Kieselhorst Piano Co. v. Porter

171 S.W. 949, 185 Mo. App. 676, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 744
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 949 (Kieselhorst Piano Co. v. Porter) 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
Kieselhorst Piano Co. v. Porter, 171 S.W. 949, 185 Mo. App. 676, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 744 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

This action, commenced before a justice of the peace, is a statutory action for' claim and delivery of personal property, replevin, so-called, plaintiff claiming under a chattel mortgage executed by defendant, the chattel mortgage pledging a certain piano which had been bought by defendant of plaintiff, secured a note dated November 30, 1908, signed by defendant, whereby for value received she promised to pay to order of defendant $200, “with [678]*678six per cent interest per annum to maturity; said principal and interest payable $10 cash this date and balance in installments of five or more dollars each and every month, beginning December 30, 1908,” with the usual clause that in case of default in the payment of the note or any installment or of interest when due the whole should become due. Defendant made no written pleading, nor does the abstract show which party prevailed before the justice. The case reached the circuit court, where it was tried before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of defendant, the jury finding that defendant is still the owner and entitled to possession of the property, describing the piano, assessing the value of it at $125; and assessing damages in favor of defendant for the wrongful detention of it in the sum of $31.25, that, as stated in the verdict, being at the rate of $2.50 a month for a year and fifteen days. The ordinary judgment in such cases, as provided by statute, followed. Piling a motion for new trial as well as one in arrest, plaintiff has perfected its appeal to this court.

Here counsel for appellant assigns ten errors.

The first to the admission of evidence as to the '-rental value of the piano from date of taking, is untenable. Respondent, if entitled to the use of the in - strument, was entitled to the value of that use, and we find evidence in the record of that value as assessed by the jury.

The second assignment is that it was error to admit evidence as to the nonentry of payments on the back of the note; that is, evidence was admitted to show that these payments had not been endorsed on the note until a short time prior to the trial. We see no error here.

The third assignment is the most serious one in the case; that is to say, the admission of parol evidence, as it is claimed, to contradict or vary the note and mortgage.

[679]*679The transaction, as in evidence, was about this: Respondent wanted to purchase a piano'. Appellant is a dealer in pianos. Respondent, accompanied by her pastor, a Mr. Washington, went to the salesroom of appellant and told a salesman whom they met there, of her desire to purchase a piano. The salesman asked her how much she proposed to pay. She told him she could pay only $200; that she was not prepared to pay more than that. The salesman showed respondent and Mr. Washington a number of pianos and quoted prices on them; some at $200; others more or less; some new, others secondhand. Respondent expressing a preference for a secondhand one, priced at $200, the salesman, according to the testimony of respondent and Mr. Washington, showed her a new piano and endeavored to have her buy that. He quoted it at $200. So both these witnesses most positively testify. Mr. Washington asked the salesman how it was that they could sell a new piano for the same price as an old one, whereupon the salesman said that this new piano was named for a member of the family of the proprietor of the music house (appellant) and that the house wanted to get it on the market. Respondent still insisted that she preferred the secondhand piano; both she and Mr. Washington saying they liked its tone better. Respondent thereupon said she would take the secondhand piano at the price named, $200. Thereupon she handed the salesman a credit slip calling for a credit of $75 on the purchase of a piano. Respondent and Mr. Washington both testify that the salesman took this credit slip to the office in the salesroom and immediately came back to them and said that this credit slip was only good for and could only be used on the purchase of a new piano. The only contradiction at this point is that according to the salesman he did not have to go to the office with the credit slip, but that when he looked at it he saw that it called for a credit only on a new piano and at [680]*680once so informed respondent. At any rate, all agree that the salesman told respondent that it' conld not he applied on an old piano bnt only on a new one; that it could not he applied in the purchase of the secondhand piano respondent had selected. Thereupon, according to the positive testimony of respondent and Mr. Washington, respondent agreed to take the new piano at $200, finding that she could not use the credit slip in payment upon an old or secondhand piano. There is little contradiction of this. The salesman, asked by counsel for appellant if he had told respondent-and Mr. Washington that the new piano was $275, answered, £iI may have shown them the new pianos. Ques. Did you tell either of them at that time? Ans. No, all the pianos have the tag price on them. Ques. Did you vary from it? Ans. I could not, because it is there in black and white.” Whether respondent saw this tag or had. her attention called to it, does not appear.' Both respondent and Mr. Washington testify in the most positive manner that no price other than $200 was named as the price for this new piano. The salesman’s only version of it is as above set out. The note and mortgage were then drawn up, presented to respondent and she signed both, paying $10 in cash, the salesman retaining the credit slip for $75. The piano was thereupon delivered to respondent, who retained it for nearly three years, making payments until she had paid in cash $145, exclusive of the $75, when appellant * replevied it from her possession, claiming a balance still due on the basis of $275' being the price of the instrument.

During these years there was a continual dispute between the parties as to how much respondent owed on the piano, respondent insisting that she was entitled to a credit for the $75 called for in the credit ■slip which appellant had accepted; appellant claiming that the price of the piano was $275; that it had credited the $75 slip or order on its hook account with [681]*681respondent in which, it had entered the transaction from a sales slip made ont by the salesman; and that when respondent signed the note she still owed $200, on which she then paid $10. Including this $10, appellant had credited respondent with $145, not crediting the’ $75 evidenced by the credit slip on the note.

Going back to the purchase of the piano and execution of the note and mortgage, it is in evidence that when the salesman handed them to respondent and she was asked to sign them, and was about to do so, Mr. Washington said: “Why do you sign a note without having it read?” Whereupon, according to Mr. Washington, the salesman said: “It is all right, that is the contract that we sell everything.” The salesman testified very positively that both the mortgage and note were read by.him to respondent. Respondent testified that she could write but could not read “to amount to anything.” She at first testified that neither the note nor mortgage were read by or to her.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stephen Burns, Inc. v. Trantham
305 S.W.2d 66 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 949, 185 Mo. App. 676, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kieselhorst-piano-co-v-porter-moctapp-1914.