Bakelite Company v. Miller

372 S.W.2d 867, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 638
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 11, 1963
Docket50098
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 372 S.W.2d 867 (Bakelite Company v. Miller) 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
Bakelite Company v. Miller, 372 S.W.2d 867, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 638 (Mo. 1963).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

A division of Union Carbide Corporation, called Bakelite Company, brought an action against J. H. Miller and his wife, Shirley, in two counts, seeking to recover an alleged indebtedness evidenced by six promissory notes each in the sum of $2,000 executed by J. H. Miller Manufacturing Company, a corporation, payable to plaintiff and endorsed by defendants; and in the second count to recover $6,000 as the alleged balance due on an open account for merchandise sold and delivered by plaintiff to J. H. Miller Manufacturing Company, the payment of which had been guaranteed in writing by defendants. We shall continue to refer to the parties as they were designated in the trial court.

A jury returned a verdict on Count 1 for plaintiff and assessed its damages at $12,000 with interest from the date of said notes and on Count 2 a verdict for the defendants. Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment on Count 2 and defendants ■ have appealed from the judgment on Count 1.

We shall consider first the plaintiff’s appeal and here state the evidence pertinent to the issues under Count 2.

It was conceded that J. H. Miller was the president of the J. H. Miller Manufacturing Company, a corporation, hereinafter sometimes called Miller Company, located in Quincy, Illinois, and that Shirley A. Miller was his wife. Prior to April 1958, the Miller Company owed plaintiff $21,000 for merchandise theretofore purchased from plaintiff. Frank Bielevicz was the manager of plaintiff’s Bakelite division’s eastern credit office and was handling the Miller Company account. As a result of discussions between him and Mr. Miller in Quincy in the latter part of April 1958, a series of fifteen notes dated May 2, 1958, and totaling $21,000, were executed by the company and on May 16, 1958, endorsed by Mr. and Mrs. Miller. Also on May 16, 1958, Mr. and Mrs. Miller executed a guaranty agreement by the terms and provisions of which they agreed to guarantee the payment to plaintiff “of any and all open and other accounts” of the Miller Company, whether then due or thereafter incurred, until such time as the guarantors revoked the agreement (there was no contention that the agreement had been revoked). Plaintiff did not at the trial contend, and does not here contend, that the agreement had anything to do with the indebtedness evidenced by the notes; on the contrary, plaintiff stated at the trial that the guaranty agreement did not cover the notes but only the open account, which by the time the present action was filed was in the amount of $6,000.

Mr. Bielevicz testified by deposition taken on September 7, 1962, a week prior to trial on September 12, that he was personally familiar with the accounts of J. H. Miller Manufacturing Company and J. H. and Shirley A. Miller as individuals, as they appeared on the books of the Union Carbide Corporation and that the original books and records reflecting the transactions evidencing those accounts were kept under his supervision. He testified that such books and records showed that the Miller Company and the Millers as individuals then (September 7, 1962) owed plaintiff a total of $18,000, $12,000 evidenced by notes and $6,000 on open account; that no payments had been made on the account since the institution of this lawsuit (July 16, 1959) and no credits other than those entered were due; that the prices charged were plaintiff’s standard published prices for the goods delivered; that about February 3, 1959, he had talked with Mr. Miller by telephone; that Miller agreed to pay the then $7,000 open account in full within a week; that thereafter $1,000 was paid on the account; that written demand for the balance of $6,000 was again made by letter dated March 16, 1959; that “Mr. Miller never did deny that $18,000 was due and *871 owing. He just kept asking for more time to pay.” Mr. Bielevicz testified further that the merchandise sold for which $6,000 was due was sold and shipped to the Miller Company in reliance upon the guaranty agreement.

Mr. Miller, who testified both as plaintiff’s witness and later in his own behalf as defendant, testified (relevant to the open account) that he did not have any conversation with Bielevicz on or immediately prior to February 10, 1959, to the effect that the open account would be paid within a week thereafter; that at that time (February 1959) he (Miller) was not in control of the business; that a Mr. Hanlon was then running the company; that he had introduced Bielevicz to Hanlon in a telephone conversation on February 4, 1959, and had told Bielevicz that Hanlon would be running the business.

Plaintiff first contends that the trial court erred in failing and refusing to direct a verdict for it because its claim that $6,000 was due on open account was established by “uncontradicted testimony and documentary evidence about which there was no real dispute and about which the defendants did not offer one scintilla of evidence.”

It is true, as plaintiff contends, that its evidence (sufficient to have made a prima facie case on the open account claim) was not denied or contradicted in any essential respect by any evidence offered by defendants; but defendants’ answer to Count 2 specifically denied the averments by plaintiff that defendants by reason of their guarantee owed plaintiff $6,000 on open account. Thus, the burden was on plaintiff to prove the essential facts necessary to establish its claim. The jury could believe or not believe plaintiff’s uncontradicted or uncontroverted evidence, and if the jury did not believe plaintiff’s evidence, it properly could find for defendants. J. D. Streett & Co. v. Bone, Mo., 334 S.W.2d 5, 9 [5].

Plaintiff seeks to bring itself within an exception to the above-stated rule on the ground that its proof was largely “documentary” and that neither Mr. Miller nor Mrs. Miller denied that the Miller Manufacturing Company did in fact owe $6,000 on open account even though each was a witness in the case. The only “documents” to which plaintiff refers are its own books and records. The fact is that even those books and records were not offered in evidence, and even if they had been offered, those books and certain letters written by plaintiff to defendant J. H. Miller were certainly not “documentary” within the meaning of the exception to the rule.

The general rule as to “conclusive documentary evidence” is stated in Baugh v. Life & Casualty Ins. Co. of Tenn., Mo., 307 S.W.2d 660, 664, as follows: “ * * * it must be an instrument or record having legal efficacy to which the one sought to be bound is in some way a party, or the truth of which he vouches for, either expressly or in legal effect, or is estopped to deny.” There was no such documentary evidence adduced in this case. Further, there was no admission at the trial by either Mr. or Mrs. Miller that they owed the $6,000 and their failure to deny that they owed that amount (they were not asked) did not constitute an admission.

Plaintiff contends further that the trial court should have granted it a new trial on the ground that the verdict on Count 2 was against the weight of the evidence and where, as here, it is contended that “there is a complete absence of probative facts to support a verdict an appellate court is authorized to interfere.” Plaintiff again overlooks the fact that a verdict in defendants’ favor need not be supported by any evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
372 S.W.2d 867, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bakelite-company-v-miller-mo-1963.