Wehmeier v. Yontz

256 S.W. 145, 215 Mo. App. 240, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 165
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 145 (Wehmeier v. Yontz) 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
Wehmeier v. Yontz, 256 S.W. 145, 215 Mo. App. 240, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 165 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*242 TRIMBLE, P. J.

The present case makes its second appearance here. This time it is the defendant who appeals, but the first appeal was by plaintiff. [See Wehmeier v. Yontz, 208 Mo. App. 434.]

When the trial began, the petition was in three counts. The first alleged a contract for the sale by plaintiff to defendant of certain hogs which defendant, it was charged, refused to accept, wherefore judgment was asked for $555.27 damages, that being the difference between the contract and the market price.

The second count pleaded a contract for the sale of said hogs, wherein it was provided that each party should put up with a bank his check for $500 to be paid as a penalty to the other in case of violation of the contract on his part. It was then alleged that plaintiff performed but defendant refused to accept said hogs and refused to permit said check to be paid him, wherefore judgment for the $500 was asked.

The third count was a suit on account for $140.15 alleged to be due plaintiff from defendant.

The answer, in one count, set up the defense that plaintiff was the one who breached the. contract by failing to deliver the hogs on the day agreed upon, subsequent to the contract, and charged that under the terms of said contract the sum of $500 was to be paid, as liquidated damages, by the party who failed to keep his contract, wherefore that amount was due from plaintiff. The answer admitted that, at the institution of the suit, there was a balance of $140.15 (the amount specified in plaintiff’s third count), due plaintiff from defendant on account, which should be credited on the $500 due defendant from plaintiff leaving a balance of $359.85, for which defendant prayed judgment. Plaintiff duly filed reply.

At the close of all the evidence, the plaintiff, by leave of court, amended the first count of his petition, so that it, instead of seeking as damages the difference between the contract and market price, sought to recover the sum of $500 as liquidated damages; and when *243 this amendment was allowed,, plaintiff dismissed the see- and count.

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $500 on the first count, and for $140.15 on the third count.

On October 3, 1919, the parties entered into the following written contract:

“Tipton, Mo., 10-3-1919
“R. L. Wehmeier sells. A. C. Yontz 16,000 lbs. Hogs at $12.50 per 100 lbs. for the month of December, 1920, to be delivered at Tipton, Mo., to be a straight load of hogs 200 lbs. or better at A. C. Yontz’s option. The sum of $500 being put by both parties to bind the bargain.
“A. C. Yontz R. L. Wehmeier.”

Each deposited in bank his check for $500 payable to the other.

At 9 :30 a. m., December 10, 1920, plaintiff received from defendant the following telegram:

“Clarksburg, Mo., 12-10
“R. L. Wehmeier
“Tipton, Mo.
‘ ‘ The load of hogs I bought from you please deliver at Tipton stock yards today.
“A. C. Yontz.”

Plaintiff did not have the hogs but he secured them, and, according to plaintiff’s evidence, he caused to be served upon defendant at 5 o’clock that afternoon, a written notice that the hogs would be at the Missouri Pacific Stockyards in Tipton, Mo., “as per contract.” (According to defendant’s evidence, the notice had, immediately following the word “contract” these additional words: “this 10th day of December, 1920.” The original was lost and the constable who served it was dead.)

The men from whom plaintiff obtained the hogs brought them on December 10, 1920, in several truck loads, to the stock yards at Tipton, arriving there after nightfall; and all but six or seven of them, or at least the greater portion of them, had been weighed before *244 12 o’clock that night. The weights, in order to save time, were made and copied, one being for the nse of the sale from the men to plaintiff and the other for the sale by him to defendant. The defendant was there looking-after the hogs and “he would inspect them as they came on and off the scales.” As the hogs were being weighed they were put into a pen. Those at the yards had lanterns by which they could examine the hogs and see what they were doing. Defendant made no objection to anything that was being done until shortly after twelve o’clock when he held up his hand and asked, “Who are you weighing these hogs to?,” and then said, “Don’t weigh any more hogs to me; it is twelve o’clock,” and refused to take them.

Plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that it was the custom, when hogs were purchased, for the buyer to notify the seller the day before he wanted delivery, in order to give the seller sufficient time to make delivery on the day desired; that such custom was well known to both parties; that the hogs brought to the stock yards corresponded to those mentioned in the contract; and that the market price for such hogs in Tipton on December 10, 1920, was $9 per hundred pounds.

A motion has been filed by plaintiff praying the court to dismiss defendant’s appeal on the ground that his statement violates our rule and that the brief fails to specify wherein it is claimed that the court erred. An examination of defendant’s brief discloses that it is not entirely open to the charges brought against it in the motion, hence the motion to dismiss is overruled.

The construction to be given the contract in the light of the conduct of the parties, and other points, were decided upon the other appeal; and the evidence on the second trial is not of a character to reopen any of such questions so decided then.

In the former appeal the ruling was made that it was for the jury to say (1) whether the attempt to deliver was made in a reasonable time after notice to do *245 so was given, and (2) whether sneh attempt to deliver was at a reasonable hour of the day. [Wehmeier v. Yontz, 208 Mo. App. 435, 439.] It is urged that this timeUhe trial court utterly disregarded the second issue above mentioned. Whatever may have been the issues involved in the former appeal, it would seem to be clear that at this trial no issue was raised that the -attempt to deliver was made at an unreasonable hour, but only that the plaintiff did not deliver on the day specified. The answer says that “defendant was at the Stockyards in Tipton all during the day of December 10, 1920, ready and willing to receive said hogs from plaintiff according to contract, demand and plaintiff’s notice, but notwithstanding the defendant was present, ready and willing to receive said hogs at the time and place aforesaid, the plaintiff wholly failed to deliver said hogs to defendant on said date, which under plaintiff’s contract with defendant he was obligated and bound to do,” and says nothing about an unreasonable hour. The evidence shows.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cure v. City of Jefferson
396 S.W.2d 727 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1965)
Burkhardt v. Decker
295 S.W. 833 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 145, 215 Mo. App. 240, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wehmeier-v-yontz-moctapp-1923.