Thompson, Payne & Co. v. Irwin, Allen & Co.

42 Mo. App. 403, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 395
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 42 Mo. App. 403 (Thompson, Payne & Co. v. Irwin, Allen & Co.) 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
Thompson, Payne & Co. v. Irwin, Allen & Co., 42 Mo. App. 403, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 395 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinions

Jas. P. Mister, Special Judge.

I. This cause is brought to this court from the Jackson circuit court by writ of error. The petition is as follows : “ Said plaintiffs for cause of action against said- defendants state: That said plaintiffs are, and on the several dates hereinafter stated were, partners, doing business under the firm name and style of Thompson, Payne & Co.; on said several dates defendants were, and still are, partners, doing business under the firm name and style of Irwin, Allen & Co. On ■or about the fifth day of July, 1879, said defendants, partners as aforesaid, sold and delivered to plaintiffs seventeen head of beef cattle, in consideration whereof and that said defendants would warrant the title to said cattle as hereinafter stated said plaintiffs agreed to, and did, then and there, pay to said defendants the sum of five hundred' and thirty-six dollars and sixty-one cents, which said sum of money was then and there the [409]*409full value of said cattle. At the time of said sale and the payment of said sum of money, defendants had said cattle in their possession ; that in consideration of said purchase and payment of said sum of money as aforesaid, and by reason of all the facts aforesaid, said defendants covenanted and agreed with plaintiffs that the defendants had good title to said cattle, and would, and then and there did, warrant the title thereto to plaintiffs, and that they had good right to sell and deliver the same. For the sum of five hundred and forty dollars therefor paid to plaintiffs, by one William Clark, they, on or about the day and year last aforesaid, sold and delivered said cattle to said Clark. Said cattle were not the property of said defendants, when so sold and delivered to these plaintiffs as aforesaid, or at any other time, but were then the property of John Stock ; afterwards said Stock, by due process of law, recovered said cattle from said Clark, in consequence whereof, these plaintiffs were compelled to, and did, pay said Clark the value of said cattle, the damages recovered of him by said Stock for the detention thereof, together with the costs and expenses of defending the title, to said cattle, to-wit, the sum of six hundred and twenty-five dollars ; afterwards on the-day of-, 18 — , plaintiffs demanded of defendants the sum of money last aforesaid, which they then, and ever thereafter, wholly neglected, failed and refused to pay. Wherefore plaintiffs ask judgment for the sum of money last aforesaid and interest thereon from the date of said demand as therein before stated.” The answer is a general denial.

At the trial, the evidence, appearing by the record, Avas in substance thus : First. On the fifth of July, 1879, defendants were the consignees of seventeen head of cattle, at the Kansas City stock-yards purporting to be shipped to them by W. H. Moreland, and on that day sold these cattle to plaintiffs at their market value, and subsequently gave them a memorandum account [410]*410showing the number of cattle, their weight and price (which was receipted under the firm name of defendants), together with an order for the delivery of the cattle to the plaintiffs, directed to the Kansas City Stockyard Company, and were paid by plaintiffs five hundred and thirty-six and sixty-one-hundredths dollars, the price of the cattle. Second. W ithin a few days plaintiffs sold and delivered said cattle to one William Clark, at their market value, which said Clark then paid. He held said cattle in Clay county, Missouri, when suit in replevin was brought in the Clay circuit court against said Clark, by one John Stock, to recover possession thereof, he claiming to be the owner. On the institution of said suit, Clark notified plaintiffs, and they notified defendants, and each was respectively requested to defend the same. Said Stock recovered said cattle ; thereupon plaintiffs repaid said Clark his money, interest and cost, and demanded of defendants their money, interest and cost, the defendants refused payment, and this suit was brought. Third. There was some evidence to the effect that Moreland appeared at the stockyards, at or near the time of the sale, although this is denied by the plaintiffs ; but it is not claimed that Moreland took any part in the making of the sale or in the delivery of the cattle. Fourth. There was also evidence that the cattle were stolen from one J ohn Stock, and that the so-called Moreland was the thief; and in the proof of ownership by Stock in the replevin suit .aganst Clark it appeared that he, Stock, had never given to anyone authority to sell the cattle. .It also appeared that said Stock and his wife made inquiry at the stockyards about their lost cattle, and traced them into the possession of Clark, from whom, after identifying them, they recovered them by suit. Fifth. It also appears that plaintiffs bought the cattle from defendants intending them for Clark, if they suited Clark, but paid for them with their own money. But Clark afterwards took them at the price paid for them by plaintiffs, with the [411]*411addition of the nsnal charge for commission ; and when he was paid back the money paid by him and the costs incurred in the litigation with Stock, 'by the plaintiffs, he transferred and set over to them, all his (Clark’s) right to collect the same from defendants. Sixth. There was also evidence to the effect that the defendants paid over to the person calling "himself Moreland, by their check, the amount paid them by plain tiffs, less charges for freight, etc., and their commissions (and it was shown, against the objections of plaintiffs, that it was not customary at that time to make inquiry back of what was shown on the face of the bill" of lading, and the "person in whose charge the cattle came, as to the right ownership, and that defendants had always dealt with stock as commission merchants).

II. The instructions asked by plaintiffs, and refused, were to the effect that, if defendants were in possession of the property, and sold and delivered it to plaintiffs for its market value, and for the consideration paid delivered the written statement of sale read in evidence, and that the plaintiffs thereafter sold the cattle to Clark at their market value, and that suit was thereafter brought against Clark, and the cattle recovered from him therein by one Stock, on account of his (Stock’s) superior title thereto, defendants having been previously notified of pendency of Stock’s suit, and that after such recovery plaintiffs paid to Clar.k the purchase price of the cattle and costs of suit, the jury would find for plaintiffs and assess damages at sum paid to Clark, with six per cent, interest. Again, that, even if defendants sold the cattle as agents, and undertook to sell in the name of Moreland, which was not the real and true name of the person from whom the cattle were received, and on whose account sold, then, upon the facts predicated, the finding should be the same. Again, that, even if agency was disclosed during negotiations, the signing of the writing of sale by defendants in their own name made them principals.

[412]*412The instructions asked for plaintiffs, and given, were to the effect that, although defendants did disclose their agency, and did give the name of W. H. Moreland as principal, yet, if defendants made and delivered the ■statement of sale, and plaintiffs were influenced to make purchase by the known character and standing of ■defendants, the finding should be for plaintiffs, and for the amount which plaintiffs repaid to Clark, with interest from payment at six per cent.

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Related

Mendenhall v. Sherman
187 S.W. 271 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1916)
Thompson, Payne & Co. v. Irwin, Allen & Co.
76 Mo. App. 418 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)
Hurt v. Ford
44 S.W. 228 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
42 Mo. App. 403, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-payne-co-v-irwin-allen-co-moctapp-1890.