47 Miss. 61 | Miss. | 1872
• The declaration is in the usual form of indebitatus assumpsit for goods, wares and merchandise, sold and delivered, and for money paid, laid out and expended. Plea: Non assumpsit. . The claim, according to the declaration, was upon an open account. Upon the trial the defendants objected to proof of the account sued on, under art. 90, Code, 492, which provides that “there shall be annexed to, or filed with the declaration in every case founded on an open account, a copy of the account or bill of particulars of the demand;” and, that “no evidence thereof shall be given on the trial, unless so annexed or filed,” the defendant insisting that the particulars furnished were insufficient, and that the drafts upon which the money was paid, should be produced upon the trial. The objection was overruled, and verdict and judgment followed for plaintiff. From this judgment, the defendants below prosecute this writ of error.
The bill of particulars, filed with the declaration, consisted of items, of which the following are selected by way of illustration, to wit: “ To invoice, pier Quitman, $98;” “ To Draft, per Keep & Caulfield, $168; ” etc. Neither the original books of account of' the merchant, nor the drafts mentioned in the account filed, were produced on the trial. The deposition of the merchant is the only evidence sent up with the record, or was, we suppose, .the only evidence offered. The testimony of the merchant is, in substance, that he had previously rendered bills of items of the account sued on to the defendants, to which they had made no objections, showing, if uncontradicted, an account stated, between the merchant and his customers, the defendants. The effort of counsel was, on the trial, as here, to sustain the statement filed with the declaration, as a sufficient compliance with the code.
As to the argument drawn from the common law,
If we have correctly developed the common law practice and doctrine, it follows that the old precedents afford no certain criterion in the determination of the
There is also another material difference between the practice at common law, and under our statute. By the former, an account rendered may be referred to in a bill of particulars, as previously delivered, the bill giving the footings only, whereas our statute requires the bill of particulars to be “ filed with the declaration.” It would clearly be insufficient and evasive to file with a declaration on an open account, the aggregate of such account only, referring to particulars theretofore rendered for further information.
A further argument in support of our view, may be drawn from the language of the statute, which enacts, that, when the action is upon an “ open account,” a “ copy of the account ” shall be filed-as a bill of particulars, with the declaration. The suit at bar is upon an “open account.” According to the statute, there should have been filed “ with the declaration,” a “ copy of the account” sued upon, whereas there was filed merely the amounts of invoices, or bills rendered. Were the action upon an account stated, this bill of particulars would have corresponded therewith, for in such case, the nature of the action, the issues and proofs are all somewhat changed, the basis being a new promise. Although portions of an account stated may be contested, yet the items thereof, in extenso, need not be given in evidence, and consequently, the bill of particulars may conform to the nature of the action.
The history of legislation upon the subjéct under discussion, affords a further illustration of our views. As is well known to the profession, the general mode of de
There is another consideration affecting alike the bill of particulars and the mode of keeping the books in this instance. It is not, certainly, according to the authorities and- reason, the most approved method of entries in books of account. We can well conceive, that in keeping books of account, by entering only the aggregate of “bills rendered,” there are far more serious objections to the books of a merchant thus kept, than to those of a mechanic. Suppose a merchant and a mechanic each charge in their respective books against a customer, the one, “ goods as per bill rendered, $75,” and the other, for “labor and material furnished, $75.” In the former case, the aggregate may be made up of a thousand different items, which are contained in a variety store, and constitute the wants of a family, and a planter, or a mechanic, including dry goods, groceries, hardware, dress goods,, crockery, kitchen ware, mechanic’s tools and farming implements. If the bill be lost, omnipotence alone, could give the items, and thus mistakes, whether accidental or intentional, could never be detected and corrected. In the case of the mechanic, however, experts by knowing the particular job performed, or the character of the work, might approximate, with great accuracy and certainty, the labor and materials necessary to its performance. We do not impugn the books in this case, nor question them as evidence, but this objection seems to be a serious one to the bill of particulars, and to the mode in which the accounts were kept, as a rule, which, to some extent, confirms our general view of this branch of the
On the other hand, a custom of merchants, as to their mode of keeping and rendering accounts, is invoked as providing a rule in this case.. We are not informed of any such usage. None is in evidence. The adjudications define the most approved methods of bookkeeping; and the entry of items is enforced in numerous cases. A single item, by a mechanic, thus, a bricklayer’s charge of “ 190 days work,” was rejected; as was this: “ thirteen dollars for medicine and attendance,” by a physician. The laws of Texas require an account to be kept by items, and in 5 Texas, 343, a single charge, stating the aggregate, “as per bill rendered,” was questioned “upon principle.” “ Inovice ” is a well understood term, and signifies only a written account of the particulars of merchandise shipped to a purchaser, factor, or consignee, with the value or prices and charges annexed, but implies no custom. An “ invoice” of goods, is merely another term for “ bill rendered.” In this case it means only, that the merchant had rendered to his customer, before suit, an itemized statement of the account against him. This, however, is not in compliance with art. 90, Code of 1857, p. 492, nor with the Code of 1871, sec. 580.
While thus holding with reference to the contents of the bill of particulars, we do not hold that in an action upon an open account, the amount due cannot be established by an implied admission of the correctness of the account sued on, and that such implied admission may be in the mode understood, by the term, “ stated account.” A sufficient bill of particulars being filed with a declaration upon an open account, proof of a prior delivery to the defendant of the items of the account sued on, which the latter held for some time without objection, creates an “ account stated,” and involves an admission by .implication of the plaintiff’s demand; 25 Miss. 267; 26 ib. 212; but such is not the case at liar, in this, that the
It is true, that at common law a promissory note, if given “for value received,” is evidence under the money counts, as an admission of the amount due. So under the common counts, with a proper bill of particulars, according to the form of the action, an implied admis
Another question, arising out of the testimony sent up with the record, will naturally be raised upon another trial, to wit: whether the books of account of the witness Nugent should not be produced in court in support of the plaintiff’s action. In answer to the fourth interrogatory, the witness, Richard Nugent, states in his deposition, as follows,: “ My bookkeeper, at the time referred to, was David Thomas, who has since died. I know the annexed paper, marked ‘A’ is a correct copy of the original items in my books, which I know were correctly kept. I believe said paper to be a correct copy or transcript of the original accounts in books, which I know were correctly kept.” In Moody v. Roberts & Co., 41 Miss. 75, the court say, “A custom has grown up in some parts of the state, which seems to have been followed in the present case, of giving in evidence copies of accounts, proved by witness to have been correctly transcribed from the books, and this course derives some support from the language of the court in the several cases of Hazlip v. Legget, 6 S. & M. 306 ; Simmons v. Means, 8 ib. 397, and Moon v. Joyce, 23 Miss. 584. But there does not seem to be any sound principle upon which such a practice can be sustained. It is going quite far enough to permit the original book itself, after being inspected by the court, and subjected to the scrutiny of the opposite party, to go as evidence to the jury, and in no
With reference to the money portion of the plaintiff’s demand it is suggested, in argument, by counsel, that the suit is “ not founded upon any negotiable subsisting security or other writing.” As a matter of fact, there is no description in the record of these “ drafts,” upon which the money is stated, in the bill of particulars, to have been paid. Whether they were letters, mere “ orders ” of the simplest form, or formal bills or drafts, known as such by the business community, does not appear. Upon this point the record is silent. In the absence of testimony, we must presume the term “ drafts ” found in the account filed, was used in its highest commercial sense, and consequently, that the money sued for was paid upon “ negotiable, subsisting security, or other writing,” or “ drafts.”
In support of the argument, very strenously urged, that upon the evidence in this case, it was unnecessary to produce the drafts on the trial, we are referred to Curry, Dismukes & Co. v. Kurtz, 33 Miss. 24 ; and to Keene v. Meade, 3 Pet. 7. In the former, the rule of law requiring the production, upon the trial, of drafts paid by a plaintiff suing to recover the money advanced thereon, or such an identification thereof, and their absence so accounted for, that a judgment for the money would bar a future action on the drafts, is explicitly affirmed. In that case, as in the one before us, the plaintiff sought to recover money paid upon drafts, without accounting for, identifying or producing them on the trial. The claim was rejected. In Keene v. Meade, which was an action for money had and received, the defendant had, on request, written “ his name at full length ” in the “ rough cash book ” of plaintiff, “ not so much for the sake of the receipt, as in order for plaintiff to become acquainted with the signature ” of “ and the way of spelling his name ” by
Our opinion, delivered on giving the judgment which was remanded to the docket, was substantially as follows : 1. That the bill of particulars filed is insufficient; 2. That the “drafts” mentioned in the. pleadings and evidence should have been produced on the trial, or their destruction or loss proved. The opinion was studiously limited to the specific points presented, carefully omitting all reference to the exceptions and qualifications arising out of a change of facts, leaving these to be developed in the future progress of the cause. We stated only primary rules, which might be modified, or superceded by a change of- circumstances. The record before us furnishes no precise description of these “ drafts”; whether they were negotiable, and are a subsisting security; whether sight drafts, and instantly paid; whether their negotiability was destroyed by payment or otherwise; whether in fact they were put in circulation, and are outstanding in the hands of strangers; whether the drawers have been exonerated, in fact or in law, from their payment; or whether in case of judgment in this action and its satisfaction, these defendants might not be subjected to a second payment on these drafts in the hands of third parties, depend upon facts not presented to us. The observations now submitted, therefore, will serve to enforce and illustrate, as well as to show the limited scope of our opinion rendered on a former occasion in this case, and its intended consistency with acknowledged rules of law. 16 Md. 208; 4 Barn. & Cress. 235; 4 Car. & Payne, 44; 10 Pick. 31; 6 Mass. 358; 21 Pick. 247; 4 Mass. 93; 4 Mich. 387; 5 Tex. 343; 11 Leigh, 471 ; 4 Gilem, 98 ; 2 Greenl. Ev. § 127; 1 Johns. 334; 2 T. R. 479 ; 3 Camp. 101; 3 T. R. 182; 2 Johns. R. 235; 10 ib. 418; 3 Johns. Cas. 5; 8 Johns. R. 79 ; 12 ib. 90 ; 7 Wend. 311; 15 Pick. 212; 4 Seld. 346; 2 ib. 19; 11
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded.