Bader v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co.

113 S.W. 1154, 134 Mo. App. 135, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 622
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 1154 (Bader v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bader v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co., 113 S.W. 1154, 134 Mo. App. 135, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 622 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

BLAND P. J.

The action is bottomed on the following contract:

“This agreement, made and entered into this thirty-first day of Jnly, 1900, by and between W. H. Huffman, of Pemiscot county, in the State of Missouri, party of the first part, and J. W. Thompson, of Pemiscot county, Missouri, party of the second part, witnesseth: That the said party of the second part, in consideration of the covenants and agreements herein contained, and in consideration of and in order to pay certain debts due and owing to first party, as well as for debts due Pemiscot County Bank for which said first party is indorser, the second party agrees to and with the said first party, that said first party shall be empowered to collect and shall collect and apply toward the payment of the debts due to the said first party and to Pemiscot County Bank the proceeds of all timber which I have bought from Joe Little, Frank Avis, Scott McDonald, also the timber on forty acres land bought of John Sullivan, near Kinfolks Ridge, and that which is on my land, and all the timber now on the bank of river, all on Island 16 and under contract to Chicago Mill & Lumber Company, and any and all timber which I may come in possession of, excepting a claim of Chicago Mill & Lumber Company of f303, which is to be paid first out of proceeds of said timber; all other proceeds of timber shall be subject to order of said first party until the debts above-mentioned are paid. This agreement shall not be revoked or rescinded by either of the parties hereto, until the whole of the said indebtedness owing from the said second party to the first party and Pemiscot County Bank shall have been paid [139]*139and discharged in full; provided, that the same may be revoked and rescinded if both of said parties hereto agree to revoke and rescind the same.

“This agreement shall he taken and considered by the Chicago Mill & Lumber Company as an order for the payment of said sum to the said first party. This agreement may he accepted by the said Chicago Mill & Lumber Company by their indorsement, but the same shall be as valid and binding upon the parties hereto as though indorsed by said party above-named.”

The defendant accepted the provisions of the contract -and from time to time paid money to W. H. Huffman in recognition of its acceptance. The facts and circumstances leading up to and existing at the time the contract was made, succinctly stated, are as follows: “The mill company had a contract with Thompson for the delivery of timber on the banks of the Mississippi river, in Pemiscot county, some of which had been delivered at the time the contract sued on was entered into. Some of the timber Thompson agreed to deliver was to be cut from his own land, the balance from the land of the parties named in the contract, which timber the mill company had purchased for Thompson. Huffman was engaged in a general mercantile business at Oaruthersville, and Thompson had become indebted to him in the sums named in the contract. After, the execution of the contract, Huffman furnished Thompson such supplies, on credit, as were necessary to enable him to continue the delivery of logs on his contract with defendant. Huffman died January 1, 1901, at which date Thompson owed him the sum of $358.68 for supplies furnished after the execution of the contract. After Huffman’s death his son Carl continued the mercantile business in his father’s name and continued to extend credit to Thompson until the amount, including the notes mentioned in the contract, amounted to $1,311.19, exclusive of credits by payments made by the mill company. The [140]*140action is to recover this balance. By agreement of parties the canse was referred to B. A. McKay, Esq., as referee. McKay qualified, heard the evidence and made the following- report to the court:

“I, the undersigned, duly appointed by the Pemiscot Circuit Court as referee to hear and try all the issues in said cause, a certified copy of which appointment is hereto annexed, do hereby report my proceedings as such referee:
“I did, on the sixteenth day of May, 1906, take the oath prescribed by law, which said oath is hereto annexed, and herewith returned.
“And on the seventeenth day of May, 1906, said plaintiff appearing by S. J. Corbett and C. G. Shepard, his attorneys, and said defendant appearing by Faris and Oliver, its attorneys, and both parties waiving notice by the referee of the time and place for the hearing of said cause, announced themselves ready for the hearing of said cause, I proceeded to hear the evidence.
“The evidence offered by both plaintiff and defendant, together with the rulings thereon, will appear by the transcript thereof hereto annexed, which, together with the exhibits offered and referred to in said hearing, and which are attached to the transcript of the evidence, make a part of this report.
“Upon the evidence thus adduced I find the facts to be as follows:
“On the thirty-first day of July, 1900, one J. W. Thompson, who was engaged in placing along the banks of the Mississippi river certain logs for the defendant herein, and being a man of limited means desired to have plaintiff furnish him with merchandise and extended to him certain other credit; that upon said thirty-first day of July, 1900, said J. W. Thompson and W. H. Huffman made and entered into a written contract, by which said Thompson agreed to and by the terms of said contract empowered said W. H. Huff[141]*141man to collect all moneys due to said J. W. Thompson by defendant herein until said W. H. Huffman should be fully paid for all credit extended said Thompson by said Huffman. By the terms of said contract certain indebtedness was expressed as being- the debts due and owing by said Thompson to said Huffman as well as certain debts due Pemiscot County Bank.
“I further find that said defendant herein became guarantor for said Thompson under the terms of said contract; that subsequent to the making of said contract said defendant notified said Huffman that it had been informed that Thompson intended giving him, said Huffman, an order for all balance due on all logs, and that as soon as defendant was notified of such fact it would pay no money to any one except Huffman.
“I further find that on the first day of January, 1901, said W. H. Huffman departed this life and that said J. W. Thompson was at said date then indebted to said W. H. Huffman in a considerable sum; that subsequent to the death of said W. H. Huffman, Carl Huffman, the son of the deceased, carried on and conducted said mercantile business of the said W. H. Huffman for the benefit of the estate; that said Carl Huffman was uncertain as to his right, after the death of said W. H. Huffman, to further extend credit under the terms of this contract, and before proceeding further under said contract, he advised with said Thompson and with one D. L. Russell, who was the agent of the defendant, as to the propriety of proceeding further under the terms of said contract; that they all conferring together interpreted said contract to give Carl Huffman the right, representing the estate of W. H. Huffman, to continue furnishing Thompson the same as W. H. Huffman had been doing in his lifetime, and that J. W. Thompson was to receive no money out of said logs until the indebtedness then owing to the estate of W. H. Huffman, as well as all the goods, moneys and merchandise furnished said J. W. Thompson by [142]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 1154, 134 Mo. App. 135, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bader-v-chicago-mill-lumber-co-moctapp-1908.