Haseltine v. Messmore

82 S.W. 115, 184 Mo. 298, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 271
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 115 (Haseltine v. Messmore) 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
Haseltine v. Messmore, 82 S.W. 115, 184 Mo. 298, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 271 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

In the month of January, 1897, Steele M. Bird and Prank L. Miller formed a copartnership under the firm name and style of Bird & Miller Grain Company with a capital of $450, for the purpose of engaging in the business of buying and selling grain, with offices at Kansas City, Missouri.'

About six months thereafter they commenced consigning grain to the firm of Messmore, Gannett & Co., a copartnership' composed of A. L. Messmore, John M. Gannett and T. B. Morton, and conducting a grain commission business at the city of St. Louis.

A large number of cars of grain were shipped by Bird & Miller Grain Company under consignment to Messmore, Gannett & Co., amounting in the aggregate [303]*303to about seven hundred and fifty cars, most of which, if not quite all, was wheat of various grades and qualities, which was sold by defendants on commission, the proceeds arising therefrom, less their commissions, being as a rule promptly remitted to Bird & Miller Grain Company.

On the eighteenth day of January, 1898, the Bird & Miller Grain Company, becoming heavily involved in debt, and being unable to meet its liabilities, made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, and said assignee, or rather, William G. Haseltine, his duly appointed successor, instituted this suit in the circuit court of Jackson county to recover the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, alleged to rightfully belong to said company and to have been received and appropriated by defendants to their own use, after the assignment of the Bird & Miller Grain Company.

At the return term, on January 8, 1900, the de- . fendants, Messmore, Gannett and Morton, appearing specially- for that purpose, filed a motion or plea directed to the jurisdiction of the court as to them, on the ground that service of summons in the cause was obtained upon them in the city of St. Louis, and that defendants, Bird and Miller, were made parties to the suit for the sole purpose of giving the court apparent jurisdiction of the case. While this motion or plea was pending, defendant A. L. Messmore died in February, 1900. At the January term, 1900, of said court, on March 23, an order was duly entered, making John L. Messmore and William M. Scudder, executors of "the estate of A. L. Messmore, deceased, parties defendant, unless they showed cause to the contrary on or before the fourth day of the next term of the court. At the April term, 1900, of said court, on April 23, an order was entered of record reviving the cause as to the defendant, A. L. Messmore, deceased, in the name of his said executors. The motion or plea to the jurisdiction, [304]*304in so far as it was directed against the original petition, was never acted on by the court.

Thereupon the plaintiff filed an amended petition wherein John L. Messmore and William M. Scudder, executors of the estate of A. L. Messmore, deceased, were named as defendants in lieu of A. L. Messmore, deceased, and which contained appropriate allegations as to the condition of the parties caused by the death of A. L. Messmore, and the consequent dissolution of the partnership which had theretofore existed between him and John M. Gannett and T. B. Morton. In other respects the charges of the petition were substantially the same as those of the original petition. The record of the court shows an entry upon the thirteenth of October, 1900, at the October term of that court, as follows : “Now the defendants refile their plea to the jurisdiction of the amended petition and said plea is by •the court heard and overruled without prejudice, to which ruling of the court defendants except. Thereupon defendants are given leave of court to plead further herein.” The plea or motion so refiled was the same document filed on the eighth of January, 1900, which .opened with the words, “Gome now the defendants, A. L. Messmore, John M. Gannett and T. B. Morton, appearing specially,” etc., and is signed, “Scammon, Mead and Stubenrauch, attorneys fqr Messmore, Gannett & Company.”

On October 17, 1900, at the same term as that last referred to, the defendants, Messmore and Scudder, executors, and Gannett and Morton appeared generally in the cause by filing a demurrer, which was based upon the sole ground that' “said amended petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against them,” which was overruled on October 20, and no exceptions were preserved to that action of the court.

On October 22, 1900, the defendant executors, and Morton and Gannett, again appeared generally by filing an answer in which they admitted that A. L. Messmore, [305]*305T. B. Morton and John M. Gannett were partners as alleged in the amended petition, and denied all other allegations in the petition.

The original defendants, Messmore, Gannett and Morton, appeared unconditionally by counsel at the taking of depositions on the part of the plaintiff at Kansas City on January 18, 1900, at which time the depositions of the defendants Bird & Miller were taken. And all the appealing defendants appeared unconditionally by counsel at the taking of depositions in this' cause in St. Louis on September 24,1900, at which time the deposition of defendant Morton was taken, and at which time plaintiff attempted to take the deposition of defendant Gannett and of the bookkeeper, Ellis, of the firm of Messmore, Gannett & Morton. All the appealing defendants appeared generally by counsel in this cause in open court in resisting the applications to produce papers preliminary to the trial.

The cause came regularly to trial on May 10, 1901, at the April term of the court, where the appealing defendants appeared generally by counsel and defended the action.

The petition was in two counts, but the first count was withdrawn by the plaintiff. The second count of the petition upon which the trial was had is as follows:

• ‘ ‘ Plaintiff, for a second cause of action, states that he is the duly appointed, qualified and .acting assignee of the Bird & Miller Grain Company, and that said Bird & Miller Grain Company was at all times herein referred to a copartnership engaged in the business, at Kansas City, Missouri, of buying and selling grain for its own account, and of buying and selling grain for others on commission, and was composed of Steele M. Bird and Prank L. Miller; that the defendants, A. L. Messmore, Gannett and Morton were, at all the times herein referred to,, partners engaged at St. Louis, Missouri, in buying and selling grain on their own account, [306]*306and of selling grain for other persons on commission, under the style of Messmore, Gannett & Company; that A. L. Messmore has, since the institution of this suit, died, and John L. Messmore and William Scudder are his executors; that the said defendants composing the firm of Messmore, Gannett & Company, on or about the first day of August, 1897, entered into an agreement with the said Bird & Miller Grain Company, whereby it was understood and agreed that the said Bird & Miller Grain Company should buy grain upon the market at Kansas City, or elsewhere, and consign and ship the same to Messmore, Gannett & Company, at St. Louis, and that said Messmore, Gannett & Company should sell the same pn the market at St.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 115, 184 Mo. 298, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haseltine-v-messmore-mo-1904.