Motherstadt v. Harry Newman, Inc.

217 S.W. 591, 204 Mo. App. 619, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 65
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 591 (Motherstadt v. Harry Newman, Inc.) 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
Motherstadt v. Harry Newman, Inc., 217 S.W. 591, 204 Mo. App. 619, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 65 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

STURGIS, P. J.

The only question involved in this case relates to the jurisdiction of the trial court. The defendant is a corporation having its office and place of business in St. Louis, Missouri. The plaintiff! lives in Stoddard County where he brought this suit and obtained service on defendant by summons sent to the sheriff of St. Louis and served there. The defendant appeared to the action in Stoddard County specially and by proper plea raised the question of the jurisdiction of the court. The plaintiff claims that the suit was properly brought in Stoddard County because the cause of action accrued in that pounty. This claim is based on section 1754, Revised Statutes' 1909, which provides that suits against corporations shall be commenced either in the county where the cause of action accrued or where such corporation shall have an office or agent. Defendant deniels, that the causie of action accreued in Stoddard County and hence defendant could only, be sued in St. Louis. The court found this issue for 'defendant, dismissed the case and plaintiff has appealed.

The facts are not in dispute and the issue is one of law. It stands admitted that defendant has no *621 office, agent or place of business in Stoddard County, but that its office and place of business was solely in St. Louis where it was engaged in selling automobiles. The plaintiff, then and at all times mentioned a resident of Stoddard County, went to St. Luis and there purchased of defendant an automobile paying-for same mostly in cash but partly by delivering of trading to defendant a used automobile owned by plaintiff at an agjreed price. The automobile so purchased by plaintiff was thus fully paid for but it is alleged in the present suit, and this will be taken as true, that defendant then promised and agreed to pay; plainitff or'his' assignor of such contract the sum of $282 whenever the defendant sold the used car taken as part payment. This suit is for this $282, it being conceded that defendant has sold the used car. The gist of the action is that defendant at its place of business in St. Louis for a sufficient consideration promised to pay plaintiff $282 to be due and payable whenever it sold a certain used ear and such debt having matured by. the sale of said car defendant ■ has and does refuse to make such payment. In making- such promise by defendant, nothing was said as to where the payment of the $282 should be made.

Where under these facts did plaintiff’s cause of action accrue — in St. Louis where the defendant resides and where the indebtedness was incurred or in Stoddard County where plaintiff resides and where he was at the time the debt matured by defendant’s sale of the used car? The plaintiff claims that the cause of action accrued in Stoddard County for these reasons:

1. It is the breach of the contract rather than the making of it that accrues the cause of action and hence the place of the breach (or refusal to pay) rather than the place of making the contract fixes the place where the cause of action accrues. As a general'proposition this is good law. [Barnett, Haynes & Barnett v. Colonial Hotel Bldg. Co., 137 Mo. App. 636, 646, 119 S. W. 471; Brown v. Bach (Utah), 53 Pac. 991; Ripp *622 stein v. Ins. Co., 57 Mo. 86; Martin v. Ins. Co., 176 S. W. 269; Bankers’ Life Ass’n v. Shelton, 84 Mo. App. 634; Hosley v. Ins. Co. (Wis.), 57 N. W. 48; Bank v. Lacombe, 84 N. Y. 367; Penn. L. & M. F. Co. v. Meyer, 49 L. Ed. 810; Vaugh v. Weldon, Law Rep. 10 C. P. 47; Jackson v. Spittal, Law Rep. 5 C. P. 542.] In Peak v. Harvester Co., 194 Mo. App. 128, 131, 186 S. W. 574, this court said: “The cause of action sued on, however, is' based on and has to do with the breach of the contract rather than its making. The cause of action accrued, therefore, at the place of its breach It is the performance of the contract which was breached and, obviously, the place of the performance, rather than the place of the making, determines the place of the breach.” In Maxwell v. Railroad Co., 34 Fed. 286, the court said:

“I am clearly of the opinion that the cause of action arises, not where the contract is made, hut where it is broken; and that, as the expulsion of the plaintiff took place in Kansas, the cause of action must be deemed to have arisen there.”

II. "Where an agreement to pay is made and no place of payment is mentioned, the debt is payable where the creditor resides. The debtor in such a case must seek the creditor and make payment where the creditor resides or may be found. This also is the general rule of law. [30 Cyc. 1185.; 21 R. C. L. 15; Dameron v. Belt, 3 Mo. 213; Hale v. Patton, 60 N. Y. 236, 19 Ame. Rep. 168; Dockman v. Smith, 113 Mass. 320, 18 Ame. Rep. 495.]

Combining the above two propositions the plaintiff! says: (1) the defendant’s promise to pay, though made in St. Louis, fixed no place of payment and the place of payment was therefore the residence of the plaintiff! in Stoddard County; (2) That defendant was obligated to seek plaintiff in Stoddard County and make payment there; (3) That its refusal to do so constituted a breach of the contract and this breach occurred in Stoddard County; (4) That the breach of the contract is *623 the accrual of the cause of action and such breach and accrual being" the place of payment in Stoddard County such is the proper venue of this suit.

However logical this' may seem on ¡first impression we find no case going to the full length contended for -by plaintiff. While a number of eases dealing with the place of the accrual of 'the cause of action as fixing, the proper venue have held that the place of the breach of the contract rather than the place of its making; is the proper venue, none have gone to the extent of holding that, where the breach consists in a mere refusal to pay and no place of payment has been made part of the obligation, then the place where the creditor resides or may be found when the refusal to pay is made is the place where the cause of action accrues and fixes the venue of the cause of action. Many of the caises cited and relied on by plaintiff do- not deal with a mere refusal to pay or perform a contract obligation but are cases for damages on tort or cases which, though bottomed on contract, involve acts, which are held to accrue the cause of action, which in realty create the cause of action. Of this latter elasfi of cases are insurance cases, for while bottomed on contract they are not suits for breach of contract since it cannot be said that the loss of property by, fire or the death of the insured is a breach of the insurance contract but rather that the loss or death first brings the cause of action into being. There is no difficulty, therefore, in holding, that the death of • the insured or the destruction of the insured property accrues the cause of action and the place of such event fixes the place of bringing suit where as here the suit may be brought where the cause of action accrues. Of course in suits for damages growing out of tort the cause of action accrues where and when the tort is, committed.

In suits for breach of contract to pay money or deliver property the courts have gone no further than to hold that where the contract fixes the place of performance then the failure or refusal to do so constitutes *624

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 591, 204 Mo. App. 619, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/motherstadt-v-harry-newman-inc-moctapp-1920.