Del Monte Corp. v. Stark & Son Wholesale, Inc.

474 S.W.2d 854, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 535
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1971
Docket9105
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 474 S.W.2d 854 (Del Monte Corp. v. Stark & Son Wholesale, Inc.) 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
Del Monte Corp. v. Stark & Son Wholesale, Inc., 474 S.W.2d 854, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 535 (Mo. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

In this jury-waived, court-tried action at law on an open account of $13,533.63, plaintiff Del Monte Corporation appeals from an adverse judgment.

On August 20, 1969, Del Monte instituted suit against defendants S & S Institutional Distributors, Inc. (Distributors) and Stark & Son Wholesale, Inc. (Wholesale), both of whom were Missouri corporations, by the filing of plaintiff’s petition which averred “that the defendants are indebted to said plaintiff in the sum of $13,533.63 for merchandise purchased” as per itemized statement of account attached, and “that demand has been made upon the defendants for payment but payment has been refused.” (All emphasis herein is ours.) Defendant Wholesale filed timely motions for security for costs, to dismiss plaintiff’s petition, and to make it more definite and certain. Defendant Distributors interposed a motion “for dismissal or stay of proceedings” averring, inter alia, that on August 18, 1969, it had filed in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, together with schedules of assets and liabilities in which the debt owing to plaintiff Del Monte had been listed, that Distributors had been adjudicated a bankrupt and a receiver had been appointed and had taken charge of its assets, and that plaintiff was proceeding against Distributors in the state court without leave of the United States District Court and without making the receiver in bankruptcy a party to the suit. On October 20, 1969, the circuit court entered an order in the case at bar staying “all proceedings” as to Distributors “until disposition in bankruptcy.”

However, in its “First Amended Petition on Account” thereafter filed on November 24, 1969, upon which the case was tried, plaintiff again charged that “defendants are justly indebted to it for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered for and on behalf of the defendants in the sum of $13,533.63,” which “said amount became due on May 14, 1969 at which time demand for payment was made.” Defendant Wholesale answered with a general denial and an affirmative plea that its “supposed promise or obligation ... to answer for the debt of another person, to-wit, [Distributors] . . . was not in writing nor was any memorandum or note of said alleged contract or promise made in writing signed by [Wholesale], or by any per *856 son by it thereto authorized.” Sec. 432.-010. 1 Defendant Distributors filed nothing.

At the close of the trial on January 8, 1971, plaintiff dismissed as to Distributors and the court took the cause under advisement. On January 15, 1971, judgment was entered finding the issues against plaintiff and discharging the remaining defendant, Wholesale. On this appeal, the only point presented in plaintiff’s-appellant’s brief is the broad contention that “the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the judgment of the [trial] court.” This we are authorized to consider and rule, notwithstanding the fact that no motion for new trial was filed in the circuit court. Rules 73.01(d) and 79.03; Glassburner v. Burtrum, Mo., 418 S.W.2d 119, 121(4).

The itemized statement of account attached to and made a part of plaintiff’s original petition, and subsequently by reference made a part of the first amended petition, was addressed to "S & S Sales'’ as the purchaser-debtor, listed debits aggregating $31,358.46 and credits aggregating $17,824.83 during the period from November 21, 1968, to May 26, 1969, and showed an unpaid balance of $13,533.63. In the course of trial, it developed that the debits were for canned goods invoiced and shipped to “S & S Sales, Springfield, Mo. 65804”; that the purchase orders, in response to which these canned goods were so shipped, directed Del Monte to “Bill to: S & S Food Service Acct., P.O. Box 547, Neosho, Missouri 64850”; and that most of such goods were sold and delivered by the Springfield consignee to a large institution in that city.

Plaintiff’s witness Gene Wolfe of Springfield, an employee of Schwindler Brokerage Company, to whom plaintiff paid a commission “on shipments that [were] invoiced,” stated that he “personally set this account up.” According to Wolfe, he dealt with Paul E. Stark, “the son,” whom he first met in March 1968. “I (Wolfe) contacted Mr. Stark and he said it would be paid by Stark and Son, Neosho, Missouri; set it up as .S' & S Sales, which was a division of Stark and Son, Neosho." With Wolfe denying that in 1968 and 1969 he had any knowledge of S & S Institutional Distributors, Inc., plaintiff’s counsel immediately translated “Stark and Son, Neosho, Missouri” into Stark & Son Wholesale, Inc. Regarding the above-noted purchase orders, Wolfe said that “we take these orders to our office and type or handwrite them on one of our [Schwindler’s] forms and forward the order on to Del Monte,” but there was no evidence as to whether or not the direction on the original purchase orders to “Bill to: S & S Food Service Acct., P.O. Box 547, Neosho, Missouri 64850,” was heeded or honored.

The testimony of plaintiff’s home office assistant credit manager, Ralph Weinrichter of Menlo Park, California, was directed primarily to affirmation of the reasonableness of the charges for the canned goods invoiced and shipped to “S & S Sales, Springfield, Mo 65804” and to the identification of some of plaintiff’s exhibits, namely, (a) the three invoices in suit so addressed and dated December 10, 1968, and January 14 and March 3, 1969, (b) a trial balance from plaintiff’s computer showing the balance owed by “S & S Sales" on June 3, 1970, to have been $13,274.48, (c) four Dun & Bradstreet reports, (d) memoranda pertaining to a “discount charge-back” of $19.-78 on an earlier invoice dated May 8, 1968, together with two envelopes of “Stark & Son, Wholesale Co.” postmarked in Neo-sho, Missouri, and (e) a memorandum from Paul E. Stark on a “Stark & Son, Wholesale Co.” printed form pertaining to a Del Monte “credit memo for $164.65 to cover short merchandise” on another earlier invoice dated August 7, 1968 (not in the rec *857 ord before us). All of these exhibits, excepting only the Dun & Bradstreet reports (of which more betimes), were received in evidence. Witness Weinrichter conceded that plaintiff had no writing by which Wholesale had promised to answer for the debt “of S & S Sales or any other corporation,” and that plaintiff had acted “on the basis of information received from Schwindler Brokerage . . . as to who we were to bill” and had never contacted Wholesale “to determine whether or not they were to pay a bill.” However, Wein-richter was permitted (mayhap erroneously), over defendant’s timely objection, to give his affirmative conclusionary hearsay response, to wit, the single word “yes,” to the leading question of plaintiff’s counsel, “Did you know that S & S Sales was a branch of Stark and Son Wholesale Company?” Cf. Scherffius v. Orr, Mo.App., 442 S.W.2d 120, 126-127(9); Shaw v. Terminal R. Ass’n of St. Louis, Mo.,

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Bluebook (online)
474 S.W.2d 854, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/del-monte-corp-v-stark-son-wholesale-inc-moctapp-1971.