Missouri Valley Walnut Co. v. Snider

569 S.W.2d 324, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2185
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1978
DocketKCD 29043, KCD 29044
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 569 S.W.2d 324 (Missouri Valley Walnut Co. v. Snider) 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
Missouri Valley Walnut Co. v. Snider, 569 S.W.2d 324, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2185 (Mo. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

ANDREW JACKSON HIGGINS, Special Judge.

Action by Missouri Valley Walnut Company against Jim Snider and Tom Panned for damages for breach of contract to deliver a quantity of walnut logs. Cross-claim by defendant Snider against codefendant Panned for damages for breach of contract between them to fulfill their contract with plaintiff.

Appeal (29043) by defendant Snider from verdict and judgment of $15,186.63 in favor of plaintiff against defendants, combined with appeal (29044) by defendant Panned from the verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff, and from the verdict and judgment of $7,593.31, in favor of cross-claimant Snider against codefendant Panned. The question common to both appeals is whether the court erred in admitting a computer print-out in support of plaintiff’s damages. An additional question in Pannell’s appeal is whether the court erred in giving verdict-directing instructions 7 and 8 on Snider’s cross-claim. Affirmed.

Missouri Valley Walnut Company, located in St. Joseph, produces lumber, veneer, and gunstocks from walnut logs. Ozark Hardwoods, located in Springfield, produces lumber from walnut logs. Both companies were owned by C & D Sales Company. James Rowland was employed by Missouri Valley as a buyer of walnut logs, and had known Jim Snider and Tom Panned since 1966. He had purchased logs from Mr. Snider since 1967, and from him and Mr. Panned since 1972 when they started work *326 ing together. Mr. Rowland’s purchases on behalf of Missouri Valley would be shipped to Missouri Valley Walnut Company in St. Joseph or to Ozark Hardwoods in Springfield at the direction of Missouri Valley depending upon where logs were needed.

In September, 1972, Missouri Valley, through Mr. Rowland, contracted with Mr. Snider and Mr. Pannell, as partners, to purchase $45,000 worth of walnut logs at a price of $0,275 per board foot. The logs were held in a log yard on the Frisco Railroad at Walnut Grove, Missouri. The partners were to ship the logs and Missouri Valley was to scale them either before shipment or after arrival at Missouri Valley in St. Joseph or its sister company, Ozark Hardwoods, in Springfield, as designated by Mr. Rowland.

On September 29, 1972, Missouri Valley advanced the $45,000 to Mr. Snider and shipments began the following week. Shipments to Missouri Valley and Ozark Hardwoods, as directed, continued whenever railroad cars were available until sometime in December, 1972. At that time Mr. Rowland was notified that Mr. Snider and Mr. Pan-nell had terminated their partnership. Mr. Snider and Mr. Pannell agreed that Mr. Pannell would fulfill the remainder of their obligation to Missouri Valley, and Mr. Pan-nell paid Mr. Snider $18,000 for his interest in the remaining Walnut Grove logs. Mr. Rowland was notified that Mr. Pannell would continue to ship logs to fulfill the $45,000 contract.

After December, 1972, Missouri Valley continued to receive logs on the contract both at St. Joseph and Springfield until late spring, 1973, when shipments ceased. Mr. Rowland called Mr. Pannell about the remaining shipments due and was informed first that the railroad was not furnishing enough cars and, later, that he did not owe Missouri Valley any additional logs.

To establish the balance due on the contract, i. e., its damages, plaintiff offered in evidence Exhibit 2 which was received over defendants’ objections as to foundation. Its admission is now assigned as error. In support, appellants assert that there was no testimony as to mode of preparation of the records that constituted the source of the information that went into preparation of the exhibit; that it was hearsay on hearsay; that it purported to show receipts at Ozark Hardwoods and there was no testimony of the method or time of preparation of records from Ozark Hardwoods; that no such records were produced in support of the print-out, and defendants were deprived of any opportunity to cross-examine or test the credibility of the sources.

Part of the agreement was that Mr. Rowland would scale the logs at Walnut Grove, or Mr. Snider and Mr. Pannell would ship them to one of Missouri Valley’s plants and the man on the yard there would scale them. Such would continue until $45,000 worth of logs had been received by plaintiff. When logs were scaled at point of shipment or upon receipt, a tally was made which listed the number of logs and the amount of board feet they contained. Such tallies would go to the office in St. Joseph for the office manager to record. Neither Mr. Snider nor Mr. Pannell scaled logs. Their business was to load the logs.

Willard Baber is the office manager and chief bookkeeper of the logging division of Missouri Valley Walnut Company at its office in St. Joseph. He receives information daily from buyers in the field and from the log inspection stations where the company receives logs. He checks such information, codes it as necessary, and feeds it to a computer. The print-out is delivered from the computer the following morning and he checks its accuracy against the original information. Such records are business records of the company, and he is responsible for gathering the daily records, reviewing them, and feeding them to the computer. When records from field buyers and from the log inspection stations are received, he reviews same and feeds their information' into the computer. Logs go through an inspection station when they are received by rail or truck. Log inspectors measure and grade the logs and send their information to his office the same as do buyers in the field. He checks inspectors’ information against inbound car records and tallies *327 before sending it to the computer. The inbound car record book shows what railroad cars came into the plant with logs, and the point of origin.

The Walnut Grove transaction was given a buyer/producer/lot number, JO 9615. All records or transactions reference that account were credited or reflected in the company’s records to that number at or near the time they were done or received by the office. Exhibit 2 was identified by Mr. Baber as the logging ledger for account JO 9615, maintained under his direct supervision and control. It showed monies paid by Missouri Valley for purchase of logs at Walnut Grove, number of logs actually received from Walnut Grove on the account, and where same were received. Such record was kept and maintained in the ordinary course of plaintiff’s business.

Specifically, Exhibit 2 showed, with reference to the Walnut Grove transaction:

Mr. Baber, using Exhibit 2, stated that Missouri Valley received 3,503 1 logs containing 108,886 board feet which, at $0.275 per foot, had a value of $29,813.37, leaving $15,186.63 worth of logs still due and owing Missouri Valley.

Mr. Baber stated with respect to the accuracy of inspectors’ records, that “inspectors are responsible individuals trained in their jobs.” By experience, he can check the “reasonable” accuracy of inspectors’ figures. The company scales and measures the logs when received at either of its plants (St. Joseph or Springfield), and credit against the advance payment is made on the scaling. Mr. Snider and Mr. Pannell confirmed the arrangements for scaling.

The Uniform Business Records Act, Section 490.680, RSMo. provides:

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Bluebook (online)
569 S.W.2d 324, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-valley-walnut-co-v-snider-moctapp-1978.