Nelson Manufacturing Co. v. Shreve

79 S.W. 488, 104 Mo. App. 474, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 506
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 79 S.W. 488 (Nelson Manufacturing Co. v. Shreve) 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
Nelson Manufacturing Co. v. Shreve, 79 S.W. 488, 104 Mo. App. 474, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 506 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

REYBURN, J.

After reversal by this court, (94 Mo. App. 518) this case was retried upon amended pleadings and from judgment upon verdict for plaintiff, [476]*476defendant has again brought the cause to this court. In June, 1899, appellant’s son then engaged in business on his own account, in the city of Louisiana, called on his father at the latter’s office with a letter of respondent, and stated it had demanded security before further shipments of goods and ashed his father to write that he would be responsible for the particular bill discussed. Appellant, disclaiming that such offer on his part would be of any assistance, as he was unknown to respondent, at urgent request of his son, finally wrote a letter to respondent, hereafter reproduced. A few days later his son again called upon him at his office, and making a statement that he owed respondent for which he was required to furnish security before obtaining the goods, again asked his father to write a further letter to respondent and, repeating his doubt of acceptance of his guaranty, the father, asking amount of the son’s indebtedness, to which the son, after consulting a letter from respondent, and either submitting it to appellant or repeating to him its contents, replied that the amount was $265, again wrote a letter to respondent, later exhibited in its order. Appellant denies receiving any reply to either letter, but subsequently by letter was notified of extent of son’s indebtedness to respondent and its payment requested. The correspondence between the parties co'nsisted of the following:

“St. Louis, Missouri, June 22, ’99.
“I. C. Shreve, Esq.,
“Louisiana, Missouri.
“Dear Sir:
“We have your order of the 21st, inst, which will receive our prompt attention. By referring to your account we find that you owe us a balance on April account of $114.07, together with shipments made you during May and June, bringing the total amount up to date $265. You mentioned to the writer when you were in our office several days ago that Mr. C. D. Shreve had expressed his willingness to guarantee the payment of [477]*477your account against you, and as it has now grown to be a right considerable amount, and we hope will be larger in the future, we would thank you to have him write us to that effect. Awaiting your reply, we are,
“Yours truly,
“N. 0. Nelson Mug. Company.
“Louisiana, Mo., 6-24, 1899.
“Messrs. N. 0. Nelson Mfg. Co.,
“Saint Louis, Mo.
“Dear Sirs:
“You ship the Dr. Birkhead order sent you by my son and I will stand good to you for the payment of the same. You need not be afraid to ship him, in my judgment, anything he orders; for he is strictly honest; just started in business, a good mechanic and plenty of work - and I believe he will forward your money just as fast as he collects it in.
“Yours very respectfully,
“ C. D. Shreve.
“St. Louis, Missouri, June 26, 1899.
“I. C. Shreve, Esq.,
“Louisiana, Mo.
“Dear Sir:
“We have your favor of the 23rd inst., also letter from your father on the 24th. It seems that either of you or he misunderstood our letter of the 22nd, as in his letter he stated that he will guarantee the payment of the order for Dr. Birkhead. We did not have in mind asking for a guarantee of this particular order, but simply a general guarantee of his, to cover your account for anything you might order.
“You mentioned when in the office recently, that your father was willing to guarantee payment of your account, and it was for this reason we wrote you that as your account was now gettting to be a pretty good-sized one, and hoping that you would continue to give us your orders, and probably run it up to a still larger amount; [478]*478we thought we might as well ask for the guaranty. Please explain this to him and request him to write us that he will stand good for any and all orders you may place with us. Awaiting your reply, we are,
“Yours very truly,
“N. 0. Nelson'Meg. Company.
“Louisiana, Missouri, June 28th, 1899.
“Messrs. N. 0. Nelson Mfg. Co.,
‘ ‘ St. Louis, Mo.
“Dear Sirs:
“Your letter to my son is before me. In reply will say you let him have such amount of goods as he needs until further orders, and I will stand good to you for the same, also what he owes you at the present time.
“Yours very respectfully,
“C. D. Shreve.
“St. Louis, January 19, 1900.
“C. D. Shreve, Esq.,
“Louisiana, Mo.
“Dear Sir:
“Your son owes us $512.59, which it seems we can not collect. The amount is long past due, and we have written him repeatedly asking for settlement, and being unsuccessful we must look to you to make good the guarantee which you gave us June 28th, 1899.
‘ ‘It has not been our wish to call upon you, but we must realize from our outstanding accounts with a fair degree of promptness.
“We need considerable money next Monday, and if it is inconvenient for you to send us your check by return mail for the entire amount, we will accept your 30, 60, and 90 day notes; each for one-third of the total.
“Awaiting your reply, we are,
‘ ‘ Yours very truly, -
“N. O. Nelson Meg. Co.” .

1. Appellant vigorously protésts against the.admission in evidence of the letters of respondent of dates [479]*479June 22 and 26,1899, both being those addressed to the son, as being received without sufficient foundation for their introduction in the shape of letterpress copies of the originals in lieu of the letters themselves. It appeared from the testimony that if extant they were in possession of the appellant’s counsel or his son, their addressee; the latter who had become a non-resident, in testifying by deposition, identified the press-copies and stated that he did not have the originals, but thought they had been lost. Respondent further duly served on appellant a subpoena duces tecum for their production at the trial and his counsel assured the court he would produce them if in his possession. These copies were further identified by their writer, an employee of respondent, and as it has satisfactorily accounted for the non-production of the originals by showing they were neither within control of either party nor within the jurisdiction of the court, and has exhausted all reasonable efforts to produce them, under such circumstances the best evidence obtainable, the press duplicates were properly allowed in evidence. Brown v. Railroad, 69 Mo. App.

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Related

Brown v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Co.
69 Mo. App. 418 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1897)
N. O. Nelson Manufacturing Co. v. Shreve
68 S.W. 376 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 488, 104 Mo. App. 474, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-manufacturing-co-v-shreve-moctapp-1904.