194 Mo. App. 367 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1916
This is an action to recover the sum of $610, the alleged purchase price of certain personalty delivered by plaintiff to the Farmers’ Mercantile Company. Plaintiff corporation conducts a wholesale business, and in 1910 the Farmers’ Mercantile Company, a corporation (hereinafter referred to as the “Mercantile Company”), was engaged in conducting a retail store at Yanduser, Scott county, Missouri. Under a written order executed by the Mercantile Company on September 3, 1910, plaintiff shipped to it fifteen wagons and five “Clinton boxes.” It appears that three of the wagons were afterwards returned to plaintiff, and that two were sold by the Mercantile Company and payment made to plaintiff therefor. In June, 1911, the store buildings of the Mercantile Company were destroyed by fire, whereby the ten wagons remaining in that company’s possession, and the five boxes, were totally destroyed. Thereafter the defendants were appointed trustees of the Mercantile Company in a proceeding for the dissolution of that corporation, and plaintiff instituted this action against them as such trustees.
At the close of plaintiff’s ease the court gave á peremptory instruction offered by defendant, in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. Plaintiff thereupon took
The written order of September 3, 1910, signed by the Mercantile Company, is, for the most part, a printed form furnished by plaintiff. It is addressed to plaintiff, and proceeds as follows:
“Please ship the goods hereafter specified on or about 19 or as soon thereafter as possible, via-from - to Farmers’ Mercantile Company . . . the freight charges to be paid by the undersigned unless otherwise agreed and stipulated herein in writing, and the undersigned agrees to receive and settle for same upon these and other terms and. conditions printed. on back hereof, which are hereby agreed to as being our contract. ’ ’
“No. Description. Price Each.
16 Clinton Wagons Complete with spring-seats but no brakes .............. 55.00
5 26” Clinton Boxes ................ 12.-”
Upon the face of the order the following provisions were written, viz:
“Payable. These wagons are to be paid for as sold.”
“Kingman Plow Co. reserves the right to draw on these wagons to fill orders taken in South East Mo.”
The printed matter on the back of the order, referred to in the latter, contains certain provisions not applicable to this transaction, having to do with plowshares, shovels, etc. And certain other provisions are here wholly irrelevant. So much thereof as could possibly have any bearing upon the case before us, is as follows :
“If requested, notes with highest legal rate of interest per annum from maturity, unless otherwise specified (including exchange and collection charges), will be given to you [plaintiff] on receipt of invoice and bill of lading-in settlement of same, it being expressly understood that ptitle to the goods shall not pass until said notes are paid in money.
*372 “The undersigned purchaser agrees to look to transportation companies for all losses or damages to goods in transit when receipted for in good order. , .
“If the undersigned purchaser countermands this order, or any part thereof, or causes shipment to be held beyond present season, the undersigned purchaser agrees . . . to pay fifteen per cent of the net amount of the goods herein ordered to you as agreed and liquidated damages.
“It is distinctly understood that all goods are sold subject to the following warranty and no other, viz: that they are well made of good material, are durable if used with proper care and will do the work for which they are intended. ...
“Should the undersigned become insolvent, make an assignment, remove to another place, execute a chattel mortgage, sustain loss by fire or other casualty, transfer property or close out business, or in case of death of any member of the firm or failure to carry out the conditions of this contract or if bankruptcy or attachment or other legal proceedings be begun against purchaser, all obligations provided for in this contract or arising therefrom, shall become due and payable at once, or at any time thereafter, at your option.
“It is expressly agreed that the title to and ownership of all goods shipped under this contract shall remain vested in you, unless at your option it shall be expressly waived in writing and the goods are to be held at all times subject to your order until paid for, if sales are made before payment, they shall be made only in the regular course of business and the proceeds of all such sales, whether cash, book accounts or notes, are to be held as your property in trust, until all obligations pro-' vided for in this contract or arising therefrom are fully paid in money or until full payment is made at the net prices herein specified but nothing in this clause shall release the undersigned purchaser from making payments as above stipulated. It is further agreed that notes taken by you are not accepted as payment or a novation of waiver of this contract; and shall not be*373 construed as a waiver of your right to have the same recorded, or right to take possession of said goods on demand, hut that the same shall be binding as between parties, their successors and assigns.”
The rights of the parties depend upon the construction to be placed upon this instrument when taken as a whole. Plaintiff’s action proceeds upon the theory that the contract thus entered into was one of sale, though the title to the goods was reserved by the seller until they were paid for; that the transaction was a “conditional sale;” and that where goods are thus sold and delivered, the seller retaining the title as security for the payment of the purchase price, they are at the buyer’s risk, and he is liable for the purchase price though they are destroyed by fire or other casualty while in his possession.
The term “conditional sale,” is commonly applied to “a class of transactions whereby the- terms of' the contract the possession of the goods is delivered to the buyer, but the property in them is to remain in th'e seller until the payment of the price; ’ ’ though as pointed out by the writers generally, the term is inaccurate and tends to confusion, since the transaction is not in reality a sale but an agreement to sell. [See 35 Cyc. 651, 652.]
“It is the distinguishing feature of the so-called conditional sale that the title to or property in the goods remains in the seller until payment of the price; but the buyer is entitled to the possession and use of the goods until default in payment. The security retained by the seller is not a lien, but a reservation of title and the right to pursue the property in specie.” [25 Cyc. 652, 653.]
Learned counsel for plaintiff (appellant here) contend that the transaction here involved is a conditional sale, within the aforesaid meaning of that term; and proceeding upon this hypothesis cite a number of authorities in support of the further contention that in a case of such character the seller may recover the agreed purchase price, though the goods, in the buyer’s possession, may have been in the meantime destroyed without his fault.
In Farmer v. Moore, 73 Mo. App. 527, the contract under scrutiny was held by this court to be one of sale, “with the right reserved in the vendors to retake the property if not paid for in one year, and to collect the value of the use of the property for the time it should remain in the possession of the defendants, or to collect the selling price with eight per cent interest.”
It would serve no useful purpose to refer to the many other authorities cited and relied upon by appellant in this connection. For the purposes of this suit it may be conceded, without deciding, that where the contract is one of sale, upon credit, and thereunder the goods are delivered to the buyer, the seller reserving in himself the title until the purchase price is paid, the destruction of the goods in the buyer’s possession by fire or like casualty will not relieve him from his obligation to pay the purchase price. As to this it is said in 35 Cyc. at pages 670, 671:
“In some jurisdictions the rule prevails that oh a conditional sale, since the title remains in the seller, the goods are at his risk, and in the event of their destruction or injury without the buyer’s fault, the seller must bear the loss, following in this regard the rule that prevails as to sales generally. It is to be noted, however, that under a conditional sale the buyer is ordinarily vested with all the incidents of ownership except the title,*375 and by the weight of authority the risk of loss is therefore to be borne by the buyer, and he is liable for the price notwithstanding injury to or destruction of the goods.” [Citing an array of authorities, among them Tufts v. Wynne, supra.]
But an examination of the written instrument upon which plaintiff here relies has convinced us that the contract here involved is not one of sale; that there was no sale of the property here in question, conditional or otherwise.
“An agreed price, a vendor, a vendee, an agreement of the former to sell for the agreed price and an agreement of the latter to buy for and to pay the agreed price are essential elements of a contract of sale. . . . The power to require the restoration of the subject of the agreement is an indelible incident of a contract of bailment.” [Sanborn, C. J., in In re Columbus Buggy Co., 143 Fed. 859.]
The contract before us contains no words constituting, or purporting to constitute, an agreement on plaintiff’s part to sell these goods; and none binding, or purporting to bind, the Mercantile Company to buy them and pay an agreed price therefor. Upon its face the instrument is an order, directed to plaintiff, to ship certain goods, which the Mercantile Company agrees to “receive and settle for,” upon the terms and conditions specified. Prices are designated, but no words are employed constituting an agreement on the one hand to sell and on the other to buy. The terms and conditions specified on the face of the order are that the wagons are “to be paid for as sold,” and that plaintiff reserved the right to “draw on” them to fill orders in Southeast Missouri.
Turning to the printed matter on the back of the instrument, we find nothing to make the contract appear to be one of sale. The incidental employment of the word “purchaser” is, 'in itself, of little, if any, significance. And the general provision found in this printed “form” (evidently one designed for miscellaneous use by plaintiff) to the effect that all goods are sold subject only to a certain warranty, might well be applicable re
This printed matter contains a provision for notes to be given on request, but none were here requested or given, and there is nothing to indicate that this clause was intended to apply to this transaction.
It is expressly provided that the title to and ownership of all goods shipped under the contract shall remain vested in the plaintiff; that the goods are to he held at all times subject to plaintiff’s order, until paid for; and that if sales are made before payment, the proceeds thereof are to be held in trust for plaintiff until all obligations of the other party, arising under the contract, are fulfilled.
It appears that no obligation was placed upon the Mercantile Company to pay anything unless and until the goods were sold. Upon a sale or sales being made, that company was required to hold in trust the proceeds and “settle” with plaintiff. In the meantime the goods were held subject to plaintiff’s order, unless the Mercantile Company should elect to pay for them before making sale thereof; and plaintiff could fill its orders from them, or require that any part or all thereof he restored to it. And it appears that plaintiff did in fact cause three of the wagons to be returned to it or delivered elsewhere upon its order. The Mercantile Company had, by virtue of the contract, no power to deal generally with the property as’ its own; and the only distinct obligation, as to payment, placed upon it, was to faithfully account to plaintiff, at designated prices, out of the proceeds of sales made in the course of its business.
The contract is therefore lacking in the essential elements of an agreement of sale, and its provisions indicate clearly that the true intent and purpose thereof was to effectuate a bailment of the goods to the Mercantile Company for the purpose of enabling it to sell them in the course of its retail business.
From the language employed it may be inferred that the Mercantile Company had the right, at its option, to pay for the property and become vested with the title thereto, prior to sale there'of by it; though it was evi
Appellant lays some stress upon the following clause of the “contract” upon the back of the instrument under discussion: “Should the undersigned become insolvent, make an assignment . . . sustain loss by fire or other casualty, transfer property or close out business . . . all obligations provided for in this contract or arising therefrom, shall become due and payable at once, or at any time thereafter, at your [plaintiff’s] option . . .” But this clause, we think, cannot have the effect which appellant seeks to give to it. Its evident purpose is merely to mature any obligation “provided for in this contract or arising therefrom.” It creates no obligation whatsoever. And inasmuch as the contract places no obligation upon the Mercantile Company such as is here sought to be enforced, this clause cannot affect the question before us.
Our conclusion is that this record discloses a “bailment for sale,” and not a “conditional sale.” [See Piano Company v. Williams, 167 Mo. App. 515, 151 S. W. 211; In re Columbus Buggy Company, supra.] The fact that the Mercantile Company paid the freight, and was authorized to fix its selling prices, retaining the difference between the agreed prices for which it was to account to plaintiff and its own selling prices, as its
It follows that plaintiff made no prima-facie case for the recovery of the purchase price alleged to be due and payable to it, and that the trial court properly sustained the demurrer offered by defendants. The judgment is therefore affirmed.