Webb & Kinne v. Steiner

87 S.W. 618, 113 Mo. App. 482, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 233
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 S.W. 618 (Webb & Kinne v. Steiner) 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
Webb & Kinne v. Steiner, 87 S.W. 618, 113 Mo. App. 482, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 233 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

— Plaintiffs brought this action for tbe sum of one thousand dollars and set it forth in tbe petition of two counts — tbe first for money bad and received; and tbe second charging a fraudulent contract for the transfer of a stock of goods to plaintiffs upon which they paid one thousand dollars, and then, upon discovery of tbe fraud, rescinded and demanded tbe return of tbe money, which defendants refused. Tbe judgment in tbe trial court was for tbe defendants. Tbe plaintiffs and defendants made, or attempted to make, an exchange of properties. Tbe plaintiffs owning mill property in Lee’s Summit, and tbe defendants a stock of merchandise in Cameron. Their contract was put in writing and is as follows:

“By tbis agreement made tbis the third day of February, 1903, by and between E. Steiner of Cameron, Mo., party of tbe first part, and Webb & Kinne of Lee’s Summit, M'o., parties of tbe second part.
“Witnesseth: That first party has tbis day bargained and sold to second parties tbe stock of merchandise and store fixtures, located in tbe Freeman building, in Cameron, Missouri; tbe fixtures as per list hereto attached to be taken at tbe sum of ($350), three hundred and fifty dollars. Tbe stock of merchandise to be invoiced as per tbe following cost mark on said goods, viz.:

[486]*486and where any goods are not marked with said mark, price to be agreed upon by both parties. In payment for such stock and fixtures said first party is to receive from said parties, Warranty Deed, for six lots in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, on which is located the Lee’s Summit mills, subject to a mortgage ’of ($600) six hundred dollars, the equity in said mill property to be taken at the sum of five thousand dollars ($5,000) balance above said five thousand dollars ($5,000) that said stock and fixtures invoice, to be paid in cash at the completion of the invoice, less $100 paid at the signing of this agreement and (the sum of $900 before the commencement of the invoice) receipt of which is hereby acknowledged. Said stock of merchandise are free and clear.

“Deeds to be general warranty, with abstract showing good title. Should said stock not invoice the sum of $6,000 then first party to pay second party the difference to be guaranteed by the bank. Invoice to be commenced on or before February 9, 1903, and completed as soon as practical.
“It is agreed that second parties are to have the use of said mill free of rent until March 1, 1903.”

The cause was tried with the aid of a jury under a number of instructions given at the instance of either party, in which the theories upon which the case was heard are set forth with clearness. The plaintiffs charge that defendants had purposely put the “cost mark” on the merchandise above its cost for the purpose of trading or selling it, and to deceive and defraud whoever might he the purchaser. The defendants denied this and insisted that no representations were made as to what was meant by the figures and characters set out in the contract as “cost mark.” That plaintiffs went through the stock thoroughly and that they assisted in its invoice and did not ask, receive or rely upon any assurance of the [487]*487defendants as to the original cost of the goods. It appears that plaintiffs went to Cameron and examined the stock of merchandise. That it was not known to either party just what it would invoice and hence the stipulations on that head in the contract.

The evidence showed the. payment of the one hundred dollars and the nine hundred dollars provided for in the contract. There was evidence tending to show that plaintiffs considering themselves deceived and defrauded at about the close of the invoice refused further dealing with defendants, left them in sole possession of the goods, offered to rescind and demanded back the money they had paid — which demand was refused by the defendants. The court refused to declare that the contract was a “warranty” by defendants that the goods cost the sum indicated by the “cost mark” in the contract. We are of the opinion that the contract is sufficiently indefinite and ambiguous as to what was meant by the expression, “the stock of merchandise to be invoiced as per the following cost mark on said goods” to.permit evidence to be heard, and that the court, as just said, properly refused plaintiffs’ request for an instruction stating that such cost mark was a “warranty as a matter of law.”

The theory of defendants, advanced here, is that - each party put a trading valuation on each of their properties, and that each so understood it. That plaintiffs valued their mill at a large sum more than they had offered to sell it to others. That they examined the stock, noticed the “cost mark” thereon and agreed to accept such mark as the trade valuation. That it was at no time represented by defendants that .such mark represented what the goods had actually cost at wholesale. And the plaintiffs themselves asked instructions, which were given by the court, wherein was submitted the question that if defendants had put on a fictitious cost mark with a view of defrauding a buyer by indue[488]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.W. 618, 113 Mo. App. 482, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-kinne-v-steiner-moctapp-1905.