. the sum of ten thousand dollars, as liquidated damages in lieu of any other dam*399ages under this contract; and in the event that the said D. Crawford & Co. shall fail to accept the aforesaid goods, wares and merchandise, at the time they may be tendered to them after completion of inventory, or shall fail to pay the amount due as a balance on the purchase price as agreed upon herein for said goods, wares and merchandise, then said D. Crawford & Co. agree, in lieu of all other damages under this agreement, that they will pay to said D. May & Co., as liquidated damages for their breach or breaches, as in this section specified, the sum of ten thousand dollars. It is understood that in the event of the breach or breaches of this agreement and any failure to pay the liquidated damages which may be due by either of said parties hereto, that suit may be instituted in any competent court to recover the said liquidated damages.”
The particular complaint made by plaintiffs in respect of this contract is thus stated in their petition:
“But that defendants failed to keep the agreement entered into between plaintiffs and defendants in said contract, by which defendants were restricted and prohibited therein from in any way, directly or indirectly, by means of the public press, posters (mailed or distributed) , or by any other public means of any kind or nature whatsoever, from using in their said advertisements of the purchase of the above merchandise the general terms, ‘dry goods,’ ‘house furnishing goods,’ ‘chinaware,’ ‘shoes,’ ‘clothing,’ ‘shirt waists,’ ‘cloaks,’ ‘wraps,’ ‘suits,’ ‘furs,’ ‘fur trimmings,’ ‘men and boys’ hats and caps,’ ‘ribbons,’ ‘millinery,’or anything pertaining thereto, and violated the same. But defendant failed to keep the agreement set forth in said contract by which they agreed to. advertise no other articles as having been bought by them from said D. May & Co., or ‘Famous,’ than those actually sold and delivered by *400said D. May & Co., and enumerated as sold and kept in the departments mentioned in the first portion of the aforesaid agreement, and violated the same. That said defendants, in total disregard of their agreements with the plaintiffs, made in said contract, advertised, by means of the public press and posters, other articles as having been bought by them from said plaintiffs, or ‘Famous,’ than those actually sold and delivered to them by said D. May & Co., and used in their advertisements of the merchandise mentioned in said contract, the general terms they were prohibited from using by said contract, by reason whereof defendants became indebted to plaintiffs in the sum of five thousand ($5,000) dollars, to be paid by said defendants to D. May & Co., as liquidated damages as stipulated by the terms of said contract.”
In support of this petition the appellants offered in evidence (among other matters) four advertisements published in different St. Louis newspapers. This evidence tends to show that in advertising the property purchased under the contract, the respondents used the words “Famous” and “Famous stock,” and in one case the words “dry goods,” though not in the description of the goods purchased from, the appellants. Plaintiffs also offered in evidence photographs of two signs on the store of respondents in which the words “Famous” is used. But we need not go into the particulars of plaintiffs’ testimony as to the breach of that part of the contract which relates to advertising. The learned trial judge found (and we think, correctly) that defendants had broken the agreement “by inserting in the newspapers the advertisements in evidence in the case, and by the posters placed by them on their store” to quote the language of the judge in a declaration of law on that point.
The serious contest in the circuit court was on the *401issue whether or not plaintiffs were entitled to recoyer the sum of $5,000 as declared in the part of the contract referred to. The court asserted the negative and accordingly instructed as follows: “The court declares that upon a proper construction of the contract between the plaintiffs and the defendants, given in evidence, and upon which the suit is instituted, the sum of $5,000 mentioned therein is to be construed as a penalty, and not as liquidated damages.” The court further declared that plaintiffs were entitled only to nominal damages. The result of these declarations of law was a finding for plaintiffs for one cent, followed by a judgment for that amount and costs. Plaintiffs duly appealed, after the usual steps preliminary.
1. The problem whether or not a stipulation for ■a fixed sum (as compensation for the breach of a contract) is to be held a penalty or liquidated damages is often one of difficulty, as are many similar problems in the law which require the courts to surmise what parties to a contract intended. All the cases on this subject agree that the mere language parties have used is to be legally moulded into the form which their intent reveals. Thus cases are to be found in which an express stipulation for ¿ penalty has been held to give a right to ■damages in the sum named. Whereas, on the other hand, damages (called by the parties “liquidated”) have been frequently pronounced a penalty, and as such not recoverable. Eoiyunder the modern common law, especially as interpreted in the United States, parties may not stipulate absolutely for a price for the breach of some immaterial or trivial part of .their contract. Such a stipulation is theoretically against the policy of the law as declared .by the courts, which have established a supervision of agreements by a long course of precedents and*’acquiescence by the people therein.
*402The touchstone of validity of contracts of the sort before us is found by solving the question whether the amount ostensibly awarded, for the breach complained of, is or is not reasonably appropriate and just, regard being had to the nature of the stipulation for the possible breach of which the agreement provides.
The nature of the contract to be kept is the paramount fact to be grasped in getting at what the parties intended in providing against its violation.
The fact that some of the particulars of the agreement are less weighty than others, is an important consideration in reaching the true intent of the parties, as has been stated in several Missouri decisions; but it is not an absolute guide to that intent any more than is the use in the contract of the bare words “penalty” or “liquidated damages” an infallible index to the meaning of the parties. The true question is whether, in view of the actual breach complained of, the sum nominated in the contract is to be fairly regarded as penalty, or as a fair measure of the real damage in the estimation of the parties most familiar with the probable effects of its breach.
At bar we have a case in which the effect of certain sorts of advertising of retail dealings by a large department store comes in question. The parties determine in advance the bearing that certain' advertisements will have on the business of a rival concern, in the very peculiar circumstances indicated by the contract itself. Will anyone contend that the true damage of such advertising as plaintiffs stipulated against is represented by the award of mere nominal damages? Yet what measure of damage could be proven, in the absence of ■ the stipulation? Such injury to the business as might be shown to be the natural and probable consequences of the breatíh of agreement. But how difficult it is to prove an injury to business, especially from the mere *403advertising of a rival concern. The firms involved in the controversy are substantial concerns and their business operations are large. It appears that plaintiffs’ stock (remaining after the sale to defendants) is over $350,000 in value. The exact damage plaintiffs will suffer is not susceptible of definite ascertainment, and the amount of compensation fixed by the agreement of the parties is not apparently unreasonable when we consider the general character of the transaction, and the business relations of the parties to each other.
Without elaborating the argument, we are satisfied that the trial court was in error in declaring the law so as to permit only the recovery by plaintiffs of nominal damages, and accordingly the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Maceablane, Robinson and Bbace, JJ., concur.