77 Mo. App. 339 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
A contention is made in this court as to the correctness of the following paragraph in the certified copy of bill of exceptions, viz.: “Whereupon the plaintiff in the following words, in writing, asked the court to make a finding of facts, to wit: “We would also request the court to make its finding of facts. “But the court failed and refused to do so, and defend
The suit is in replevin for the recovery of specific goods sold by the plaintiffs to the Peters Rubber & Supply Company, a corporation, which sale the plaintiffs claimed on the trial to be fraudulent, from which the defendant appealed.
The Peters Rubber and Supply Company was a Missouri corporation doing business in the city of St. Louis, and was organized in July, 1894, at which time it bought the private business of Mr. Peters, whose assets amounted to $6,653.82, liabilities, $7,189.34; against his business Peters had drawn an overdraft of
One of the assignments of error is' that the trial court improperly submitted to the jury the issue that the Peters Company bought the goods with the intention never to pay for them. On this assignment the appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to carry this issue to the jury, and that that issue is res judicata, the case having been here on a former appeal, when it was held by this court that there was no evidence to warrant the submission of this issue to the jury (69 Mo. App. 475).
From a close and critical examination of the bills of exceptions in the two trials, it appears that some facts were brought out in the last trial, that were not on the first, and that the financial condition of the Peters Company from its organization to the time of its failure was more fully developed on the latter trial than on the first; and also the fact of Peters’ knowledge of the financial affairs of the company is shown by the testimony of the bookkeeper and secretary of the company on the last trial, which was not done on the first. On the last trial a more full and detailed account of the expenses of the company was shown, than on the former, and it is made to appear more glaringly that when the goods were bought, the Peters Company was hopelessly insolvent. For these reasons the doctrine of res acljudicata should not be applied.