Evans-Snider-Buel Co. v. Bank of Atchison County
This text of 76 Mo. App. 449 (Evans-Snider-Buel Co. v. Bank of Atchison County) 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.
Opinion
The material facts are about as follows: Christian & Longhening were traders and feeders of stock in Atchison county and kept a bank account with the defendant with whom they made deposits when stock was sold and on whom they made checks for stock, feed, etc., purchased. In November, 1895, Longhening (acting it seems in behalf of the firm of Christian & Longhening) borrowed about $1,600 from the plaintiff [452]*452corporation and made a chattel mortgage covering fifty-eight head of cattle he was then feeding for market. It was the understanding that after feeding the cattle’ about six months (the duration of the loan) they were to be consigned to the plaintiff (Buel Company) who was to sell the same, on commission and out of the proceeds pay the loan. In April, 1896, Christian & Longhening (which we shall hereafter designate as C. &L.) shipped twenty-two head of these cattle to the plaintiff at Kansas City, Longhening going with them. The cattle were there sold by plaintiff (acting as commission agent for C. & L.) and the net proceeds were paid over by plaintiff giving its check for $621 payable to said C. & L. or order and $15 cash delivered to Longhening. The plaintiff’s representative at Kansas City (who sold the C. & L. stock) seems to have been ignorant of the mortgage given to his company. Longhening took the $621 check back to Atchison county and deposited same to the credit of C. & L. in defendant’s bank, and the proceeds thereof were drawn against by C. & L. and used as other credits. The receipt and appropriation of this $621 check so given to C. & L. by plaintiff seems to serve the basis of the first count in the petition. -
The second count is based on a shipment in May, 1896; of six head of the mortgaged cattle to Chicago where plaintiff (the mortgagee) received and sold them, along with some twenty-four other cattle shipped by C. &L. Christian accompanied this shipment, and, under an agreement then and there made, the entire proceeds of the thirty cattle were transferred by plaintiff to defendant’s bank to the credit of C. & L.— Christian however promising that when he returned home he and Longhening would compute the proximate amount for which the six mortgaged cattle sold and remit this sum to plaintiff at Chicago.
[453]*453This however was not done, and thereupon a representative of plaintiff was sent from Chicago to Atchison county to investigate the matter. This agent then learning of the shipment of the twenty-two cattle to his firm at Kansas City, the sale thereof and payment of the proceeds over to C. & L., demanded that such proceeds of sale be paid to his firm. Covering this demand C. & L. gave to plaintiff their check on the defendant, the Atchison county bank, for $800, but this check was on presentation refused payment for want of funds to the credit of C. & L.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
76 Mo. App. 449, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-snider-buel-co-v-bank-of-atchison-county-moctapp-1898.