Cousins v. Bowling

74 S.W. 168, 100 Mo. App. 452, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 495
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 74 S.W. 168 (Cousins v. Bowling) 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
Cousins v. Bowling, 74 S.W. 168, 100 Mo. App. 452, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 495 (Mo. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

The suit originated in a justice’s court in Oregon county. It was appealed to the Oregon Circuit Court, from which it was taken by change of venue to the Howell Circuit Court, where a trial was had resulting in a judgment for defendant, from which the plaintiffs appealed.

The substantive averments of the petition are, that in the month of October, 1901, plaintiffs entered into a contract with defendant for the purchase and delivery of one hundred and sixty-six head of hogs, to be delivered at Koshkonong, Missouri, on October 26, 1901, at a price agreed upon; that they paid defendant $25 earnest money on the purchase; that a memorandum in writing of the contract was signed by both parties; that defendant failed and refused to deliver the hogs, whereby plaintiffs were damaged in the sum of $105, for which, with the $25 paid on the purchase price, they ask judgment.

The answer was a general denial.

[455]*455The memorandum contract referred to in the petition is as follows:

“$25 paid on 65 to 100 at $3.50; 100 'up, at $4 per hundred. All to be well. Delivered at Koshkonong, Saturday 26th. Dock on bad piggy'sows.
“W. H. Hann.
“J. P. Bowling.”

Defendant contracted with one Erwin for 105 head of the hogs. His son had 66 head that defendant intended and had arranged with his son to put in on the contract. The Erwin hogs were driven to Koshkonong on October 25th; and put in the railroad stock pens, with the understanding between defendant and Erwin that they would be weighed up and turned over to defendant by Erwin on the following morning. The son’s hogs were brought in on the 26th. Cousins, one of the plaintiffs, was at Koshkonong on the 25th, saw the Erwin hogs and wanted them delivered on that day. Defendant declined to deliver at that time, telling Cousins that they were not yet his hogs, that they would be weighed up and delivered to him the next morning j- that all the hogs that he was to deliver on the contract were not yet in, and he would weigh up and deliver all of them the next day.

Defendant’s evidence is, and he is corroborated by other witnesses, that Cousins told him if he did not deliver the hogs then and there that his (Cousin’s) money would never pay for them.

On the following day, October 26th, the day the hogs were to be delivered, Cousins and Hann arrived in Koshkonong at 5:30 p. m. They testified they were unable to see or locate the defendant until about 8:30 p. m., and after he had retired for the night. When they found him they asked him to have the hogs weighed up that night. He declined to do this on the ground that it was not businesslike, and that it was too late. They then asked him if he would weigh them up the following morning, which would be Sunday. Defend[456]*456ant replied that he would not do business on' Sunday. They then asked him if he would weigh them up on Monday morning. He said he would if plaintiffs would pay the expense of keeping the hogs over until that time. They refused to do this. Some hot words passed and plaintiffs attached the hogs. After Cousins demanded that the hogs be weighed up on the 25th, he left Koshkonong and went to Thayer and from there sent word to the defendant, <£to go to hell with his hogs.” Defendant then ordered a car with the intention of shipping tlie hogs on his own account.

Plaintiffs testified that they paid the defendant the $25 as part of the purchase price of the hogs.

The defendant testified that he refused to sign the memorandum contract unless Hann would put up $50 as a forfeit; that they finally agreed on $25 as a forfeit, and that the same was given to him as a forfeit and not as payment on the hogs.

The plaintiffs asked the following instruction, which the court refused to give:

"4. The jury is instructed that a day in law embraces the time from midnight to midnight, and that plaintiffs had from 12 o’clock on the night of the 25th to 12 o’clock on the night of the 26th in which to comply with their contract of receiving and paying for the hogs At question.”

The evidence is that the moon was shining on the night of the 26th, but that the hogs would have to be driven from the pen where they were to another, to be weighed. Under ordinary conditions a party, bound by a contract to deliver a thing on a particular day, has until midnight of that day to make the delivery or offer of delivery. Startup v. McDonald, 6 Mann. & Gr. 591. In this case, at page 622, it is said: ££ The general rule, I conceive, is, that wherever, in eases not governed by particular customs of trade, the parties oblige themselves to the performance of duties within a certain number of days, they have until the last minute of the [457]*457last day, to perforin their obligation. The only qualification, that I am aware of, to this rule is, that in acts requiring time in order that they may be completely performed, the party must, at all events, tender to do the act, at such a period before the end of the last day, as, if the tender be accepted, will leave him sufficient time to complete his performance before the end of that day. In the case of a mercantile contract, however, the opposite party is not bound to wait for such tender of performance beyond the usual hours of mercantile business.” If something is to be done with the thing to be delivered before it can be delivered, as that it shall be weighed, then the tender should be made at such an hour of the day as.will afford time and opportunity to weigh it. The tender must be made in a reasonable time. Beach on Modern Law of Contracts, sec. 206; Tiedeman on Sales, sec. 99.

The contract for the delivery of the hogs was not a mercantile contract. There was no evidence of any particular trade custom prevailing át Koshkonong, and we think that it was a question for the jury to say whether or not plaintiffs offered to receive the hogs at a reasonable or unreasonable hour and at a time of day when it was reasonable that they could be safely driven from one pen to another to be weighed, and that the instruction was broader than the evidence warranted and was therefore properly refused.

The court gave the following instruction for the defendant, the giving of which is assigned as error:

“2. You are further instructed that if you find from the evidence in this case that the defendant, on the 26th day of October, 1901, ordered a car or made arrangements to have a car sent down for the purpose of shipping said hogs to market, or that the defendant refused to deliver the hogs at a time when he was under no obligation to deliver them, this would not dispense with the necessity of the plaintiffs attending at the time and place agreed upon for receiving said hogs.”

[458]*458This instruction should be considered in connection with No. 4, given for defendant, which is as follows:

“4.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 S.W. 168, 100 Mo. App. 452, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cousins-v-bowling-moctapp-1903.