18 Mo. App. 196 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff and Gr. W. Freeman were partners in business, and, in May, 1882, entered into a written contract with the defendant for the furnishing of cross-ties along the line of the Kansas City, Springfield and Memphis railroad, for a defined extent of about nine miles. The testimony tended to show that the writing was regained in the possession of defendant and was by him lost, so that it could not be produced at the trial. Parol proof of its contents tended to show that Love and Freeman were to deliver the ties at the price of twenty-five •cents each, and were to have the exclusive right of furnishing them, up to the number of fifty thousand, within the defined limits. No time was specified for the periormance. It was stipulated that the defendant would not buy ties from any other person or persons, within the said limits, until the completion of this contract. Alleged breaches of this stipulation constitute the foundation of the present suit. The plaintiff claims, by assignment from his partner, as sole owner of the rights acquired by them under the contract. There was a judgment for the plaintiff.
The petition avers that, in July, 1882, “plaintiff purchased the interest of the said Gr. W. Freeman in said contract, and thereafter continued said business of buying and selling ties under said contract, in his own
The defendant contends that there was no valid assignment of Freeman’s interest in the contract tg> the plaintiff, for want of a sufficient consent thereto by the other contracting party. There is no ground for this contention. It would be hard to say that the contract was for the joint personal services of Love and Freeman,' on account of their combined skill, knowledge and experience in the art of furnishing ties, rather than a mere contract for work and labor which might be done as well by one as by another. Leahy v. Dugdale, 27 Mo. 439. But, aside from this, the record abundantly shows that the transfer was both consented to and ratified by the defendant. The attention of the jury was directed to this question -by an instruction which might have been given in much stronger terms for the plaintiff, without any strain upon the evidence. . The hypothesis submitted to them in the plaintiff ’ s behalf was, in effect, that, after the making of the contract, '“the said firm of Love and Freeman was dissolved, and by the terms of such dissolution the plaintiff succeeded to all the rights of said firm in and under said contract, and that the plaintiff, with the knowledge of defendant and without objection, proceeded and continued in the fulfilment of said contract, etc.” This hypothesis, as being sufficient to bind, the defendant to the effect of the assignment from Freeman to Love, is fully sustained by the decision of our supreme court in City v. Clemens (42 Mo. 69). But,, were it proper for us to weigh the testimony, we might
There was testimony tending to show that the defendant bought many hundreds of ties from persons other than the plaintiff in violation of the plaintiff’s claim of exclusive right under the contract, and that he paid for them prices higher than it was possible for the plaintiff to pay without loss on his undertaking, so that the plaintiff was thus seriously hindered and damaged in his efforts to perform the- contract on his part. The-defendant, claimed, by way of defence, that his obligation to the railway company required him to procure and deliver ties rapidly, of which fact the plaintiff was aware, and that the plaintiff was so lacking in diligence, and so remiss about keeping -up a proper supply, that the defendant was compelled in his own defence to procure ties from other persons. ■ As already stated, there was no stipulation in the contract-as to the times of the plaintiff’s deliveries, but the court gave to the jury, at the defendant’s instance, the following instruction: “That the legal meaning of the contract of May 20, between Love & Freeman and defendant is, that the ties were to be delivered with due diligence, whether such provision was written in said contract or not; and if you find that Love & Freeman, or Love, did not prosecute such work with due diligence, then defendant had the right to procure ties on that territory from other parties, notwithstanding the contract may have been exclusive, as claimed by plaintiff. Due diligence would require that the ties should be procured and delivered as fast as they reason
It is further insisted for the defence, that there was a settlement and release by the plaintiff to the defendant of all the matters complained of in this suit. The only evidence of such a settlement and release appears in a writing signed by the parties, in the following terms :
“I have this day released to G. S. Yan Every all claims on 1,343 ties and 118 culls, upon which I had advanced cash and merchandise to the amount of $212.71, which said Yan Every has paid me, and I have accepted said settlement of Adams’ account and given up my claim on said ties upon the agreement of said Yan Every that he is to advance or loan $500 to Mr. Long, of' Seymour, or Messrs. Matney & Crabb, of same place, to enable them to purchase my stock of goods and tie contract at Cedar Gap, Wright County, Mo., and that he will recognize either of these parties, with whom I may consummate a trade, in my stead, in the tie contract now in existence between me and said Yan Every, which contract gives me the right to buy in the territory known as Cedar Gap. Said Yan Every not to be held to this agreement of advancing $500 to said Long, unless said Long gives a lien or mortgage upon his store-house in Seymour and stock of goods at Cedar Gap and Seymour, to secure the payment of said advancement in connection with a balance of seven hundred dollars that may be due me, said security to be satisfactory to all parties.
“ Price of ties to be 25 cents each and culls 11 cents each.
“ This Dec. 30, 1882.
“T. C. Love.
“ Geo. S. Yan Evert,”
It is objected that damages may have been improperly assessed by the jury on account of breaches which occurred-before Love acquired Freeman’s interest in the contract. The hypothesis, whatever may be the law applicable to it, has no support in the record. Love’s purchase of Freeman’s interest was made on July 26. All the breaches complained of, as the plaintiff testifies without contradiction by anyone, occurred “in the latter part of August and September.” The court’s instructions directed the attention of the jury tó damages sustained by “ the plaintiff,” and not by Love and Freeman. There is some inconsistency between the defendant’ s position in this connection, and the one which will next be considered. In the^one case, it is to be inferred, from the same sort of premises, that the assignee did not acquire the right of action for antecedent breaches, and in the other, that he did.
It is complained that the court erred in giving the following instruction for the plaintiff: “There is no evidence in this case upon which the jury can find that the plaintiff has at any time either assigned, abandoned, or in any manner settled his supposed cause of action for alleged violation of said contract, charged against defendant in said petition!”
If the defendant himself is to be believed, all these expressions mean, not that the plaintiff transferred any contract right whatever to Matney, but that he simply withdrew, leaving Matney and Van Every to enter into a new arrangement. The essence of the contract was the exclusive privilege of purchasing ties from the first producers within the nine mile territory; since that enabled the plaintiff to control the prices, so as to secure a margin of profit on his deliveries to the defendant. Both Love and Van Every testified that, in the transaction with Matney, this exclusive right was abolished. It fol
In Gwin v. Biel (70 Ind. 505), it is held that “an assignment in writing as follows : ‘ For value received, I hereby assign, transfer and set over to J. G. all my right, title, claim, and interest in and to the rents and profits of the farm in Clark county,’ * * * only operates to assign, and transfer to such assignee, the rents and profits to accrue after the date of its execution, and not to invest him with any title, or claim to rents or profits which had already accrued.” “ The assignment of a judgment and execution conveys away the plaintiff’s interest in the further enforcement of it, but not his interest in money which the sheriff has previously collected on it.” Robinson v. Towns, 30 Geo. 818. In states where the
It seems pretty clear, then, that in this case there was no transfer by the plaintiff to Matney of the right of action for antecedent violations of the contract, unless such transfer was made in express terms. And as no shadow of evidence of any such express transfer appears in the record, the instruction complained of was properly given.
Objection is made that the verdict for eleven hundred dollars in the plaintiff’s favor was excessive. There was uncontradicted testimony to the effect that the plaintiff’s average profit on the ties, furnished at twenty-five cents apiece, was ten cents per tie; until the defendant, by paying higher prices to other persons than the plaintiff was paying, compelled the plaintiff to pay higher prices also, and finally made it impossible for him to purchase them at all, unless at a positive loss. That, when he was thus driven to give up his contract, the plaintiff had furnished not more than 15,000 ties, and would have furnished the additional 35,000, but for the defendant’s interference in the manner charged. The contract secured to the plaintiff a right to furnish 50,000 ties in addition to the first, on the same terms. A witness testified: “Van Every told me>he had bought, or was going to buy the Glass ties, and I remarked, ' that is on Love’s territory.’ -He then said that he had never given Love the contract, or a copy of it, and that, never having given the contract, or a copy of it, to Love, he would buy ties from whom he pleased.” Taking all these facts together, it would appear, rather, that the jury treated the defendant with remarkable leniency; and that a much larger verdict might well have been defended against the charge of excessiveness.
Counsel for the defendant appear to have exhausted
the judgment is affirmed.