Service Purchasing Co. v. Brennan

42 S.W.2d 39, 226 Mo. App. 110, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 13
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 39 (Service Purchasing Co. v. Brennan) 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
Service Purchasing Co. v. Brennan, 42 S.W.2d 39, 226 Mo. App. 110, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 13 (Mo. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

This is an action for conversion. Originating in a justice's court, the case was taken on appeal to the circuit court, wherein, upon a trial to the court alone, a jury being waived, a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, and against defendant, in the sum of $22. A motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, following which defendant prayed for and was granted an appeal to the Supreme Court, evidently upon the theory that there was a live constitutional question in the case. That court found that such was not the situation, however, and consequently ordered the case to be transferred here. [Service Purchasing Company v. Brennan (Mo. Sup.), 32 S.W.2d 81.]

No point is made in the briefs in regard to the form or sufficiency of the pleadings, and as a result their contents need not be considered.

Of the parties to the cause, it is enough to say that plaintiff, Service Purchasing Company is a corporation, engaged (so its testimony shows), in the business of buying earned salary or wage accounts; while defendant, Edward Brennan, is or was in the employ of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company as a yard clerk.

Certain facts are undisputed in the record, among which are that defendant was paid a wage of $4.40 a day, and that the railroad company paid its employees semi-monthly, the amount earned from the first to the fifteenth of the month, inclusive, being due and payable on the twenty-fifth, and the amount earned from the sixteenth to the end of the month, inclusive, being due and payable on the tenth of the following month. In other words, the railroad company reserved a period of ten days after the maturity of each wage account in which to make up its pay roll for that period.

On April 25, 1927, defendant came to the office of plaintiff company, and advised the one in charge that he wanted to get some money. Whether it was his purpose to sell his wage account, or to obtain a loan, was a matter of dispute at the trial, plaintiff contending the former, and defendant the latter, at least in so far as he was permitted to do so under the rulings of the court. At any rate, defendant was asked to and did, fill out a prepared form, styled an "application to sell an earned salary or wage account," in which he made certain representations in regard to his employment and outstanding indebtedness. *Page 115

It appears from plaintiff's case that defendant had worked five days after April 15, and up to April 25, 1927, the date of the purported assignment, for which his earnings would have been the sum of $22, computed at the rate of $4.40 a day. Plaintiff offered him the sum of $20 for such account (under its version of the transaction), which defendant accepted, whereupon the following document, introduced in evidence as Plaintiff's Exhibit B, was executed:

"For and in consideration of the sum of $20.00 Dollars, cash in hand this day paid me, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, I do hereby sell, transfer and assign to the Service Purchasing Co., doing business in the City of St. Louis, Mo., my account for salary or wages already earned by me during the month of April, 1927, and amounting to $22.00, and due to me by Missouri Pacific R.R. Co.

"This is an absolute and unconditional sale, transfer and assignment of the said account without further right, title or interest remaining in me, and in selling the said account to the said Service Purchasing Co. for the cash consideration herein shown and mutually agreed upon, I represent and warrant that I was employed by the said above-named company during the month and year above stated, in the capacity of Yard Clerk, 2221 Gratiot St., and while so employed I earned, and there is due to me, the salary or wages above stated.

"I further represent and warrant that there are no off-sets, claims, demands, orders, drafts, garnishments or attachments outstanding in any way affecting the said account; that I have not heretofore sold, transferred or assigned the same, but that the said account is just, true and unpaid, and that I have full power and authority to sell, transfer and assign the same.

"The said Service Purchasing Co. is hereby authorized and empowered, and by these presents I do hereby authorize and empower the said Service Purchasing Co., or C.G. Hardeman, its agent, as my attorney in fact, for me and in my name, to sign any and all checks, vouchers, receipts or acquittances necessary and proper to be signed in order to collect and evidence the payment of the said account to the same extent and authority, if I were personally present, I hereby ratifying and confirming all that my said attorney in fact may lawfully do by virtue hereof.

"Name, EDWARD BRENNAN. "Address, 924 La Salle St.

"In Witness Whereof I have hereunto set my hand at St. Louis, Mo., this April 25, 1927.

"Witness:

"C.G. HARDEMAN." *Page 116

Plaintiff's testimony was that it was aware of the existence of a rule of the railroad company making if a dischargeable offense for an employee to make an assignment, and that consequently, it did not notify the railroad company of what had occurred, but that instead, defendant was made plaintiff's agent for the purpose of making the collection for it. On the next pay day, which was May 10, 1927, defendant collected the sum of $45, shown by the pay roll to be due him for services from April 16th to the end of the month, and of which the purported assignment of $22 was a part. It was admitted that such sum of $22, or no part thereof, was turned over to plaintiff by defendant, and in due course this present action for its recovery was instituted.

It was further disclosed by the evidence that on May 9, 1927, defendant filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy; that among his assets, he listed the wages then due him from the railroad company; that plaintiff filed proof of its claim for $22 in the bankruptcy court on May 14, 1927; and that the claim was disallowed by the referee without prejudice, and without affecting plaintiff's right to maintain and recover in this action.

The prime insistence urged on behalf of defendant is that the court erred in rendering judgment against him, and in favor of plaintiff, the theory being, in substance, that under no view of the case was plaintiff shown to have acquired such a title to the fund covered by the purported assignment as to have supported an action for its conversion. More specifically stated, defendant argues that for plaintiff to have successfully maintained this action, it was necessary for it to have shown that it had the right of property in, or the right of possession to the fund charged to have been converted by defendant; and that no such right was disclosed, in that the assignment was but a partial one, concededly made without the consent of the debtor, so as not to have effectuated a transfer of absolute ownership to plaintiff as assignee.

This contention proceeds upon the theory that on April 25, 1927, when the instrument of assignment was executed, defendant's two-weeks wage account, covering the period from April 16th to April 30th, inclusive, had not yet matured, so as to be due and payable from the railroad company under the terms of the contract of employment; and that consequently, neither the whole, nor any portion, of such wage account was assignable by defendant without his employer's consent, until after the close of working hours on the last day of the wage period, when it might first he said that the increasing variable account had become a stated sum due and to be paid to defendant on the following pay day.

There is no controversy about the rule relied upon by defendant, that a portion of a debt or claim is incapable of assignment so as

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 39, 226 Mo. App. 110, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/service-purchasing-co-v-brennan-moctapp-1931.