158 Mo. App. 493 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit for the balance due on the purchase of a quantity of wheat. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
To the end of brevity and for the purpose of sharply presenting the legal propositions for consideration, we state the facts according to their legal effect instead of seriatim.
It appears plaintiff, Samuel Ogilvie, a farmer, sold to defendant, in January, his crop of wheat, to be delivered in July of that year, at ninety cents per bushel and defendant paid earnest money on the purchase. The sale was effected through W. A. Ogilvie, plaintiff’s son, and the evidence for plaintiff tends to prove that in the month of June' thereafter he personally made a new contract with defendant by which he agreed to deliver the wheat in June instead of July and defendant agreed to pay him'one dollar per bushel therefor. Defendant purchased the wheat for the purpose of selling it on the market, and as the price ranged at a high figure in June, he was anxious to have it delivered during that month instead of July. In accordance with this second contract, defendant delivered the wheat (in all 1900 bushels) to plaintiff and plaintiff made pártial payments thereon as the deliveries were made. The wheat was delivered by plaintiff’s son, W. A. Ogilvie, to whom the various payments were made, and upon making the final delivery he .demanded payment of the balance due. Defendant declined to pay more than ninety cents a bushel for the wheat and insisted upon the contract of purchase made in January to that effect and plaintiff’s son and agent,
The only question for decision and which merits discussion in the opinion relates to the instruction given by the court as to the effect of this tender and acceptance and the refusal of an instruction on. the same subject requested by defendant. So far as material, the court of its own motion instructed the jury, substantially, that if it found defendant, on June 28, 1900, offered W. A. Ogilvie the sum of $878, stating that it was in full compensation for the wheat in question at the contract price and that Ogilvie accepted the same in full satisfaction, then the verdict should be for defendant, any contract to the contrary notwithstanding. It is argued by defendant that the court erred in so instructing the jury, for, it is said, the employment of the words “in full satisfaction” in the instruction in effect told the jury to find for plaintiff unless his agent, W. A. Ogilvie, agreed that the sum offered was all that was due. We believe the criticism to be unsound, for the instruction, as we read it, directs the jury instead that if W. A. Ogilvie accepted the amount tendered in full satisfaction then the entire controversy was concluded thereby. No one can doubt that when the amount of a claim is disputed and one tenders the lesser amount in payment of the whole and it is accepted on the condition thus attached, such
As before stated, there can be no doubt that where a claim is disputed and a tender is made in full pay
The judgment should be affirmed'. It is so ordered.