Pearsell Manufacturing Co. v. Jeffreys

81 S.W. 901, 183 Mo. 386, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 S.W. 901 (Pearsell Manufacturing Co. v. Jeffreys) 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
Pearsell Manufacturing Co. v. Jeffreys, 81 S.W. 901, 183 Mo. 386, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 232 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This suit was begun in a justice’s court, taken by appeal to the circuit court, where there was a judgment for $16.37 for the plaintiff, from which [389]*389the defendants appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, where it was concluded that the judgment ought to he reversed and the cause remanded, hut the judges of that court were of the opinion that their decision was in conflict with a decision of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, viz., Globe Ptg. Co. v. Bickley, 73 Mo. App. 499, and for that reason transferred the cause to this court for determination.

The suit is founded on an alleged contract in writing as follows:

“April 1, 1900, I, the undersigned agent for the Pearsell Manufacturing Company of Des Moines, Iowa, do hereby agree to remit amount due company of each order I buy of said company within thirty days after receiving said goods.

“Mary Jeffreys, Agent.

“We the undersigned, have faith in the honesty and reliability of Mrs Mary Jeffreys and will guarantee the payment of each bill of goods said Mrs. Jeffreys may buy of said Pearsell Manufacturing Company within thirty days after receiving goods.

Name. Occupation.

“Mr. George H. Parker, Cond’r C. M. & St. P.

“Lewis S. PreNtiss, Real Estate Agent.

“F. W. Ashby, Real Estate Agent.”

In the caption to the plaintiff’s petition the style of the case is as follows: “ Pearsell Manufacturing Co., plaintiff, v. Mrs. Mary Jeffreys, Geo. H. Parker, Lewis S. Prentiss and F. W. Ashby, defendants,” but the contract declared on is not one alleged to have been made by Mrs. Jeffreys as principal and the other defendants as sureties, but it is the alleged contract of guaranty, and although Mrs. Jeffreys is named among the defendants in the caption, yet the petition states that she “is insolvent and suit against her would be unavailing.” The answer begins: “Now this day come the defendants,” etc., but the purport of it shows that it was in[390]*390tended as the answer of the alleged guarantors only, and whilst the judgment is nominally against “the defendants, ’ ’ yet on the whole record it appears that Mrs. Jeffreys was ignored or overlooked, and the attorneys and court treated it as a suit against the alleged guarantors only, and so we will,treat it, and when the word “defendants” is hereinafter used it will mean the alleged guarantors only.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to show that the bill sued on was sent to the witness for collection, and he presented it for payment to the defendants Pren-tiss, Ashby and Parker, who admitted that they then knew that Mrs. Jeffreys had received the goods, but asked for time to enable them to try to collect it from her. Witness waited awhile, and then brought suit. Defendant Parker told witness that Mrs. Jeffreys was insolvent.

The evidence for defendants tended to prove that the body of the instrument sued on was a printed form sent out by the plaintiff, that it was presented to them by Mr. Parker, a son-in-lhw of Mrs. Jeffreys, with the request that they sign it. The paper in the form as presented to them called for payment for the goods within ten days from delivery, but they objected to that, as being too short a period, and interlined the paper to read thirty days, and then signed it, and returned it to Mr. Parker, and never saw or heard of it again until demand was made on them for payment of the bill sued on; they were never notified that the plaintiff had accepted their proposal to guarantee the payment of Mrs. Jeffreys’ bill, or that any goods had been sold to her until the bill was presented to them for payment, a few days before the suit was brought; they denied that they acknowledged the debt or that they only-asked time for payment.

The case was submitted to the court on the evidence, jury waived. There were no instructions asked or given. The result of the trial was as above stated.

[391]*391The judgment in the case will depend on the answer to the question whether or not the written document and the attending circumstances constitute a complete contract of guaranty, or only a proposal which never became a contract. The circuit court took the view that it was a complete contract; the Kansas City Court of Appeals was of the opinion that the transaction never got beyond a mere proposal.

There was no evidence to show that between the time of the signing of the paper by the defendants and the day on which the bill was presented to them for payment, there had been any notice expressly given them that the plaintiff had accepted their guaranty.

It is as essential to a contract of. guaranty, as it is to any other contract, that both parties agree to it; a proposal never becomes binding on the proposer until it is accepted.

The cases referred to in the opinion of Judge Elli-soN for the Kansas City Court of Appeals in this case sustain this doctrine.

In Rankin v. Childs, 9 Mo. 665, it appeared that one McCourtney applied to the plaintiff for a bill of lumber and was told that security would be required; in a few days thereafter, he presented a bill of the lumber desired, signed by himself, and below his signature this: “I hereby guarantee the payment of the above bill. ¥m. Childs.” The lumber required was furnished to McCourtney on the bill, and Childs knew that it was furnished; he had no notice that his proposal to guarantee the payment of the bill had been accepted except such as might have been implied from the fact that the lumber was furnished and he knew it. There was no evidence that demand of payment had been made of McCourtney or that he was insolvent. The circuit '•court sustained a demurrer to the evidence and that judgment was affirmed. This court held that acceptance of the proposal to guarantee the bill and notice thereof were necessary to make it a binding obligation on [392]*392Childs, and in that connection, referring to the fact that Childs knew that the lumber was being furnished, the court said: “Whether that would constitute a sufficient notice of the acceptance of his guaranty, and that upon the faith thereof the plaintiffs were delivering the materials for the boat, ought to' have been left to the jury. ’ * But the judgment was affirmed on the ground that there was no evidence that a demand of payment had been made on McCourtney or that he was insolvent. The point in that decision directly hearing on the case at bar is, that acceptance of the proposal and notice thereof to the proposer are essential to complete the contract, hut such acceptance and notice may be inferred if the circumstances justify the inference.

In Bank v. Shine, 48 Mo. 456, the defendant wrote a letter to the president of the hank asking him to submit to. his hoard a proposition to loan O’Neil & Co. $15,000, and that if the hank would make the loan he would hold himself responsible for the payment, and concluded with this: “If the Central can not conveniently make this advance, I will feel obliged to assist them in procuring it elsewhere. ’ ’ The court interpreted that to he a mere proposal and not binding until acceptance and notice. Indeed the concluding clause in the letter is in effect an invitation for an answer.

In Taylor v. Shouse, 73 Mo. 361, a paper of character similar to that in question was signed by the defendants ’ intestate on March 29; on the thirtieth he was taken ill, and on the thirty-first he was totally incapacitated for business, and on April 1 he died.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.W. 901, 183 Mo. 386, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearsell-manufacturing-co-v-jeffreys-mo-1904.