172 Mo. App. 1 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Action by plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy of the Robinson Timber & Lumber Company, against defendant to recover money claimed to he due as the result of dealings between the lumber company and defendant. Plaintiff claims in his petition that $850.23 were due, by reason of that sum hav
At the trial it was admitted that the amount of the rebate on account of interest rebates was $333.96, not $359.23. Verdict was rendered for plaintiff for $1187.07, from which plaintiff remitted seventy cents, and judgment being rendered for $1186.37, defendant duly saving exception, has appealed to this court.
It is conceded by counsel for appellant that there was evidence which warranted the jury in finding that $850.23 had been improperly charged and retained by defendant and that as to those items and this sum the verdict is conclusive. Those counsel, however, argue that no rebate on account of interest was recoverable, and that if any was, then the verdict is excessive in the amount of $2.18, and this, say counsel, calls for a remittitur and puts the costs of appeal upon respondent. Hence the only assignments of error here made are that the judgment is excessive in the amount of $2.18, and that under the evidence plaintiff was not entitled to recover any sum for rebate of interest, and, therefore, (a) an instruction numbered 2, given for plaintiff, was erroneous, and (b) the refusal of the court to give instructions numbered 1 and 2, requested by défendant, was erroneous.
The Robinson Timber & Lumber Company, hereafter referred to as the lumber company, a concern, formerly engaged in the lumber business, going into bankruptcy and now represented by the trustee, desiring banking accommodation, entered into an arrangement with appellant, referred to hereafter as the bank, to furnish it financial accommodation.
In answer to this letter, the bank wrote that it saw no objection to making some such arrangement as that mentioned. It futher stated that the bank would like to have the lumber company obtain a designated stamp; that it might begin sending invoices to the bank whenever desired, and that the bank would place seventy-five per cent of them to the credit of the lumber
Acknowledging the receipt of this letter the lumber company, on the 22d of October, transmitted four invoices with bills of lading attached and advised the bank how it would like to have the matter handled with respect to collections from customers. The letter further stated that as the lumber company understood from Mr. Novel that the bank would require a note executed with each invoice, and as it had no blank notes, it would not then carry out that part of the agreement. Inclosed with the letter were the signature card and copy of the resolutions adopted by the board of directors of the lumber company.
On October 26, 1909, the bank, wrote the lumber company, evidently in answer to the last mentioned letter, and inclosing a note drawn at sixty days for $646.38, stated that it covered the four invoices mentioned in the preceding letter, enumerating them. This letter then proceeds: “Upon return of this note properly signed we shall be pleased to discount the same at eight per cent and pass the proceeds to your credit. In the event of these invoices being paid at any time before the maturity of the note we shall rebate you interest at the same rate. We are inclosing a number of blank notes and we would suggest that you sign a note and send to us together with each batch of invoices. It would also be advisable to have you send your invoices say once a week in order to make the note as large as possible and avoid a great number of notes in small amounts. In the event of onr having difficulty in collecting any of these invoices at maturity
This is the letter upon which the contention in this case is based, the vital clause being the one which we have italicized.
Upon the following day the lumber company wrote the bank, acknowledging the receipt of this letter, and inclosed the note referred to as covering the invoices mentioned in the letter, further saying that the lumber company did not know of any better plan.to suggest than the one outlined in the foregoing letter and that it would send the bank its paper once a week unless the lumber company should accumulate a considerable amount in less time.
The next day the bank wrote the lumber company, acknowledging the receipt of that letter and saying they had discounted the sixty-day note above referred to and had credited the account of the lumber company as per memorandum inclosed.
In a letter to the lumber company of the 2d of November, the bank wrote that they had discounted another note of the lumber company and had passed the proceeds to the credit of the lumber company, inclosing a memorandum showing the discount. This letter continued: “You will note that we have charged a dollar a car in addition to our interest for handling this transaction. On all future notes we shall be obliged to make this charge, as we find that the same is necessary to cover the trouble and time that we shall
On the 15th of November the bank wrote to the lumber company acknowledging the receipt of the latter’s note for a specified amount together with invoices securing it and then continued: “In all payments that are made against your notes, we will retain the invoice, which has been returned to us together with the freight bill until the note has been liquidated in full when we will return all the papers together with the cancelled note. If you have any objéction to this arrangement and would prefer that we return the papers with each payment, we would thank you to-so advise us.”
The lumber company wrote, stating that this was satisfactory.
Other correspondence followed, covering remittance. of notes, .invoices, etc., in the usual course of the business, otherwise not necessary to reproduce, until the 25th of May, 1910, when the lumber company wrote to the .bank concerning a note which had been sent in payment of a certain invoice and also inclosing a check for a collection which it had itself made on an invoice sent to the bank. The letter then proceeds: “In this connection would call your attention to your letter of October 26, 1909, in which you say: ‘Upon return of this note properly signed, we shall be pleased to discount ,tke -same at. eight per cent and pass the proceeds to your credit. In the event of these invoices being paid before the maturity of the note, we shall rebate you interest at the same rate.’ Up to the present time we have no record of the manner in which the interest is rebated to us. Do we understand that we have a credit which has not yet been reported for these items?”
Answering this letter, the bank, on May 27, 1910, wrote the lumber company, after referring to various
No answer to this appears in tbe abstract.
On June 11, 1910, tbe bank wrote tbe lumber company, calling its attention to tbe fact that it bad largely exceeded its $15,000 credit and declining to make further discounts on its account until some of these past-due obligations were paid off.
Various other correspondence followed, none, however, touching on tbe interest rebate, with tbe result that tbe lumber company, being unable to meet its paper and becoming financially involved, «the bank turned over a number of tbe accounts and invoices to an attorney, who proceeded to tbe collection of something over $7000 on tbe outstanding accounts. Making a charge for these attorney’s fees and for bis expenses, as well as for some telegraphing, tbe bank ren
The instruction, numbered 2, of which complaint is made and which was given by the court at the instance of plaintiff, is substantially as follows: That by its letter to the lumber company, of date October 26, 1909, defendant agreed with the lumber company to allow that company a rebate of interest where an invoice which secured a note was paid before the maturity of the note at' the rate of eight per cent per annum, and if the jury found and believed from the evidence that there were invoices so paid, then plaintiff was entitled to recover for the amount of the rebate of interest as long as the agreement was in effect but not after the receipt by the lumber company of the letter written to them by defendant on the 27th of May, 1910.
The instruction, numbered 1, asked by defendant and refused, was to the effect that the lumber company was not entitled to any credit against defendant for any Rebates of interest mentioned in the evidence. That numbered 2 is to the effect that the lumber company is not entitled to any credit against defendant for the rebates of interest mentioned in evidence, excepting as to a rebate on the one note mentioned in defendant’s letter'of October 26, 1909.
We are unable to agree with learned counsel that the verdict is excessive by the amount claimed, $2.18. While it is true that "the court did not instruct the jury that plaintiff was entitled to interest, if the jury found for plaintiff, the question of interest was within the issues of the case. Plaintiff specifically demanded it in the petition. We are inclined to agree with the learned counsel for respondent, that if anyone has the right to complain of this amount of $2.18, which is all that can be considered as covering interest, it is respondent and not appellant. Reckoning the interest, not from October 1st, the alleged date of the demand, hut from the date of the institution of the action, October 31, 1910, until the date of the verdict, March 27, 1911, it would amount to something over $29, a much
We see no error to the prejudice of the appellant in the trial of this cause or in its result. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.