77 Mo. App. 217 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
Action replevin. Daniel David, who had for many years been engaged in the retail clothing business, on May 19, 1892, executed to one Cloney, as trustee, a certain deed of trust whereby he conveyed to said trustee his stock of clothing for the purpose of securing certain creditors therein named; that on the next day the said David, by deed of assigment for the benefit of his creditors, conveyed the said stock of clothing to said Cloney, subject to said prior deed of trust. Since this action was commenced Cloney has died and defendant Hinsdale has become administrator of his estate.
In the months of August, September and October, 1891, the plaintiffs sold the said David three bills of clothing amounting to $1,089. Goods of the invoice price of $434 were returned, thus reducing these purchases to $655. Between the months of January and May, 1892, the plaintiffs sold the said David three bills of clothing amounting to $1,019. The plaintiffs in their brief state that, this suit toas brought to recover only the goods sold by them to said David after January 1, 1892, and that these are the only goods in controversy. The invoice value of the goods taken by the sheriff under the plaintiffs’ writ was $1,586. It is thus seen that the
Now if it be conceded that David made to the plaintiffs’ agent, Mossier, false representations as to his pecuniary responsibility, which were known to have been false at the time of making the same, and that such representations were made with the intention to deceive plaintiffs, whereby they were induced to part with their goods, and that they relied on the same in making the sale to David, and that plaintiffs, in consequence thereof, are entitled to a rescission of the contract and to recover back the goods, yet the plaintiffs’ instruction number 1, submitting the case to the jury on this theory, was manifestly erroneous because it authorized by its very terms a recovery of all the goods levied on without reference to the time when the same were purchased. As has already been stated, it stands admitted that the fraudulent statements which the evidence tends to show were made by David to plaintiffs’ agent affected only the sales made after January 1, 1892. It is not contended that the sales made by the plaintiffs to David prior to January, 1892, were influenced by any fraud of David. The validity of such prior sales is not attacked.
The plaintiffs’ second instruction, which told the jury that if plaintiffs sold the goods in controversy to David and that at the time of the purchase of the same
The defendant requested the court by his. eighth instruction to tell the jury that, to entitle the plaintiffs to recover in this cause, it devolves upon them to prove to the satisfaction of the jury that they were led and induced to sell the goods in controversy to Daniel David by false and fraudulent representations made before such sale by the said Daniel David as to his said financial condition at the time of said sale, and that such false statements and representations were communicated to the plaintiffs before said sale and that the plaintiffs were induced by false and fraudulent representations and statements, if any were so made by the said Daniel David, and not by information obtained from other persons or statements made by the said Daniel David long prior to the said purchase, as to his financial condition, and also at the time of the piwchase of said goods the said David had a preconceived design and purpose of never paying for said goods at any time. The court modified this instruction by striking therefrom the italicised portion thereof, and then gave it as thus modified. If the facts hypothesized in its modified form were found, this entitled plaintiffs to a rescission of the contract of sale. Porter v. Leyhe, 67 Mo. App.
The rule embodied in the modification as an independent proposition is undoubtedly a correct expression of the law, for it is now well settled in this state that where a vendee buys goods with a preconceived intention of never paying for them or where he knows he can never pay for them he commits a fraud on the vendor which entitles the latter to a rescission of the sale. Bidault v. Wales, 19 Mo. 36; Bidault v. Wales, 20 Mo. 550; Fox v. Webster, 46 Mo. 181; Strauss v. Hirsch, 63 Mo. App. 95. But the plaintiffs would have a right to recover if the facts assumed in the defendant’s said instruction were found to exist, without reference to the modification thereof, and therefore it would have been improper to have required the jury to find both the facts of the instruction as given and those of the modification before the plaintiffs could be allowed to recover. Plaintiffs were entitled to recover if the jury found the facts embraced in either the instruction as given or in the modification thereof.
As the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for further trial it is proper to say that the first six points of objection urged by defendant in his brief to the action of the trial court in respect to the admission of evidence we think should be sustained.
The numerous other grounds assigned for the reversal of the judgment have been examined but found without merit. The judgment will be reversed and cause remanded.