162 Mo. App. 72 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit on account which originated before a justice of the peace. It found its way into the circuit court by appeal, where plaintiff had judgment, from which defendant prosecutes the appeal.
A jury was waived and the case tried by the court. The only point for consideration here relates to the fact that defendant had executed several promissory notes to plaintiff at the time he purchased the books involved and that this suit proceeds in assumpsit on account instead of on such notes. It appears that on January 18, 1907, defendant entered into a written contract with plaintiff, whereby he purchased twenty-three volumes of the Encyclopedia of Law & Procedure from plaintiff and agreed to accept subsequent volumes of that publication, which, in all, should not exceed forty in number, at $6.50 per volume. He agreed, too, to accept from plaintiff the 1907 volume of Annual Annotations thereto and pay therefor $6.50'. At the time of the purchase, defendant paid thereon the sum of $10.90 in cash and executed to plaintiff his thirty-nine promissory notes of $6.50 each, which fell due one each month thereafter until thirty-nine months had expired. Plaintiff thereupon delivered to defendant the twenty-three volumes of the Encyclopedia of Law & Procedure published, and made other deliveries thereof to defendant as the volumes were made, until he received in all twenty-seven volumes of the work. Defendant paid several of the $6.50' notes as they fell due
It is argued that the court should have given defendant’s instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and declared that plaintiff was not entitled to recover in this action on the original consideration, because' the account had been fully paid by the giving of notes; but we find no suggestion in the proof to this effect. That one may sue on, the original consideration, if he surrenders a note given thereon for cancellation at the trial, is settled beyond question. The mere fact that a note has been given and received on the same consideration for which the suit is prosecuted in assumpsit is immaterial, unless