189 Mo. App. 484 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
Tke suit herein is over the breach of an oral contract for the sale and delivery of corn. Respondent alleged that on or about February 1, 1914, appellant contracted to sell and deliver to him four carloads of ear corn at sixty-seven and one-half cents per bushel to be paid on delivery; that 800 bushels was a reasonable carload; that on or about March 25, 1914, appellant, in part performance of said contract, delivered one carload, which respondent received and paid for; that appellant failed and refused to deliver the other three carloads although a reasonable time has long since expired; that respondent made a demand of appellant to complete his delivery of said corn on or before May 9, 1914, which latter date was a reasonable
Appellant claimed that the four carloads were not ordered under one contract but were made at different times and occasions, and set up the Statute of Frauds concerning the sale of goods of more than $30 in value; also that he sold the corn as agent of his brother whose ownership of the corn and principalship he disclosed to respondent. These were denied in the reply.
The questions whether there was or was not an agreement in one contract to sell and deliver four carloads, and whether the one car that was delivered was in part performance of that contract, were submitted in instructions as was also the question of whether appellant acted as agent of a disclosed principal. The jury returned a verdict assessing damages at $90 upon which judgment was rendered.
The judgment should be affirmed. There is no dispute over the law involved. The issues were plain and simple, easy to be understood, and the facts were few and free from intricacy. They involved matters which the triers could readily determine, and their solution ought to be accepted unless there was error in the admission of evidence, or in the submission of the case, of such a nature as to clearly and undoubtedly mislead them. We do not think there was any such error in the case.
It is the contention of appellant that, as thirty days was a reasonable time for delivery according to the evidence, the contract was breached about March 1st, and therefore it was error to admit evidence as to the value of corn so late as May 9th, the date which respondent had set as the limit for delivery. There was evidence that the market price of corn gradually rose after March 1st and was much higher May 9th. Appellant says, in order to get the true measure of damages, only the value of corn around the first part of March should have been considered and not its value
Respondent’s instruction number 1 was not misleading. It did not undertake to specify the date from which the reasonable time should be computed, and it could not have been understood by the jury as doing so. Appellant’s instruction number 4 so plainly told the jury they must compute the reasonable time from the date of the contract that the jury could not have been misled by respondent’s instruction number 1 even
Neither is said instruction number 1 erroneous because it fails to refer to the defenses interposed by appellant. The instruction was framed upon respondent’s theory of the evidence, namely, that the contract was with appellant himself and was for four carloads of com, a part of which contract had been fulfilled by the delivery of one car. And appellant’s instmctions 2 and 3 clearly and forcibly submitted his defenses as to the Statute of Frauds and whether respondent was dealing with appellant as owner or agent.
Respondent’s instruction number 2 was not erroneous nor misleading. It merely submitted the question of whether respondent knew appellant was selling the corn for his brother, and that unless he did know it, appellant could not escape liability on the ground that he was selling as agent for his brother and not as principal. Appellant had said he told respondent he was selling it for his brother and that was all that the evidence, on appellant’s part, showed respondent had been told. Besides, appellant’s instruction number 3 told the jury that if defendant disclosed his agency to plaintiff, their verdict must be for defendant.
Other objections are made to the instructions but we see no objection to them. Respondent’s instruction number 4 is not open to the charge brought against it.
No error can be predicated upon the admission of the conversation of defendant, as testified to by the witness Wright, tending to show that the contract was one contract for four carloads of corn as respondent claimed and not four different contracts for each car as appellant contended. The ground of objection was that no proper foundation was laid, in that defendant was asked concerning a conversation had with Heller in the presence of Pleas Wright “down here on the street near Morris’ restaurant” and that when Wright testified to the conversation he said it was on the street
There was substantial evidence to support the ver-, diet. It cannot be urged now that there was not, because no demurrer was asked and both sides joined in submitting the issues to the jury. This was an admission that there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury. [Kenefeck-Hammon Co. v. Norwich, etc., Ins. Society, 205 Mo. 294, l. c. 312; Hanson v. Boyd, 161 U. S. 397, l. c. 402; Hartford Ins. Co. v. Unsell, 144 U. S. 439, l. c. 451.]
There is no reversible error in the case, and, as said before, it should be affirmed. It is so ordered.