Schollay v. Moffitt-West Drug Co.

17 Colo. App. 126
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1902
DocketNo. 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 Colo. App. 126 (Schollay v. Moffitt-West Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schollay v. Moffitt-West Drug Co., 17 Colo. App. 126 (Colo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Thomson, J.

The Moffitt-West Drug Company brought this action against E. Pauline Lyneman to recover the price of goods, wares and merchandise, alleged to have been sold and delivered by it to her. The answer was a denial. Judgment went in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed to this court, where the judgment was reversed.—Moffitt-West Drug Co. v. Lyneman, 10 Colo. App. 249.

The trial which followed the reversal, -resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff, and the case is now here by.the defendant’s appeal.

Upon some matters of controlling importance, the evidence was conflicting; and if the case was properly submitted to the jury, we are powerless to disturb their verdict.

It appears that the defendant was the proprietor of a drug store, known as Lyneman’s Pharmacy, which was managed by her husband, F. A. Lyneman, as her agent. Her testimony was that on a day in July, 1893, happening to go to her store, she found in the room Mr. John J. Smythe, the traveling salesman of the plaintiff, endeavoring to obtain an order from her husband for a bill of goods; that she then and there told him that she wanted him to keep out of the store; that she did not want her husband to buy any goods east, because she could not keep track of the purchases; that she wanted her goods bought in Denver, from two houses which she named, for the reason that she knew just what goods were needed, and what should be bought; and if her husband bought at those houses she could keep herself advised of his movements. It appears from her statements that she had very little confidence in her husband’s business capacity, and disliked his methods; and hence her anxiety to be able to follow his transactions. The goods, for the price of which this action [129]*129was brought, were all sold to the pharmacy after the defendant, according to her testimony, notified Mr. ■ Smythe that she wanted no goods from his house. She also stated that she had no knowledge that any goods from that house had come into her store; and we find no tangible evidence in the record that she ever knew anything whatever about any of such goods, except it might be one barrel of whiskey. Concerning that, she denied knowledge that it came from the plaintiff, but her denial was contradicted. Mr. Lyneman died on the 19th day of June, 1894, and the defendant, after the first trial, became Mrs. E. Pauline Schollay. The evidence on the subject is unsatisfactory, but it may be conceded that with the exception of the whiskey, all the goods received from the plaintiff were placed upon the shelves in the storeroom, and, in due course of business, were sold with the other goods. The defendant’s statement of the conversation with Mr. Smythe, was contradicted by him.

Upon the evidence, the court instructed the jury orally, as follows:

“If you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff sold and delivered to the Lyneman Pharmacy, and you find that the defendant was the principal and owner of the business carried on and conducted in the name of the Lyneman Pharmacy, and that the defendant was doing business in such name, and you find that the merchandise was delivered at the premises, and in the store of the defendant, and that the defendant .personally, or through her agent, received such goods and disposed of them for her own benefit, and appropriated the proceeds thereof to her own use, then the defendant is liable in this action, and you should return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the value of the goods so sold, so delivered and so received, and so appropriated by the defendant. [130]*130And under such, facts the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, whether the defendant had or had not knowledge of what the agent did, and whether there-may or may not have been a limitation on the agent’s authority.
“In order to justify you in finding for the plaintiff, you must find from a preponderance of the evidence, that the goods and merchandise in question were sold and delivered to the Lyneman Pharmacy. -And if you find from the evidence that a certain bill of merchandise and goods was in the manner as we have described, sold and delivered to the said pharmacy, and that the defendant was the owner of the business, and carrying on her business in that name, and you further find from the evidence that the'defendant personally, or through her agent, disposed of any part of the said bill of goods and merchandise, and appropriated the proceeds thereof to her own use, and you find from the evidence, under these instructions, that the defendant is liable for such portion of the bill of goods, then and in that case the defendant would be liable for the entire bill of goods to the extent-of the items and amount of the entire bill of goods which were sold -and received at her place of business, provided you find that such entire bill of goods was sold and received by the defendant, either personally or through her agent, and that the same were placed in the store and mingled with the goods and merchandise of the premises and store of which the defendant was the principal and owner, and you find that such goods were sold and disposed of by either the defendant personally, or her agent, and the proceeds thereof went into the funds of the.defendant, and were retained by her.
“If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff did not"sell the merchandise in question-.to the Lyneman Pharmacy,, and deliver the same'to the Lyne[131]*131man Pharmacy,, and that the same, nor' any part thereof were appropirated, and the proqeeds thereof not appropriated by the defendant, personally, or through her agent, -and that the proqeeds thereof did not go into and become mingled with the funds of the defendant, and that the defendant did not retain the same, then and in that case, you should find for the defendant, with reference to the entire bill of goods.
“In determining these questions, you should take into consideration all of the evidence that has been offered in the case, and. from and upon that evidence return your verdict.
“It has been contended on the part of the defend-. ant, that the defendant instructed one Smythe, who it is said'was a salesman for the plaintiff company, upon a certain occasion, in the defendant’s store, that her husband, Lyneman, was forbidden to purchase goods from any house other than two certain houses named, in the city of Denver, inclusive of the house which Smythe'represented. And it i contended that she told Smythe that she would not' permit Mr. Lyneman to purchase any goodfvat his house, and evidence has been offered in reference to such contention. If you find that the ¡defendant did, on that occasion, notify the salesman, and you find that salesman to be the person who subsequently sold the goods to the agent of the defendant, and you find that the goods in question ybere sold to such agent, Lyneman, the husband, and were not sold to the Lyneman Pharmacy, of wjiich the defendant was owner or principal, and you find that the defendant, either personally or through her agent, did not receive the said bill of goods, or any part thereof, and did not mingle them with the other goods in her store, and did not, through, herself personally, or through her agent, appropriate the same, or any part thereof, by selling and disposing of them, and by appropriating the [132]

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17 Colo. App. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schollay-v-moffitt-west-drug-co-coloctapp-1902.