Martin v. Ashland Mill Co.

49 Mo. App. 23, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 171
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 49 Mo. App. 23 (Martin v. Ashland Mill Co.) 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
Martin v. Ashland Mill Co., 49 Mo. App. 23, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 171 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This was an action commenced' before a justice of the peace. The cause of action set forth in the first count of the plaintiff’s statement is, that he sold and delivered to defendant corporation, a milling company, thirty-eight bushels of wheat for which defendant agreed to pay plaintiff in flour at the-rate of twenty-nine pounds per bushel, on demand, and which defendant had refused to pay and deliver although often requested to do so. There was a second count in a similar cause of action, which was alleged to have been assigned to plaintiff.

It appears from the evidence that the defendant was engaged in the operation of a flouring mill in the village of Ashland in Boone county, and that it was, and had been for many years, its custom to receive wheat from the neighboring producers, and allow them, according to quality, so many pounds of flour per bushel, to be subsequently delivered on demand, or to-pay them at their option the value of the wheat in money. It- further appears that the wheat was delivered between the tenth and fifteenth of July, and a part on the first day of August, 1890, and the quantity of' flour per bushel to be given in exchange therefor was [27]*27agreed upon. The wheat was deposited in what is termed the “sink,” and from whence it was elevated to be ground into flour. It was mixed with other wheat placed in the “sink.” The wheat was entered on the mill books to be paid for in flour.

Dr. Martin, who was president of the defendant mill company, testified that it was the custom of the mill company to have the wheat deposited with it at the loss of the party putting it there. His testimony was corroborated by a number of the customers of the mill. There was also a number of them who testified they had never heard of such custom. The plaintiff testified that he never heard of it before the transaction which gave rise to this suit. There is no pretense that there was any special agreement entered into that, if the wheat received of plaintiff should “be burned up,” the defendant should be relieved of the payment therefor. The mill was burned on the fifteenth day of August following the delivery of the wheat in question. After the destruction of the mill the plaintiff demanded the quantity of the flour which the mill had agreed to deliver him for his wheat. A compliance with which was declined by defendant. There was no evidence offered tending to show that the wheat which plaintiff had placed in the sink, or that any other wheat, was there at the time of the destruction of the mill. There was some evidence tending to prove that there was at all times sufficient wheat in the mill to pay for all the flour it owed.

The court sitting as a jury declared the law to be that if the plaintiff delivered the defendant the wheat under an agreement that he should receive therefor upon demand a specific amount of flour made from wheat taken at random from wheat in the defendant’s mill collected from other sources, and that plaintiff thereafter demanded the delivery of the flour, and the [28]*28defendant refused to either deliver the same or to pay the value thereof in money, then plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of the flour at the , time of the demand, unless defendant had proven that there was an established, general and uniform custom that wheat so delivered and under like agreements was received by the miller, and the flour to be returned therefor pursuant to said agreement was held by him, subject to the risk of the party entitled thereto of being destroyed by fire; that the plaintiff and defendant, knowing of the custom at the time, contracted in this agreement with reference to said custom, and that the flour to which plaintiff was entitled was. destroyed by fire without the fault of defendant.

The judgment was for defendant, and from which plaintiff has appealed.

The case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury. It becomes, therefore, important to examine thé instruction of the court with the view of determining the correctness of the theory of law which it adopted in deciding the case. Was the transaction between plaintiff and defendant a bailment, sale or exchange?

If a bailment, the title to the wheat did not pass to the defendant because a contract of bailment contemplates the return of the goods bailed or growing out of the necessities of commerce, as, where grain is delivered in store, other grain of like quality and grade may be returned in its stead. Nor does the mere fact that it was mixed with a mass of like quality with the knowledge of the .bailor convert that into a sale which was originally a bailment. Lynn v. Lemon, 106 Ind. 567; Nelson v. Brown, 44 Iowa, 455; Sexton v. Abbott, 53 Wis. 106. The agreement proved in this case shows that the defendant was subsequently, on demand, to deliver the plaintiff a certain quantity of flour for the [29]*29wheat received. So the contract proved was not that of bailment.

Whether the transaction was a sale or not depends upon whether it contained these elements: First, parties competent to contract; second, mutual consent; third, absolute property in the thing which was the subject of the transfer; fomrth, a price in money. Tiedeman on Sales, sec. 1. The consideration agreed upon for the delivery of the wheat was a specific quantity of flour, and [not a price in money. And, therefore, the transaction was not a sale within the meaning of the' rule just stated. If the contract had, as it did not, fixed the.price of the wheat delivered and called for, and its payment in flour, then the transfer of the wheat would have been a sale. There being no price in money agreed upon for the wheat delivered, there was no sale.

The transaction between these parties was, properly speaking, an agreement for an exchange of goods and not for a sale. It was a commutation of goods for goods, and, therefore, an exchange and not a sale. Tiedeman on Sales, secs. 12, 150; Benjamin on Sales, 7; 1 Parsons on Contracts, 436; 2 Blackstone, 446; Chitty on Contracts [Ed. 1851] 332; Mitchell v. Giles, 12 Vt. 390; Slayton v. McDonald, 73 Me. 50; Gunter v. Lecky, 30 Ala. 596; Williams v. Berry, 8 How. (U. S.) 544. An exchange has been defined to be a reciprocal contract for the interchange of property, each party being a vendor and a vendee. Anderson’s Dictionary of Law, 427; Bixby v. Burt, 59 Cal. 528. The distinction, however, between a sale and an exchange is rather one of shadow than of substance, for in both cases the title is absolutely transferred, and the same rules of law are applicable. Commonwealth v. Clark, 14 Gray, 372; Benjamin on Sales, 7; Tiedeman on Sales, secs. 1, 12; [30]*30Dowling v. McKenney, 124 Mass. 480; Bedford v. Pegg, 38 N. Y. 212.

The case of Inglebright v. Hammond, 19 Ohio, 337, cited by the defendant, is not applicable to the present case. There the miller agreed ont of every four and one-half bushels of wheat furnished by Hammond to manufacture for him one barrel of flour, for which he was to charge thirty-three and one-third cents. The wheat was furnished to the miller under the agreement without objection by Hammond, mingled in the vat with his own; while the wheat was thus mingled, the miller absconded. Hammond caused an ■employe of the miller’s to manufacture fifty barrels •of flour out of the mass of wheat in the mill with which his was mingled, and this flour was seized under execution by the miller’s creditors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Mo. App. 23, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-ashland-mill-co-moctapp-1892.