Goetz v. Piel

26 Mo. App. 634, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 466
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 Mo. App. 634 (Goetz v. Piel) 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
Goetz v. Piel, 26 Mo. App. 634, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 466 (Mo. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is brought to recover the penalty of a bond executed by the defendants to the plaintiffs, in the penal sum of two thousand dollars, to secure the performance by the defendant, Piel, of a contract between him and the plaintiffs, whereby they agreed to sell -him as much Glencoe black lime, of their manufacture, as he .should require during the year succeeding the date of the bond, at a stipulated price per bushel, provided they should have the same on hand; and whereby he agreed to make payments for each month’s purchases, at stated, periods in such month. The petition alleges that he did not make payments as required by the contract, but that a sum in excess of the penalty of the bond is [636]*636due and unpaid, for which, judgment is asked. The answer was in the nature of a plea of payment merely, leaving all the other allegations of the petition uncon-troverted. The only issue at the trial was, whether payment had been made for the black lime furnished under the contract.

I. A jury was called, and, after some of the evidence had been heard, the court, perceiving that the decision of the facts involved the taking and stating of a long account, of its own motion, withdrew the cause from the jury and referred it to a member of the bar to try all the issues. Upon this ruling the defendant took a bill of exceptions. There was no error in this ruling. Rev. Stat., sect. 3606.

II. The referee took a large mass of testimony, from which it ajjpeared that, during the year preceding the date of the present contract between the plaintiffs and Piel, a prior contract subsisted between the plaintiff, Goetz, individually, and the defendant, Piel, for supplying the defendant, Piel, with the same Glencoe black lime then manufactured by Goetz alone ; that, subsequently, and while this contract was pending, namely, in February, 1881, a partnership was formed between the plaintiffs, Goetz and Cobb, and that this partnership continued the same business, and, during the remainder of the year embraced in that contract, continued to execute it by supplying to the defendant, Piel, the Glencoe black lime as therein stipulated; that Piel knew that the contract, although made with Goetz, individually, was being executed by Goetz and Cobb in partnership; that Goetz and Cobb also furnished to Piel, between the date of the formation of their partnership and December 28,1881, the date of the termination of that contract and of the commencement of the present contract, various other articles, such as sand, hair, cement, and plaster ; so that there was due from Piel to Goetz and Cobb, at the date of the termination of the old contract and of the commencement of the present contract for the black [637]*637lime and other articles furnished, a balance of $1,082. It, also, appeared that, on December 28,1881, the defendant, Piel, entered into a contract with Goetz, one of the plaintiffs, individually, for the purchase of white lime, for the period covered by .the contract in suit; and that there were many occasions when it was more convenient for him to procure such lime in town, on which occasions, he purchased it from the plaintiffs, Goetz and Cobb. It, also, appeared that, aside from the black lime mentioned in the contract, the plaintiffs continued, during the year covered by the contract, to furnish Piel, as they had done before, with other articles than black lime, such as hair, sand, plaster, etc. Some of the payments made by Piel were in the form of checks, payable to the order of Goetz, alone, and were possibly intended by Piel to be applied in liquidation of the balance due on the account for the previous "year, which, as already stated, was made under a contract originally entered into between Piel and Goetz, alone; a great mass oí them were drawn in favor of Goetz and Cobb, and where payments were made in notes, these notes were so drawn. Such checks as were drawn, in favor of Goetz only, were indorsed by Goetz, and then by Goetz and Cobb, and went into their partnership account. No separate account was kept by the plaintiffs with Piel in respect of the black lime furnished under the contract, to secure which the bond in suit was given; but all the goods, oí whatever description, which were sold by Goetz, and Cobb to the defendant, during the year covered by the bond in suit, were charged up to him in general account, and all the payments, of whatever description, made by Piel to the plaintiffs, were entered by them upon their general account with Piel, according to their respective dates ; and this general account was kept in such a form as to be merely a continuation of the general account of the preceding year. In the checks, which were drawn by Piel, and in the notes which he sometimes gave, no designation was made of the. particular account to which [638]*638the payment was intended to be applied, except that a few of the checks, as above stated, were drawn in favor of Goetz, individually. Some oral evidence was given by the opposing parties, as to the manner in which they intended the payments. to be applied, bnt we see no evidence of any actual application of the payments, except as above stated. During the year covered by the ■contract secured by the bond in suit, the plaintiffs sold and delivered to Piel, 40,660 bushels of black lime, which, at the price fixed by the contract, amounted to the sum of $10,774.90. This is shown by the bill of particulars embodied in the petition, and stands admitted in the state of the pleadings. During the same period, as found by the referee, the defendant purchased from the plaintiffs other articles, consisting of white lime, sand, cement, hair, etc., so that his indebtedness to them amounted, in the aggregate, to $13,779.58. The referee, also, finds that, against this general aggregate of indebtedness, the total payments made by Piel amounted to $11,675, leaving a general balance due from Piel to the plaintiffs of $2,104.58, which is more than the penalty of the bond sued for.

The referee finds that no specific applications of any ■of these payments, made by Piel to Goetz and Cobb, was directed by Piel, or made by Goetz and Cobb, He accordingly finds, as. a conclusion of law, that the payment should be applied to the successive extinguishment of the oldest items of indebtedness on the general account of Goetz and Cobb against Piel; and, stating the account on this basis, in his original report he recommended a judgment in favor- of the plaintiffs, for the penalty of the bond sued on, with an award of execution in the sum of $1,774.46. Both parties filed exceptions to this report. The plaintiffs were dissatisfied with it, because it did not give them all they asked in their petition, and the defendants were dissatisfied with it because it gave the plaintiffs anything. The plaintiffs’ exceptions were two, and the defendants eighteen, in number. The court overruled all these ex- • [639]*639•cations except the defendants’ thirteenth and eighteenth. These two exceptions were as follows: - “13. That the finding of the referee, of the sum of one thousand and eighty-three dollars, as a balance due by Piel to Goetz and Cobb, on first of Jgfltmary, 1882, is not supported by the evidence ; and the law laid down by the referee on this head is bad, or, in other words, no law, and is error.” “18.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Mo. App. 634, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goetz-v-piel-moctapp-1887.