Carson v. Smith

34 S.W. 855, 133 Mo. 606, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 855 (Carson v. Smith) 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
Carson v. Smith, 34 S.W. 855, 133 Mo. 606, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 154 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Burgess, J.

Action in the nature of conversion for the wrongful and willful taking and converting to their own use by defendants, at the town of Reid, in the county of G-reeley, in the state of Kansas, a stock of general merchandise of which plaintiff claimed to be the owner, and in the possession.

The trial was by the court and a jury, which ¡resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of .$1,458.50, of which he remitted $395.18, judgment '.being rendered in his favor for $1,088.32. After an ¡unsuccessful motion for a new trial, defendants appealed to this court.

One of the questions involved which confers jurisdiction on this court is the constitutionality of the act ■of the legislature under which the jury was summoned before whom the case was tried, being an act entitled, “An act providing for and designating the manner of .selecting petit jurors, and prescribing their qualifications,” in certain counties of this state, etc., approved .April 1, 1891. (Laws, 1891, p. 172).

The facts connected with the transactions out of which this controversy arose are as follows:

On the twenty-fourth day of May, 1888, plaintiff purchased from O. F. Logan a stock of general merchandise, at Reid, Kansas, at the price of $1,700, and .in payment therefor gave him goods from the stock [611]*611amounting to $36, transferred to him his equity in two tracts of land, valued at $900, $100 by delivering up to Logan a note for that amount executed by him to one H. T. McLaughlin, which Carson held, and by executing his own notes to Logan in the sum of $700. Logan at the time of this sale was indebted to defendants, wholesale merchants at St. Joseph, Missouri, in the sum of $367, and to the firm of Clements, Hulme & Kelly, of Great Bend, Kansas, in the sum of $494.94.

At the time of the sale Logan executed to Carson a bill of sale to the goods, and.took from him an instrument of writing, providing that if Carson failed to pay any of the notes given for the purchase price of the goods, when due, Logan might assist in selling, and all proceeds arising from their sale should be paid to him. Carson never paid anything more than $36 to Logan on the goods.

On the sixteenth of January, 1888, J. L. Peek, representing defendants, and Kelly of the Kansas firm, went to Reid to see Logan about his indebtedness to them, and learned from him and Carson, that Carson had purchased the goods, and the terms of the sale; An agreement was then entered into between Logan, Carson, and the creditors, through their representatives who were present, that Logan should return to Carson the notes calling for $700, and the papers accompanying the same. Carson represented that he was the absolute owner of the stock of goods, and defendants claim that, on the faith of his representations, they, the Kansas creditors, and Logan, agreed with Carson that he should, to the extent of $665, which he then owed Logan, assume the indebtedness of Logan to said creditors.

Carson then executed to said creditors a bill of sale for said stock of goods, they executing to him at the same time an instrument of writing, providing that the [612]*612title to the goods should, revert to Carson upon the payment by him to them of said $665, with interest. This writing also provided, that sales should be made for cash only, and that all moneys received from sales, after paying therefrom such sums as might be necessary to replenish the stock should be paid to said Peck as a credit upon the $665. This writing also provided that for any violation of its terms by either party thereto, the penalty should be fixed at $665, as liquidated damages to be paid by the party failing to comply with its terms. Carson remained in possession of the goods. He testified that he paid Peek from the sale of the goods at one time $18, and at another $10. The $10 payment was denied by Peck. '

About the last of June, Peck, becoming satisfied that the sale from Logan to Carson was fraudulent on Logan’s part, went to Carson and offered to rescind the contract of June 16, but Carson refused to do so.

Defendants then sued out an attachment against Logan and had the goods attached as his property. A similar suit was also instituted by the Kansas creditors which was dismissed. The goods were sold under defendants’ suit against Logan, and purchased by them at the price of $500.

The first proposition with which we are confronted is the constitutionality of the jury law under which the jury were selected who sat upon the trial of the cause. It has been so often held by this court that the law is constitutional, that it is unnecessary to do more than refer to some of the adjudicated cases on the subject, to wit: Dunne v. Cable R’y Co., 131 Mo. 1; Sherwood v. Grand Avenue R’y Co., 132 Mo. 339.

It is contended by defendants that plaintiff’s cause of action, if any he has, is by proceeding in equity and not for conversion.

[613]*613While there are some unnecessary allegations in the petition, it clearly states a cause of action for conversion, and the answer and instructions were upon the same theory, hence, it must be heard and determined by this court on that theory.

Defendants and Clements, Hulme & Kelly, had purchased the goods from Carson, by and with thq knowledge and consent of Logan, who had previously sold them to Carson. They were then sold back to Carson for the same price, $665, which was, as has been said, the amount of Logan’s indebtedness to them. By this contract of sale Carson bound himself to keep a daily record of all sales made by him from the stock of merchandise, and to pay the same over to Peck, as the agent of defendants and Clements, Hulme & Kelly on the regular trips of said Peck to Reid. And for the true and faithful performance of the terms of the agreement each party bound “themselves to each other in the penal sum of $665 as liquidated damages, to be paid by the failing party.” Defendants now insist that if plaintiff’s remedy is not in equity, that it is for breach of the contract.

Plaintiff was the owner of and in possession of the goods, and by their seizure and taking away against his will at the instance of defendants under attachment sued out by them against Logan they became tort feasors. Plaintiff did not by this contract debar himself from the prosecution of any action that he might have against defendants for wrongful conversion of the goods, or limit the amount of damages to which he might be entitled to recover in such a suit to the sum of $665 or any other sum. No such provision is contained in the contract. But even if there was, plaintiff had the undoubted right to treat the wrong as a tort and prosecute his action as' for conversion.. [614]*6142 Add. Torts, chap. 22, sec. 1; Bliss on Code Pleading [3 Ed.], sec. 14.

It is also argued that Carson first broke the contract by selling on credit, and although defendants converted the goods he is not entitled to the penalty fixed by the contract. It is only necessary to say with respect of this contention that the action is not for the penalty, hence no such question is involved in this litigation.

Defendants and Clements, Hulme & Kelly were not joint tort feasors in the conversion of the goods, but defendants were. One firm had no interest whatever in the suit of the other, and plaintiff could not for that reason have maintained his action for conversion against them jointly.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 855, 133 Mo. 606, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carson-v-smith-mo-1896.