J. D. Streett & Co. v. Bone

334 S.W.2d 5, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 783
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1960
Docket47649
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 334 S.W.2d 5 (J. D. Streett & Co. v. Bone) 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
J. D. Streett & Co. v. Bone, 334 S.W.2d 5, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 783 (Mo. 1960).

Opinion

ELMO B. HUNTER, Special Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment for defendant in a suit by plaintiff, J. D. Streett & Co., Inc., on an open account wherein defendant, Arthur C. Bone, purchased merchandise from plaintiff for use and sale in his service station operation.

Plaintiff’s appellate contentions are: (1) That the trial court abused its discretion in overruling plaintiff’s motion for a new trial in that the greater weight of the evidence was entirely against defendant, and (2) that in any event this court under the “plain errors” rule should order a new trial.

Plaintiff’s suit was filed on April 11, 1958. The case was tried on an amended petition filed February 10, 1959. The original petition pleaded certain invoices totaling $25,-170.57 on which plaintiff claimed only $6.55 had been paid and sought judgment for $25,164.02. The amended petition alleged that plaintiff had at the request of the defendant furnished him with merchandise of the value of $267,567.94; that defendant had paid only $242,403.02 and had refused to pay the balance of $25,164.02. Defendant’s answer was a general denial.

The trial on March 20, 1959, was to the jury. Reymond Hempen, Secretary and Comptroller of plaintiff, and defendant Arthur Bone were the only witnesses.

Mr. Hempen testified: From about September 15, 1955, until July 25, 1958, plaintiff provided defendant with gasoline, oil, antifreeze and other such products for the use of defendant in operating his filling station under the name of Frontier Oil Company. The items furnished were charged to defendant on an open account and had a total value of $267,567.94. Plaintiff received payments for these sales in the amount of $242,403.92, and this sum had *7 been applied to defendant’s account leaving a balance due of $25,160.72. It was plaintiff’s practice to have defendant or his employee sign a manifest to acknowledge delivery of the items named therein. Hempen produced invoices going back to September 1955, but commenced his testimony with those concerning gasoline deliveries dated April 3, 1956, and thereafter to May 2, 1956. At that point he testified: “Between the date April 3, 1956, until the last sale to Arthur Bone in 1958 the total gasoline purchased by him amounted to 1,000,673 gallons. Q. There were other purchases besides that? A. There were other purchases besides that which included antifreeze and some maps and some oil. Q. What was the total value of those purchases ? A. * * * I could give you the total value of the purchases in the beginning but I do not have the purchases from that April the 3rd period” — that he could give only the total of all items from September 15, 1955, to July 25, 1958, shown on Exhibit A attached to the petition, which total was $267,567.94.

On cross-examination Hempen stated plaintiff company had changed from manual bookkeeping to automatic machine bookkeeping in April 1956. He was asked if in that transition a number of mistakes were made in Mr. Bone’s account and others. He answered, “There were mistakes made in, you might say, in whose account was credited. * * * Well, there can be errors made on charges as well as credits. * * * There were mistakes made, yes, sir. * * * But principally on charges, not on credits.” Hempen while being cross-examined as to a particular item of $141.60 explained that at that time his company was shipping c. o. d., to defendant, and that its Cape Girardeau Terminal computed the charges at delivery at $144.90, which was paid and that later “when the invoice was actually made we found that it should have been $141.60. The difference * * * was credited to Mr. Bone’s account.”

He further testified that on May 7, 1957, Mr. Bone owed $35,003.05. Referring to the invoices (manifests) defendant’s counsel stated, “I am going to start with May 7, and take in a good many of them,” and inquired about numerous ones as to whether they had been signed by defendant or his employee, and paid for. On redirect Hempen was asked, “Do you have any record as to show delivery was made of that merchandise? A. Yes, sir, we have signed manifests. * * * I have them right here.” Defendant’s counsel then stated, “I’ll admit, for the record, that he has in his possession there signed receipts for each one of those but that they were not attached to the invoices.” Thereafter, plaintiff’s counsel stated, “This is an awful lot of records. I don’t want to have them identified individually but I’d like to offer them in evidence. By the Court: Are these statements of invoices supporting plaintiff’s Exhibit A that was attached to the petition ? Answer (by plaintiff’s attorney): That’s right. By the Court: They may be admitted into the record.” And at that point plaintiff rested.

Defendant testified: Mr. Hempen had told him in the change over in the bookkeeping system that there had been a lot of mistakes made “in the accounts, including mine, and it would be corrected. Q. Now, was that ever later corrected with you? A. No, sir.” Plaintiff’s then attorney (who is not plaintiff’s counsel on this appeal) on May 7, 1957, told him he owed only $92.40. The attorney showed him a list of what had been purchased from May 7, 1957, to November 4, 1957, and told him he had paid during that period only $6.55. Defendant advised the attorney he had can-celled checks to show what had been paid and that “I (defendant) knew it was more than $6.55.” He offered to show these checks to plaintiff’s lawyer who told him just to bring them to court.

Defendant with his lawyer, during the trial, ran off these mentioned checks of May 7, 1957, to November 4, and they totaled $38,246.64. Defendant stated that these mentioned checks represented pay *8 ment for all of the purchases he had made from plaintiff from May -7, 1957, to November 4, 1957, and that he owed plaintiff nothing — whether it was charged or paid for on delivery.

On cross-examination defendant reiterated Hempen told him that at the time of the bookkeeping change errors had been made in his account, and in the accounts of others in an undetermined amount. Thereafter an effort was made by plaintiff’s counsel on further cross-examination to match up the checks defendant had with credits on the books of plaintiff. Several of the checks were dated after a credit in the same amount appeared in the books. Defendant stated he did not have all his checks with him — just all he was able to find at this time, that he was just a small operator with an eighth grade education, who had only part time bookkeeping services.

On rebuttal Hempen was asked to take each check and ascertain if his records showed that credit was given for them. Objection thereto was sustained on his statement he could not identify any particular check, nor any particular check as being the credit. Thereafter, he was asked to look at the statement (Exhibit A) attached to plaintiff’s petition to see if it showed a credit of May 7th for $4,000. On objection by defendant’s counsel that this would be a conclusion, plaintiff’s counsel stated he was trying to show the amounts on these checks had been credited to the account. At that point the court stated, “Well, he did not deny it. It is not rebuttal at this time; merely repetition. (By plaintiff’s counsel) That was the only purpose. I had understood that he had denied that he had been given credit for these checks. By the Court: I didn’t so understand it. (By plaintiff’s counsel) Then I have nothing further.”

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Bluebook (online)
334 S.W.2d 5, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-d-streett-co-v-bone-mo-1960.