Alexander v. Clark

83 Mo. 481
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 Mo. 481 (Alexander v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Clark, 83 Mo. 481 (Mo. 1884).

Opinion

Norton, J.

This suit was commenced in the probate court of Montgomery county upon an account of $2,037.58 and interest. Prom the probate court it was taken to the circuit court of said county, and from there by change of venue to the circuit court of Audrain county, where it was tried and a verdict and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff for the amount of his demand, and defendant appealed. Appellant having failed to make any statement of the case we adopt that made by respondent, in so far as we believe it to conform to the record.

The evidence showed that previous to the year 1861, Geo. Y. Bast, William H. Bast and B. W. Alexander ( plaintiff) were doing business in St. Louis and Denver, Colorado, as a mercantile firm under the name and style of Bast, Alexander & Co. During the year of 1860 plaintiff and Wm. H. Bast bought the interest of Geo. Y. Bast in the concern.- • In 1861 the firm ceased to do business, [484]*484and all the assets were transferred to plaintiff, who was authorized to settle up the affairs. The transfer was made for this purpose only, plaintiff agreeing to sell the goods, collect the accounts and apply the amount realized to the payment of the debts, and to account to W. H. Bast. This agreement was in writing. On the 29th day of October, 1864, W. H. Bast transferred to Geo. Y. Bast,, defendant’s testator, all his interest in the unsettled business, which transfer was endorsed in writing on said agreement. Plaintiff continued in the settlement of said business until February, 1870, when, in order to ascertain how the business stood, Geo. Y. Bast employed an expert book-keeper to make an account of the business te that. date. In making this account there was some dispute over certain items of credit which plaintiff claimed. These were finally agreed upon. When this account was taken it appeared that all the debts had been paid, and that plaintiff had paid to Bast considerable sums of money. On this accounting it was found that the concern owed plaintiff $4,490.16, one-half of which being $2,245.08, was due plaintiff from Bast. The account, as thus taken, was agreed to by both parties, and Bast agreed that he should be bound by it. At that time there were about $4,000 consisting of uncollected accounts, and some land which the parties thought might be made available, and Bast and plaintiff agreed that plaintiff should go on, collect what accounts he could, sell the land and apply what was realized towards payment of the balance, and whatever was not paid by that means Bast would pay plaintiff. Under this arrangement the matter was left until May, 1879, when the last piece of land was sold, and the accounts having proved unavailable, plaintiff credited the amount realized on the land and a balance remained due him from Bast of $2,087.58, which plaintiff demanded and payment was refused. This is the claim presented by plaintiff in this case. The account was exhibited to the probate court for allowance September 10, 1880. It was admitted that George Y. Bast died in December, 1879.

[485]*485To defeat the claim defendant relied solely on the statute of limitations and the statute of frauds. Contending first that the account taken in 1870, was an account stated, and the statute of limitation commence^, running from that date; second, that there was no consideration for an extension of the time of the payment and the agreement that payment might be delayed was void ; third, that when the credit in 1879 was made the account was already barred and could not thus be revived; fourth, that the agreement of Bast to pay the balance found due on the account taken should have been in writing, and not being so was within the statute of frauds.

Prom the instructions on the part of plaintiff;, as well as those given for defendant, it is evident that the trial •court tried the case on the theory that the settlement made in 1870 was not a final settlement of all matters pertaining to the partnership affairs, but only a final settlement of the old books of the firm up to the date of settlement, and that it was agreed as part and parcel of said settlement, that the then ascertained balance in favor of plaintiff was not to be payable till Alexander, the plaintiff, made what he could from collections of assets of the firm and the sale of some land, which were not included in the account as stated, and which both parties considered available, and that the action of plaintiff was not barred by limitation, if plaintiff did not and could not by reasonable effort realize upon all said outstanding assets till in July, 1879. The evidence introduced tended to establish this theory. Mr. Miltenberger, an accountant who had been called upon by Mr. Bast to make an examination of the books, to ascertain whether he, Bast, owed Alexander or Alexander owed Bast, was introduced as a witness, and among other things, testified as follows :

“At the time I made the balances and delivered them, George Y. Bast and B. W. Alexander had an agreement that they would both abide by the balance that I made as a final settlement between them of the [486]*486old books and after the settlement Alexander wanted to know of Dr. Bast if lie was then ready to settle np tke balance and pay him the amount due Mm as found in tke settlement. Dr. Bast replied to Mm, ‘No, I am not ready until you try furtker to collect on the outstanding accounts and sell tke lands. Go akead and do that and apply it on tke debt I owe you and if anything more is due you, then I will pay it.’ Dr. Bast examined the books with me and was perfectly satisfied with the balance found. At tke time of tke settlement we all selected accounts to the extent of about $4000.00 ($900.00 of which was lands estimated at that sum and incorporated in the balance sheet) which Alexander and Bast directed me to treat as available and lay them aside for future collection, which were turned over to Alexander to settle the amount due Mm if they could be collected, and carry all the rest of the unpaid accounts to the profit and loss account as worthless, which I did. The understanding between Bast and Alexander was about this :
The remaining assets which were treated as probably good were to be collected as far as they could by Alexander and applied to the payment of the balance due Mm. The lands belonging to the concern were, also, to-be sold by Alexander, and the proceeds applied on the-balance due Mm, and after the collections were exhausted and the lands sold, Dr. Bast was to pay any balance yet due to Mr. Alexander. The accounts turned over for further collection turned out to be worthless. I do not. know about the sale of the land.”
The theory upon which the case was tried is further-sustained by the fact that neither party, subsequently to-the settlement, treated it as a final adjustment, for on tke 14th of August, 1873, plaintiff wrote the following-letter which was put in evidence:
“St. Louis, August 14, 1873,
To Geobg-e Y. Bast, Esq.,
DeaeSie: I-have now whittled down your [487]*487indebtedness to me to about two thousand two hundred dollars, and I write you now to know if you have any proposition to make me in the way of settlement, or would you prefer having a suit to settle % Please advise me as I am now at the end of rope in collections on all claims in my hands. Respectfully,
B. W. Alexander.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Green v. Cole
30 S.W. 135 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Mo. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-clark-mo-1884.