74 Mo. 138 | Mo. | 1881
This is a suit for the value of certain tobacco and cigars alleged to have been sold by plaintiffs to defendant. There was evidence tending to show that Forney, one of the firm of Forney, Elliott & Co., plaintiffs herein, was indebted to one Tissue, and that he disposed of the tobacco and cigars in question, being the property of the firm, to Tissue, in payment of his private debt; that Tissue was indebted to the defendant, Adams, and that he transferred said tobacco and cigars to Adams in payment of his debt to him, and that Adams knew at the time he agreed to receive the tobacco from Tissue, that it was the property of the firm of Forney, Elliott & Co., and had been transferred to Tissue by Forney in payment of his individual debt to Tissue. The plaintiffs requested the
The defendant introduced evidence, against the objections of the plaintiffs, tending to show a custom on the part of the several members of the firm to deal as individuals with the customers of the firm, and that under such custom “ when a member was indebted, his account would be taken in and charged against him on the books of the firm.” Conceding that evidence of such a custom was admissible, which it is unnecessary now to decide, the custom sought to be proved was not broad enough to cover the transaction in question, nor does it appear that the transaction itself was had by either Tissue or Adams in reliance upon any such custom. Lawson on Customs, § 150. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.