Siff v. Jackson

172 S.W. 1169, 187 Mo. App. 141, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 252
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 1169 (Siff v. Jackson) 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
Siff v. Jackson, 172 S.W. 1169, 187 Mo. App. 141, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 252 (Mo. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiffs, who are wholesale dealers in furs in New York, began this suit Decem6, 1912, in the circuit court of Jackson county against defendants Jackson and Klein who, at the time, were selling furs at retail in Kansas City. The cause of action stated in the petition was the alleged conversion of certain furs of the value of $1037, which defendant received from plaintiffs on consignment. A writ of attachment in aid of the action was sued out and levied on personal property as the property of defendants. In their answer defendants admitted that furs of the reasonable value of $1037 “were shipped to the defendants upon consignment, that is, upon a contract ¿nd understanding between the parties that the same were to be held by the defendants, subject to the orders of plaintiffs with the right in the defendants to sell said goods and account to the plaintiffs therefor as their agents- upon commission and that . . . until so sold were to remain the property of the plaintiffs” but denied that defendants “have violated in any manner, the said consignment agreement or converted raid appropriated said goods to their own uses and purposes.”

At the close of the evidence of plaintiffs the court gave the jury a peremptory instruction to return a verdict foi; defendants. Plaintiffs took an involuntary nonsuit with leave and in due procedure brought the case here by appeal.

Defendants were itinerant vendors of furs which they largely procured from wholesale merchants upon [144]*144consignment contracts which, gave them the right to sell at retail. Each had obtained a part of the goods in controversy from plaintiffs and had traveled alone from city to city until they met in Kansas City where they leased a storeroom for two months, placed their stocks together therein and proceeded, as partners, to sell them at retail. Jackson assumed the performance of Klein’s contract with plaintiffs which, in all material respects, was similar to Ms own. A statement of Ms dealings with plaintiffs will suffice for present purposes.

In the latter part of September, 1912, Jackson pur-' chased from plaintiffs, at their house in New York, three fur coats for $150, and paid $100 on the purchase price. He also procured other goods of the total value of $960, upon the following written receipt, dated September 28, 1912: “I have this day received from Siff & Cohen, the goods specified below of the value set opposite each item respectively . . . said goods remaining the property of Siff & Cohen and subject at all times to their order and the same may not be sold without the consent in writing of Siff & Cohen first had and obtained.”

Permission was given Jackson to sell any or all of the goods at prices not less than those at which they were billed on condition that the latter prices of goods thus sold would be remitted to plaintiffs whenever sales were made. Jackson testified in a deposition taken by plaintiffs': ‘ ‘ Q. These merchandise were the property of Siff & Cohen? A. Returnable at any time. Q. Whenever you sold merchandise you were supposed to remit to Siff & Cohen for that merchandise? A. I was supposed to send him the money for same. . . .”

On October 29,1912, plaintiffs shipped another consignment of the total value of $357 to Jackson at Kansas City. The day before this shipment was forwarded they received a remittance of $100 from Jackson on [145]*145account of sales of consigned goods and in their letter acknowledging receipt admonished him to “let us know which of our goods you have sold and every time you send us money wou would oblige us by letting us know what goods you have sold.”

On receipt of this letter and the shipment, Jackson wrote plaintiffs complaining indignantly of the prices at which the articles in that consignment were billed and threatening that “as soon as I have sold enough of your goods to get my money out, which I have already sent you, you will have the pleasure of receiving all the rest of the goods back.” The letter then became personal: ‘ ‘ The trouble with you is, ’ ’ it continued, “that you have always dealt with people that never pay, or some that are compelled to get goods from you, and charge them prices as you please, and you have done the same with me. I certainly am getting inducement from you for my honesty. ... You will greatly favor me by not excusing yourself as T don’t expect an answer from you on this letter.” His expectations were not realized, for plaintiffs wrote a hot rejoinder and a peremptory order to him to return ‘ ‘ our goods at once. ’ ’ Jackson replied under date of November 23d, “I will be in New York on. or about the 20th of December and will settle my account with you, in the meantime I am trying to sell your goods rather than bring them back. I have sold the sables.”

Plaintiffs answered November 25th, complaining-that he had not remitted for the sables and for other goods he had sold and had not reported sales as requested and stating, in substance, that if he did not perform these conditions'of the contract on or before December 2d, “we will demand the return of our goods both yours and Mr. Klein’s. ’ ’ On November 30th Jaekson replied in the firm name of Jackson & Klein, that “the goods are ready to be shipped back and will do so on the return of the invoice which I signed. En[146]*146closed you will find list of goods I have sold also the goods which Mr. Klein has left. . . . Mr. Klein will also return the goods upon return of the invoice which he signed.”

December 2d, plaintiffs telegraphed Jackson and Klein: “According list received you and Klein sold more than three hundred dollars goods we demand you return all your goods today wire us if sending goods today or will not take goods back and will sue for full amount if wire not received will telegraph our attorney to act immediately. ’ ’

December 4th, Jackson answered by telegram: “Will be in New York Monday with goods.”

He arrived in New York with a trunk filled with furs which he had carried with him as baggage. He had the trunk taken to another store and, learning that this suit had been brought at Kansas City and the goods in his store seized under the writ of attachment, began negotiations with plaintiffs for a settlement which ended in nothing being accomplished. In the course of the negotiations, Jackson, accompanied by a Mr. Rosenblatt, called at plaintiffs’ store and, according to the testimony of plaintiff Siff, the following conversation ensued:

“He said I brought back some of the gouds. I left in Kansas City about $350 worth and if you are willing to take back the goods I brought here and leave the other case in Kansas City still on memorandum, I will pay you for the goods sold. I told him I could not do that. I want pay for all the goods. Mr. Rosenblatt spoke to me and said I ought not to be so bard with him even though I am right; that I should try to get together with him on a settlement. I thought the matter over, and spoke to Mr. Cohen in regard to the matter and finally told him that if he would pay for the goods that he had left in Kansas City and for the goods he sold I would take back the goods he had brought back, and I would even take notes for part payment. [147]*147He said he could not pay all cash. I told him those notes would have to be indorsed; he said he did not know who he could get to indorse them. I said Rosenblatt should indorse them. Mr. Rosenblatt said he would not indorse them. He left that night with Rosen-.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 1169, 187 Mo. App. 141, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siff-v-jackson-moctapp-1915.