35 Mo. App. 668 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit upon an account for goods sold and delivered. The plaintiffs are assignees of the account, which the defendant originally contracted with T. S.
Upon the trial of the cause before a jury, the plaintiffs recovered judgment and the errors assigned by the defendant appealing ar e that the court excluded proper evidence offered by him, gave erroneous instructions offered by the plaintiffs, and refused to give proper instructions offered by himself.
Touching the facts that the defendant bought the goods, and that their reasonable value is as sued for, there is no controversy. There also seems to be no substantial controversy touching the further fact that plaintiffs are owners of the account. The controversy on that point, as we read the record, is mainly whether the plaintiffs own the account absolutely, or whether they own it with a number of others assigned to them, in trust, to reimburse themselves for certain outlays out of the proceeds of collection s, and account for the balance over to the members of the firm. As there is no claim in the evidence that they had so reimbursed themselves prior to the institution of this suit, the capacity in which they hold the account is immaterial.
The complaints as to the court’s rulings on the evidence relate exclusively to the question of payment. The facts which the defendant endeavored to establish at the trial were, that when the goods mentioned in the account were bought by him, James Penny, one of the members of the firm, was indebted to him upon his individual note to an amount in excess of the aggregate of the account and that in buying such goods, he simply traded out this note, and did so with the express consent of Penny and the implied consent of other members of the firm.
The defendant on cross-examination of plaintiffs’ witnesses elicited the fact, that the partnership of P. S,
Thereupon the defendant offered to introduce the • several merchants of Memphis, Missouri, to show that - there has been a general and public usage of trade among merchants of Memphis, Missouri, for a long time or for more than ten years standing, and well known in the community to the effect following : That whenever any individual has a claim or demand by note, account or otherwise, against one member of a firm or - against a part of the members of a firm, and such person having such claim_or matter deals with such firm in a running account, upon settlement to take up such claim or matter and allow it upon his account, with the firm, with or without notice to the several members of the - firm, prior to opening of said running account; that such person expected to apply goods bought- .to payment of' his claim against any individual of. such firm, and especially is this the usage between the members of' different firms, whether either runs. up accounts for.
There was no error in this ruling. Regardless of the fact whether evidence of such custom was admissible, a question which is raised, but not decided, in Forney v. Adams, 74 Mo. 138, it does not appear that the transaction was had in reliance on such custom by either the defendant or Penny, both of whom had testified prior to the offer of this evidence, and this fact of itself, under the rule stated in the case cited, was sufficient to warrant the court in rejecting the evidence.
We had occasion to state before that, where one makes an offer of proof, which is rejected, it is incumbent upon him to show that the evidence was competent. Thus, where the competency of the facts, offered to be shown, depends on other evidence, such evidence must either precede the offer or else the offer itself must contain a further offer to supply it thereafter. Neither of these was done in the present case.
The goods sued for were mostly groceries for household use. The defendant testified that part of them were bought by his wife. He thereupon called his wife as a witness and offered to show by her that she went into the store of T. S. Wise & Co. and bought part of these goods and offered to pay for them, but that Wise, one of the partners, told her that her husband was trading out a note which he held against Penny, and that he would just put it on the books. This
The rule unquestionably is, that before a wife can testify on behalf of her husband on the ground that she acted as his agent, the fact of such agency must be established by other evidence than her own. Williams v. Williams, 67 Mo. 661. But this rule, as shown by the very case declaring it, has application only when the agency is claimed to exist, touching transactions in which the wife is not the husband’s agent at the common law. Here the transaction was touching the purchase of necessaries for the household, which she may purchase on credit and bind the husband on the law of implied agency. Tuttle v. Hoage, 46 Mo. 38. Her testimony, therefore, was competent. As it was evidence tending to show the assent of a member of the firm to the transaction, and was directly contradictory of plaintiff’s evidence on the same subject, it was material, and its exclusion was prejudicial error demanding a reversal of the case.
As upon a retrial, if such should be had, the instructions will necessarily assume a different form, we will not notice objections thereto any further than by stating this: The first instruction given on behalf of plaintiff is too broad. It seems to require an express consent on part of each of the members of the firm to validate the transaction as claimed by the defendant. The consent may be implied if the evidence warrants it, and under the decision of Drake v. Rogers, 6 Mo. 317, 320, need not include the consent of the dormant partner.
We also desire to add that the practice of multiplying instructions is to be condemned, as one tending rather to confuse than to enlighten the jury; In this case, although the issues are few and simple, the defendant asked eleven instructions, two of which the
Reversed and remanded.