State v. Rosenberger

111 S.W. 509, 212 Mo. 648, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 6, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 509 (State v. Rosenberger) 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
State v. Rosenberger, 111 S.W. 509, 212 Mo. 648, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 161 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

— At the September term, 1907, of the circuit court of Webster county, under an information filed by the prosecuting attorney of said county, charging the defendant with selling one gallon of whiskey in said county, on the 2d day of February, 1907, to one Ira Morton, in violation of the Local Option Law in full force and effect in said county at that time, the defendant was found guilty and his punishment assessed at a fine of three hundred dollars. De[653]*653fendant appealed in due course, after filing unsuccessful motion for new trial and in arrest of judgment.

The evidence tended tó prove that the defendant was a wholesale and retail liquor dealer, with office and place of business in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri; and did business under the trade name of “Penwood Company.” Ira Morton, a resident of Marshfield, in Webster county, Missouri, some time in January, 1907, ordered a gallon of whiskey from said' Penwood Company, and on February 2, 1907, the whiskey was received by him from the agent of the Wells-Fargo Express Company, at the office of said company in Marshfield. The whiskey was sent in a package marked C. O. D., and Morton paid said express agent the price thereof, $3.50; at the time of delivery, and the express agent sent the money to defendant’s office at Kansas City, where it was received. Morton testified that he mailed the order to defendant of his own motion, without any solicitation on the part of defendant, or any one on his behalf, and solely because he wanted the liquor for his own use. The express company received the package containing the whiskey from one of the defendant’s employees at Kansas City, and shipped the same to Morton, at Marshfield. The evidence further tended to prove that the transaction was carried out by defendant’s clerks, without his knowledge, while he was at Hot Springs, Arkansas; that while he had been making similar sales and shipments, on C. O. D. terms, to parties in other States, he had no knowledge that his clerks were making for him any such shipments to any local-option county in Missouri; that he had never solicited any business of that kind in Missouri either by agent or through the mails, and that up until the time of his arrest he was unaware that any such shipments had been made, nor had he authorized any.

The State introduced evidence tending to prove [654]*654that at the time of the alleged sale of liquor, and prior thereto, the Local Option Law was in force in Webster county.

The important question presented by this appeal is whether the place of sale of the liquor which the defendant is charged with selling unlawfully was in Webster county or Jackson county, Missouri. Defendant insists that the sale was at Kansas City, Jackson county, where he was authorized by law to sell liquor, and that he was guilty of no offense in accepting and filling an order from a party in a local-option county requesting the shipment to him, C. O. D., of a specified amount of liquor, to a point in said local-option county of Webster.

As a general rule the delivery of goods by the vendor to the carrier, when the goods are to be sent that way, is equivalent to delivery to the purchaser, subject only to the right of stoppage in transitu. [2 Kent’s Com., 490; State v. Wingfield, 115 Mo. 428; Kerwin & Co. v. Doran, 29 Mo. App. 397; Garbracht v. Commonwealth, 96 Pa. St. 449; Dunn v. State, 8 S. E. 806.] And this is true although the purchase money is after-wards collected by the vendor or agent at the place from which the goods are shipped. [State v. Hughes, 22 W. Va. 743.]

But when the goods are shipped upon order C. 0. D., as in the case at bar, there is much conflict in the authorities as to where. and when the title passes, that is, whether at the point of shipment or at the point of destination, upon payment of the purchase price. In American Express Co. v. Iowa, 196 U. S. l. c. 143, it is said: “True, as suggested by the court below, there has been a diversity of opinion concerning the effect of a C. O. D. shipment, some courts holding that under such a shipment the property is at the risk of the buyer, and, therefore, that delivery is completed when the merchandise reaches the hands of the carrier [655]*655for transportation; others, deciding that the merchandise is at the risk of the seller, and that the sale is not completed until the payment of the price and delivery to the consignee at the point of destination.”

Among the authorities which hold that a sale C. 0. D. is not complete until delivery, acceptance, and payment of the purchase price by the person ordering the goods, may be cited: United States v. Shriver, 23 Fed. 134; United States v. Cline, 26 Fed. 515; State v. United States Express Co., 70 Iowa 271; State v. Wingfield, 115 Mo. 428; State v. O’Neil, 58 Vt. 140; State v. Goss, 9 Atl., 829; United States v. Chevallier, 107 Fed. 434; Baker v. Bourcicault, 1 Daly (N. Y.) 23; Crabb v. State (Ga.), 15 S. E. 455; Dunn v. State, 82 Ga. 27; State v. Intoxicating Liquor (Vt.), 2 Atl. 586; Wagner v. Hallack, 3 Colo. 176; O’Neil v. Vermont, 144 U. S. 323; Town of Canton v. McDaniel, 188 Mo. 207. But in 17 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law (2 Ed.), 301, it is said: “At least so far as cases dealing with intoxicating liquors are concerned, however, the weight of authority is against the foregoing view, and it is generally held that where intoxicating liquors are ordered to be shipped C. O. D., the salé is completed when the liquor is delivered to the carrier; ’ ’ citing Pilgreen v. State, 71 Ala. 368; Hunter v. State, 55 Ark. 357; Berger v. State, 50 Ark. 20; Bunch v. Potts, 57 Ark. 257; Com. v. Russell, 11 Ky. L. Rep. 576; Com. v. Kearns, 15 Ky. L. Rep. 332; Current v. Com., 11 Ky. L. Rep. 764; James v. Com., 42 S. W. 1107; State v. Intoxicating Liquor, 73 Me. 278; Com. v. Fleming, 130 Pa. St. 138; State v. Flanagan, 38 W. Va. 53; State v. Hughes, 22 W. Va. 743. The same doctrine is announced by the courts of Texas and other States.

In Com. v. Fleming, supra, it is decided that the term “C. O. D.” placed upon an express package, means that the carrier is thereby directed to collect [656]*656the price of the goods at the time of delivering them to the consignee, and to withhold such delivery until payment is made, and is authorized, upon receipt of such payment, to discharge the purchaser of the goods from liability for their price; that “when, in pursuance of an order for goods, directed by the purchaser to be shipped to him C. O. D., the vendor has delivered them to a common carrier, with instructions to collect their prices from the consignee before delivering them to him, the transaction as a sale is complete so far as the vendor is concerned. In such case, while the title to the goods does not pass to the purchaser if they be not delivered to him by the carrier, that circumstance does not affect the character of the transaction as a completed contract of sale; the seller’s right to recover the price, if the purchaser refuses to take the goods, is as complete as if he had taken them without payment.” In that case the facts were that a liquor dealer in a certain county of Pennsylvania received an order for liquor to be shipped to the purchaser in another county of said State, C. 0. D., and in pursuance of the order the dealer delivered the liquor to a common carrier in the county where the dealer resided for shipment to the vendee, at the latter’s expense, C. 0. D.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 509, 212 Mo. 648, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rosenberger-mo-1908.