20 Ind. App. 22 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1898
Appellee sued appellants for the price of certain wheat alleged to have been sold and delivered by appellee to appellants. The complaint is in four paragraphs, each based upon a separate transaction. With each paragraph is filed a receipt given by appellants when the wheat ivas delivered. These are all substantially the same. That filed with the first paragraph is as follows: “Pottowatomie Mills, Rochester, Indiana, October 12,1894. Received of Lydia Emmons forty-two 35-60ths bush, wheat, in store, to be paid for, on demand, in flour at 36 lbs. per bushel, and 12 lbs. bran, subject to any loss by fire or otherwise. Signed. Leiter & Peterson.”
The receipt shows credits for a certain amount of flour and bran received in part payment.
It is alleged in the complaint that appellants had paid appellee at different times a certain amount of flour and bran as part of the purchase price of said wheat, and that after deducting such credits there remained due and owing appellee the market price of 25 and 22-60ths bushels, which was worth 67 cts. per bushel; that before the commencement of this action appellee “demanded of the said defendants, pay for said balance due her as aforesaid, and at the time of making such demand, wheat wras wmrth, in Rochester,
A demurrer was overruled to each paragraph of complaint. Appellant answered in four paragraphs, the first of which, the general denial, was withdrawn. Demurrers were sustained to the remaining paragraphs of answer.
A receipt may be so drawn that it will constitute a contract, and that was done in this case.
By the terms of the contract appellee was entitled to flour and bran only, in payment for the wheat. She had agreed to accept specific personal property in payment, and she was to receive it only upon demand. No time was fixed when appellants should deliver the flour and bran, nor were they required to do anything until a demand was made by appellee. It was incumbent upon her, before bringing suit, to demand of appellants flour and bran equivalent to the balance of the wheat. She does allege that she demanded pay for the balance of the wheat which was worth 67 cents per bushel. But this was not a demand for what appellants agreed to pay. The pleading does not show that appellants had failed or refused to do anything under the contract which they had agreed to do. A special demand of the flour and bran was a necessary part of appellee’s cause of action, and the absence of this allegation from each paragraph makes the complaint bad against a demurrer. Frazee v. McChord, 1 Ind. 224; Ewing v. French, l Blackf. 170; Wilson v. Dale, 16 Ind. 399; Davis v. Doherty, 69 Ind. 11; State v. Mooney, 65 Mo. 494; Bradley v. Farrington, 4 Ark. 532; Widner v. Walsh, 3 Col. 548.
Other questions discussed by counsel, and which would arise on another trial, will be determined by the construction to be given the receipt above set out.
In construing the contract, and arriving at the in