Lash v. Parlin

78 Mo. 391
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 78 Mo. 391 (Lash v. Parlin) 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
Lash v. Parlin, 78 Mo. 391 (Mo. 1883).

Opinion

Winslow, C.

This is an action for the breach of a certain contract, or memorandum in writing, alleged to have been executed by respondents to appellant, a copy of which wall be found set out in the opinion, where it has been placed for greater convenience of reference. The petition alleges in substance, that plaintiff was engaged as a dealer in agricultural implements, lumber, etc., at Linneus, Missouri ; that defendants were partners engaged in the manufacture of agricultural implements at Canton, Illinois, and [393]*393in selling tlieir manufactured goods; that on Eebruary 22nd, 1873, plaintiff purchased of defendants goods of their manufacture amounting to $1,181.11; that defendants agreed to deliver said goods, within a reasonable time on board the cars, on the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, at Cliillicothe, Missouri, at which place they were then stored; that defendants’ agent, at the request of plaintiff, assorted said goods into three lots, one to be shipped to Meadville, one to Linneus and the other to Browning, all in said Linn county; that the said agent, after having so separated and divided said plows and cultivators, boxed up and marked the lot of said goods to be shipped to Meadville, directing the same to B. L. Barbee, at that place, and made arrangements for the shipment of all of said goods; that defendants failed and refused to comply with said contract, but on the contrary, sold and delivered the goods to other parties, without the consent.of plaintiff; and that plaintiff is and always has been ready to comply with the terms oí said contract.

The answer after admitting the partnership, and denying generally all the other allegations of the petition, states that there was no money or other valuable thing paid as earnest to bind the pretended bargain set out in plaintiff’s petition, or in part payment thereon; nor did the buyer accept any part of said goods or actually receive the same; nor was there any note or memorandum of said pretended bargain in writing, made at the time alleged, or subsequently, and signed by the defendants or any person or persons to be charged with such contract or their agents lawfully authorized — to which there was a reply putting the new matter in issue.

On the trial the plaintiff offered an abundance of evidence to prove the allegations of his petition, some portions of which the court admitted and others rejected. It seems that the negotiations began between one -Taylor, as the agent of defendants, and plaintiff at Linneus, and were concluded by Taylor and one Coons as the agent of plaintiff [394]*394at Chillicothe, where the goods were stored, and that, after everything had heen completed, Taylor gave Coons the' memorandum sued on to hand to plaintiff to show what the contract was. The memorandum, the original of which is on file with the record here, was executed on a large general printed blank of defendants containing a list of all their goods, which they seem to have furnished their agents for taking orders. There was evidence tending to show a delivery; but both parties seem to have abandoned all other points in the case except the sufficiency of the memorandum, and nothing else need be noticed in the case. "When the memorandum was offered in evidence, it was objected to by defendants and excluded by the court, for the following reasons, to which plaintiff duly excepted: (1) That the instrument is wholly unintelligible, and is insufficient in law to take the case out of the statute; (2). That it is Void for uncertainty; and (3) That it is not a note or memorandum of the “bargain” or “contract” set out in the petition, within the meaning of the statute against frauds and perjuries, and is otherwise insufficient,' incompetent and irrelevant. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, defendants offered and the court sustained a demurrer to the evidence; - whereupon the plaintiff took a non-suit, and now brings the case here by appeal, which he has duly perfected.

The' only questions in this case relate to the sufficiency of the following instrument as a memorandum to take the case out of the Statute of Frauds, and the admissibility of parol evidence under it:

“ Chillicothe, Mo., February 22nd, 1878.

Messrs. Parlin & Orendorff, Canton, Ill.:

Gentlemen: Please execute the following order for plows, cultivators, * * etc., to be delivered on board cars in Chillicothe, Missouri, marked for J. E. Lash: QUANTITY. OLD GROUND PLOWS, IRON-BEAM. PRICE. 2. No. 6. 14-inch cut, medium steel landside....... §>22 00

[395]*3953. No. 7. Extra. lG-incli cut, medium, steel land-

side, three-horse...................»........... 22 00

5. A 4. "Wood-beam. 12-inch cut, medium steel

landside.......................................... 14 25

3. A 6. Wood-beam. ' 14-inch cut, medium steel

landside.......................................... 16 75

2. A 7. Wood-beam. 16-inch cut, medium steel

landside, three-horse.......................... 20 25

cultivators.

50. Iron-beam. Parlin’s Patent, with shields...... 14 50

19. Wood-beam. Parlin’s Patent, with shields.... 13 50

Eor which I agree to give you my notes payable with exchange or by express, prepaid, at above list, for plows— less forty-five per cent, and payable all January 1st, 1879, with ten per cent interest from January 1st, 1879. Cultivators, less net per cent, and payable January 1st, 1879, With ten per cent interest from January 1st, 1879.

Parlin & Orendoree,

Per Taylor.”

Respondents maintain, and the court below held, that it was void for uncertainty, and hence not a sufficient memorandum for any purpose. These questions must naturally be considered together. We entertain no doubt but what the memorandum is sufficient under our Statute of Frauds, as construed by this court. Certainly it is not complete and perfect in itself, so as to render it an artificially drawn contract; but it is sufficiently definite and certain on its face to render it admissible. Being clearly admissible, there can be no doubt under the authorities cited, but what the parol evidence rejected by the court was admissible to explain and ajiply it to the contract actually existing between the parties. Parlin & Orendorff, the respondents, are the parties to be bound by this contract. It is signed by them by their agent, contains an order on them to deliver certain goods to John F. Lash, the appellant by name; it contains an exact description of the property to be delivered, with [396]*396the price to be paid for each article; it states the manner and place of execution; and it fixes the time and place of payment. This all seems plain enough. Here then we have a paper signed by the parties to be bound, by a person purporting to be their agent, designating on its face the party to be benefited, describing the property to be affected, stating the price to be paid, fixing the manner and place of delivery, and providing the time and manner of payment. Applying the test of common sense to this paper, what else can it mean than that it is intended to contain the memorandum of a contract between Pai’lin & Orendorff and John F. Lash, all the details of which have not been fully reduced to writing? We cannot read it in any other light.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Mo. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lash-v-parlin-mo-1883.