48 Mo. App. 214 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
'This is a controversy between the plaintiff, who is the divorced wife of William Henson, and the defendants concerning a stock of dry goods. The present action is replevin, in which the plaintiff claimed to be the owner of the goods and entitled to their possession. The suit was without bond, and consequently there was no delivery order. The defendants were in possession of the property under a chattel mortgage, given by William Henson to secure certain debts contracted by him for goods purchased from the defendants. The answer was a general denial. The case was submitted to the court without the aid of a jury, and the court found for the plaintiff as to a portion of the stock, and assessed its value at $625. A judgment for the assessed value was entered, the defendants having disposed of the goods during the pendency of the suit. From that judgment the defendants have appealed, and they have assigned for error: First. Thát there is no evidence to support the judgment; second, that the finding is against the weight of the evidence ; third, that the court excluded competent evidence offered by the defendants.
It is useless for us to cite authorities in support of the proposition, that an appellate court cannot review a case on the mere weight of evidence. Therefore, that assignment may be put aside. The third assignment concerning the court’s action in the rejection of evidence may be properly disposed of in our discussion of ' the first assignment, which presents the real question in the case.
Was this testimony sufficient to authorize the judgment? We will notice the points presented by defendants on the negative side of the question. In the first place we cannot agree that, when the entire ■evidence is considered, the conclusion must necessarily follow that the original purchase from Butcher was made by Henson and Robinson for their individual benefit, and not for that of their wives. It is true that the evidence shows (as it would show in most cases where a husband was acting for the wife) that, in making the trade and taking the invoice, Henson and Robinson were the chief actors. But Butcher and the plaintiff both testified (and they were the only witnesses who testified on the subject) that the plaintiff and Mrs. Robinson were consulted about the purchase; that it was well understood that Henson and Robinson had no money, and that, if the goods were bought, they would have, to be paid for with money coming to their wives from their fathers’ estates ; that the purchase was after-wards consummated in the names of the plaintiff and Mrs. Robinson, and three-fourths of the purchase money was paid by them. Butcher further testified that, after the invoice was made and after the goods had been paid for, save the balance of $650, Henson and Robinson concluded that they did not wish to do business in the names of their wives, and that, without consulting the plaintiff, or anyone else, announced to .Butcher that they would carry on the store in their
In opposition to this it is urged that the above-facts are identical with those in the case of Rieper v. Rieper, 79 Mo. 353, wherein it was held that Mrs. Rieper must be treated as an ordinary creditor of her husband, it appearing that he had used some of her separate estate or money in paying for a stock of goods.. An examination of that case will show a stale of facts-quite different from what we have here. Rieper, the husband, bought the stock from.one Klebba. His wife-had nothing to do with the purchase. He paid $3,600 for it. His wife had deposited with one Wehrman for-safe-keeping $900, which belonged to her at the date of her marriage. Wehrman, without her knowledge or-consent, gave the money to Rieper, and he used it in paying for the goods bought of Klebba. Some time after-wards, Mrs. Rieper brought suit against her husband setting up these facts, and praying for a sale of her husband’s stock of goods, and that she be reimbursed out 'of the proceeds. Other creditors of Rieper intervened. -The court held in a coutest between them and Mrs. Rieper that, under the facts, she could only be-treated as an ordinary creditor of her husband, and that she must share with the other creditors pro rata, for the reason that the original goods which her money partly purchased had ■ been so intermingled with the-mass of her husband’s property thereafter acquired, that the right to follow any portion of it specifically was-
Again it is urged that, .if it be conceded that the-original purchase was made by the plaintiff, the subsequent investment of the $300 by her husband constituted them partne.s, and that, as it is the law of this state that one partner’may by virtue of his implied authority as such make a valid mortgage of the partnership personalty to secure a partnership indebtedness (Keck v. Fisher, 58 Mo. 532), the judgment cannot be upheld. The vice of this argument is that there is no evidence of a partnership agreement. A partnership contract, like any other contract, must be the result of an agreement either express or implied. There is nothing in the-record to show that the plaintiff ever recognized her husband as her partner, or that he ever claimed that she was his partner, or that he ever pretended to act as such. So far as the payment by Henson is concerned, the record shows that it was voluntarily made on his-part, and without the knowledge of his wife. In the absence of proof to the contrary the payment must be treated as a gift, and not as evidence of a contract of copartnership. Gilliland v. Gilliland, supra.
It is next insisted that the defendant’s title under the chattel mortgage ought to prevail on the ground of agency. Henson was undoubtedly the general agent of his wife, ana, a& oucn, nati authority to bind her in the
The last proposition discussed by the defendants is that of estoppel. It is with reference to this question that they complain of the action of the court concerning the exclusion of evidence. For the purpose, as we assume, of concluding the plaintiff by way of estoppel, the defendants’ attorney asked one of his clients the following: “Q. Bid you at the timé of selling this bill of goods, or of dealing with the firm of Henson & Robinson, have any knowledge that Mrs. Henson had any interest in it?” The question was objected to, and the objection sustained. This is all the record shows. For t aught that appears the witness did know that Mrs. Henson was the owner of the store. But a favorable answer to the question would not have been sufficient of itself to establish an estoppel. There are three things requisite to every estoppel: “ First. Fraudulent representations or withholding the truth when it is one’s duty to speak; second, reliance on the truth of such representations; third, the consequent act by the defrauded party to his disadvantage.” It will be thus seen that the defendants are in no position to have this question reviewed on its merits.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court will Re affirméa,