DocketNumber: Appeal, 314
Judges: Keller, Cunningham, Baldeige, Stadtfeld, Rhodes, Hist
Filed Date: 10/22/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued October 22, 1941. This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment entered by the court in an action of assumpsit tried by the court without a jury and finding in favor of plaintiff by JONES, J. in the Municipal Court of Philadelphia County in the sum of $91.23. A motion by defendant for judgment non obstante veredicto was filed but overruled by the court.
At the trial a statement of the principal facts was made by counsel for the plaintiff and agreed to by counsel for the defendant.
The admitted statement of facts shows that the plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and doing business at its central office, 11th and Sansom Streets, Philadelphia. It operates an electric burglar alarm system in which the premises of its subscribers are installed with certain electrical equipment and if the premises are in any way disturbed, an electric alarm is communicated over wires to the central office and guards are immediately sent to the premises to apprehend any one not authorized to be there.
Under date of February 26, 1937, the defendant entered into a written contract with the plaintiff for this burglar alarm service. The necessary connections were made on March 10, 1937, and service rendered to the defendant thereafter.
The contract provides for a monthly service charge of $15.25 and the term of the contract was for a period ending April 1, 1938, but to continue on from year to year in the absence of thirty days' written notice to *Page 509 terminate prior to the end of any current term. The contract also provides that in the event of any default on the part of the subscriber, resulting in a breach of the contract, the subscriber is liable for liquidated damages therefor, calculated at the rate of 50% of the service charge to the end of the current term.
On February 28, 1938, the defendant notified the plaintiff in writing as follows: "This is to notify you that we wish to discontinue service at the expiration period as specified in your contract of February 26, 1937. We wish to continue this service on a month to month basis without a thirty day notification. Kindly acknowledge the receipt and oblige, we are Very truly yours, Franco-American Novelty Company Per Maurice Goldstein."
The plaintiff did not acknowledge receipt of the notice nor take any action in connection therewith, but continued to render its service to the defendant. On subsequent dates, the defendant wrote the plaintiff as follows: "April 5, 1938 — Gentlemen: Kindly terminate our contract for safe protection on May- 1st, 1938. Please acknowledge receipt of this letter. Thanking you for your prompt attention, we are Very truly yours, Franco-American Novelty Co."; "June 1st, 1938 — Gentlemen: Kindly be advised that we are discontinuing your service and must have your cabinet removed upon receipt of this letter. Respectfully yours, Franco-American Novelty Co."; "June 3rd, 1938 — Gentlemen: On two previous occasions we notified you to remove your equipment from our premises and to date you have failed to do so. You are herewith advised that unless you remove your property not later than Saturday, June 4th, 1938, we shall forthwith disconnect all of your equipment and hold same at the above address for delivery to you. Very truly yours, Franco-American Novelty Co. P.S. Previous notices to you were on February 28th, and April 5th, 1938."
The plaintiff took no action with respect to the foregoing *Page 510 letters, but on June 4, 1938, the defendant refused to make the necessary manual connections to the alarm in order that the service might be rendered, as a result of which the service was disconnected on that date.
The defendant had paid the monthly service charge to June 1, 1938. The plaintiff claims $1.53 for the actual service rendered to the defendant from June 1, 1938, to June 4, 1938, which is calculated at the rate of $15.25 per month. The plaintiff also claims that as a result of the disconnection and refusal to accept the service, the defendant became liable to the plaintiff in the sum of $75.49 as liquidated damages calculated at the rate of 50% of the service charge from the date of disconnection, June 4, 1938, to the end of the then current term, April 1, 1939.
The plaintiff's witness testified with respect to the physical construction of the alarm system. He said that at the end of the day, when the subscriber closes his premises, it is necessary for the subscriber to give a certain signal and then to lock his door. If this is done, the alarm is set and will stay on until a similar signal is given in the morning for the opening of the place of business. He further said that if at nine o'clock in the evening, the subscriber has not set the alarm, then an investigation is made and it is entirely within the power of the subscriber to refuse to set the alarm and refuse to accept the service. This witness was produced by the plaintiff to show that the refusal to accept the service and the disconnection brought about by the defendant on June 4, 1938, could as well have been done by the defendant on April 1, 1938, or at any other time.
The defendant testified that he had repeatedly written the Holmes Company to the effect that he wanted to disconnect the service but nevertheless continued to accept the service up until June 4, 1938, when he refused to make the necessary connections. He specifically said *Page 511 that he could have refused to accept the service at any other time by doing exactly what he did on June 4, 1938. In answer to a question by the trial judge why he did not refuse the service on April 1, 1938, at the end of his yearly contract period, he said that he wanted to continue the service on a month to month basis until he had completed his arrangements to take another service.
It is the plaintiff's contention that the notice of February 28, 1938, was not a sufficient notice to terminate the contract at the end of the then current term, to wit, April 1, 1938. If plaintiff's contention be correct, it is clear that the contract would renew itself for the further period of one year and that the defendant would be liable under the terms of the contract until April 1, 1939. The plaintiff also contends that the conduct of the defendant in holding over after April 1, 1938, is inconsistent with a termination of the contract and evidences an attempt to continue the contract after April 1, 1938, on a basis never agreed to by the plaintiff.
We quote from the opinion of the Supreme Court in Wright v.Bristol P. Leather Co.,
The notice of February 28, 1938, is deficient under the law to be effective. It is apparent that defendant wished plaintiff's service to continue; it was plainly not his intention to terminate or rescind the contract. By its ambiguity, it may be construed to have been an *Page 512 inquiry regarding a change in the term of the contract, i.e., from year to year to month to month; from one requiring thirty days to terminate to one without the requirement of formal notification.
Inconsistent with defendant's claim that he terminated the contract at the end of the initial period, the defendant continued to accept the service after April 1, 1938. The defendant says, in his affidavit of defense, referring to the letter of February 28, 1938, "In accordance with said letter, the original contract became a contract from month to month without a thirty day notification." The defendant's position must necessarily be that the original contract was not terminated but rather was changed or modified as a result of the notice. When the defendant again wrote to the plaintiff on April 5, 1938, he asked that the contract be terminated on May 1, 1938. This is further evidence that the defendant considered the contract still in effect after April 1, 1938.
Accordingly, the defendant's position must be that the notice of February 28, 1938, did not terminate the contract between the parties, but modified it, at least, to the extent that the contract thereafter continued on a month to month basis. The plaintiff never accepted the defendant's offer to change the terms of the contract, nor can it be said that the plaintiff's non-action in the matter was an implied acceptance or an estoppel.
In Smith, Executor v. Snyder,
We also quote from the opinion of the court below in answer to defendant's contentions: "There is no evidence of an acceptance of the defendant's offer, if the letter be regarded as an offer. The conduct of the plaintiff contradicts any such conclusion for the plaintiff continued to render the same kind of service for the same charge and the defendant continued to accept such service and to pay the charge therefor as under the contract dated February 26, 1937, to and including June 1, 1938. From the standpoint of conduct of the parties after April 1, it is an affirmance of a renewal of the contract. Cases cited by defendant's counsel such as Lineaweaver's Estate,
In our opinion the record does not disclose any termination of the contract according to its terms.
Appellant contends that the provision for liquidated damages under the contract is not enforceable in the event of a breach by the subscriber without proof of the actual damage sustained. *Page 514
The principle governing the disposition of this question is discussed in a very comprehensive opinion by Judge JAMES of this court in Vrooman v. Milgram,
The measure of damage is not limited to the actual costs of disconnection and removal of appellee's facilities, but includes the loss of its bargain or value of its contract. This feature of the case is very aptly discussed in the able opinion of the trial judge from which we quote: "In the instant case it is evident from the nature of the services which the contract discloses were to be rendered by the plaintiff, the satisfactory rendition of which services is not disputed, that damages for the breach of this contract on the part of the subscriber cannot be ascertained by any satisfactory and known rule. Manifestly to render such services as the plaintiff rendered it was required to have employees. The number of the employees and the terms of their employment would be determined by the number of the subscribers and the term-period of the contracts which the plaintiff had with its subscribers. Being thus prepared, as required, to render service to its subscribers, breaches of contracts by discontinuance of service by subscribers necessarily entailed loss to the plaintiff. How to calculate and adjust the damages thus resulting were considered by the parties. Accordingly the contract prescribed the standard of measurement for the determination of damages. The damages are determined by a percentage of the actual charge which was stipulated to be paid for the services which the plaintiff agreed to render during the term of the contract the minimum of which was one year. The defendant knew, as did the plaintiff, exactly what the effect of a breach of the contract would be and that the determination of the amount of the liquidated damages was made to conform to the period of time from the date of the breach to the end of the contract or its renewal. For *Page 516
example, the damages in the case of a breach of the contract thirty days prior to its expiration would be fifty per cent of $15.25. By this standard was the finding in the instant case calculated. The damages undoubtedly meet the requirements of the cited case, for they had `been the subject of actual and fair calculation and adjustment between the parties.' (Shreve v.Brereton,
We find no error in the disposition of the case by the court below.
Judgment affirmed.