K.C. Fuel Oil Co. v. Shoecraft

274 S.W. 880, 219 Mo. App. 436, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 126
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 880 (K.C. Fuel Oil Co. v. Shoecraft) 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
K.C. Fuel Oil Co. v. Shoecraft, 274 S.W. 880, 219 Mo. App. 436, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 126 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

ARNOLD, J.

This is an action to recover the sum of $250, based upon a trade acceptance of a draft.

The draft, of date April 27, 1921, was drawn by and made payable to a company designated as The Producers Consolidated Oil Co. Plaintiffs were partners doing a wholesale business in oil products under the firm name of Kansas City Fuel Oil Co., with headquarters at the city of Kansas City, Mo. In the regular course of business they sold large quantities of gasoline and kerosene, one of their purchasers being a certain retail corporation known as the Producers Consolidated Oil Company, a Nebraska corporation. This last-named company deposited with plaintiffs as security for their past account and future sales, before due, certain trade acceptances, among them one signed by defendant, which is the one involved in this suit.

The Producers Oil Company became insolvent, at which time their indebtedness to plaintiffs amounted to $3,796.20. Plaintiffs thereupon filed suit against defendant as the drawee and acceptor of one of these trade acceptances in the sum of $250. The cause was tried to the court, a jury having been waived, and judgment was for defendant. Plaintiffs appeal.

The cause was presented to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, though there are some facts not included in the statement which we deem necessary to a clear understanding of the case.

In 1921, the Producers Oil Company organized a large and partially successful chain of filling stations throughout Missouri and Kansas. In order to. secure local interest in the project and to raise capital for *439 financing said filling stations, advance agents of said company would offer to local investors and consumers a certain contract or so-called “purchase order” by which the investor was to get double the value of gasoline when the station should be built, in return for signing a six months acceptance for a given amount. A number of persons in and around Tarkio, Mo., signed such contracts and trade acceptances. Defendant, on April 27, 1921, signed and delivered to the Producers Oil Co. the six months acceptance sued on herein. The Tarkio filling station was never completed, and the Producers Oil Co. never delivered to defendant or others in the Tarkio district the oil for which the acceptances were taken.

On June 17, 1921, the Producers Oil Company’s account with plaintiffs, being of considerable size, and more purchases being contemplated, plaintiffs asked for security and the president of the Producers Company endorsed and delivered to plaintiffs, as collateral security, a number of the said acceptances, including that of defendant. This suit was instituted to collect on said acceptance.

The agreed statement of facts is brief, and as it greatly simplifies and brings out the issues involved, it is set out in full herein, as it appears in the Bill of Exceptions.

“First: It is agreed by the parties that on the 17th day of June, 1921, plaintiffs as partners, were and for three months next prior and subsequent thereto had been transacting business in the purchase.and sale of petroleum products, in Kansas City, Missouri, under and in the name of ‘ The Kansas City Fuel Oil Company,’ without complying with any of the provisions of section 13277, Eevised Statutes 1919, pertaining to the registration of fictitious names in the office of the Secretary of State, but did so register prior to bringing" this suit, to-wit on December 27, 1922.
“Second:- It is agreed that on the said 17th day of June, and under the said name of ‘The Kansas City Fuel *440 Oil Company,’ the plaintiffs in the course of their said business, and in Kansas City, Missouri, obtained as hereinafter set out, from the ‘Producers Consolidated Oil Company’ the draft and' acceptance, and endorsement thereon, involved in this suit, which said draft, signed by defendant herein and now unpaid, is in words and figures following:
“Tarkio, Mo., April 27, 1921.
“$250
“Six months from date hereof, pay to the order of The Producers Consolidated Oil Company, two hundred fifty and no-100 dollars ($250), at the office of Tarkio Valley Bank, Tarkio, Mo. for Petroleum Products sold to drawee. With interest hereon at the rate of eight per cent from date.
“To Charles V. Shoecraft,
“Tarkio, Mo.
“The Producers Consolidated Oil Company,
“By R. R. Sibley, Pres.”
“It is further agreed that on the face of said draft are the following, words of acceptance:
“Accepted April 27, 1921. This obligation arises out of the actual purchase of goods from drawer.
“(Signed) Charles V. Shoecraft.”
“And on the back of said draft are the following words ‘The Producers Consolidated Oil Co. R. R. Sibley, Pres.’
“Third: It is agreed that this draft, acceptance and endorsement thereon with others were received and accepted as aforesaid by plaintiffs from said Consolidated Oil Company (through its president, R. R. Sibley, who represented that they were sound and good), under a contract of the date and place aforesaid, between plaintiffs in their business name aforesaid and said Consolidated Oil Company, by which contract plaintiffs were to hold said drafts and acceptances as collateral security for the payment to them of a certain unpaid indebtedness *441 of some $3796.20, then and thereafter incurred by the said Producers Consolidated Oil Company, and still unpaid, for petroleum products sold by plaintiffs in their business name aforesaid in Kansas City, Mo., at various dates between December 1, 1920 and June 29, 1921. '
“Fourth: It is agreed that as to The Producers Consolidated Oil Company, the defendant would have a complete defense to said draft and acceptance thereof, on the ground of the entire lack of consideration; but it is further agreed that the plaintiffs when they received the acceptance sued on had no knowledge or notice whatever of said lack of consideration, or of any other facts which would create an infirmity in said acceptance or draft.”

At the request of defendant the court found the facts to be, as follows:

“First: The court finds the facts to be that on the 17th day of June, 1921, plaintiffs as partners were, and for more than three months next prior and subsequent thereto, had been transacting business in the purchase and sale of petroleum products, in Kansas City, Missouri, under and in the name of ‘The Kansas City Fuel Oil Company,’ without complying with any of the provisions of section 13277, Revised Statutes 1919, pertaining to the registration of fictitious names in the office of the Secretary of State.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 880, 219 Mo. App. 436, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kc-fuel-oil-co-v-shoecraft-moctapp-1925.