107 Mo. 595 | Mo. | 1891
This is an action of slander, and the petition is as follows : “ The plaintiff states that, at the times herein stated, the defendant and one Alexander Russell were partners in the dry-goods business at the city of St. Louis, under the firm-name of D. Crawford & Co.; that at said times there was a usage and custom in the business of said firm to have their salesmen, including the plaintiff, who was at said times in the employment of said firm as a salesman, make sales of remnants of dry goods upon partial payments ; that according to said usage and custom, when a sale of such remnant should be so made by a salesman upon partial payment, there should be placed upon the package of said remnant so sold, by the proprietors of said firm, or by their floor manager, a ticket on which was marked certain letters, which by the usage aforesaid indicated the price at which said package should be sold, as also the amount of the premium or reward which the salesman making such sale was entitled to receive for making such sale, after said remnant so sold had been fully paid for by the buyer, and not till then, as according to such usage and custom such salesman was not to receive any premium or compensation for making such sales unless the buyer should fully pay for the goods so sold; that, according to said usage and custom, the letters “cf” stood for and indicated the sum of seventy-five
The defendant at the trial objected to the introduction of any evidence, on the ground that the petition
Viewing the colloqumm alone, therefore, we fail to discover that the plaintiff was charged with a crime or even a fraud. There is no averment that he received any money on the sale made by him ; indeed, the inference is that he did not receive any. Nor does it anywhere appear how the remnant of black silk goods, which plaintiff alleges he sold, was marked, nor how much it ought to have been or was sold for, nor how much he was to receive, or did receive, for making the sale. It is averred that the purchaser of this remnant paid $1 as a partial payment, and then the remnant was made into a package and marked “as aforesaid.”. But it is impossible for us to determine from the allegations of the petition, how this package was marked. We find it stated that the proprietors of the store, or the floor manager, placed upon packages to be sold tickets on which certain letters were marked, indicating the price at which the articles should be sold, and the amount of the premium or reward which the salesman was entitled to receive for making the sale, •and that “cf” stood for and indicated the sum of seventy-five cents, and that “ pm” meant and indicated the word premium, and that, “when a sale should be made of a remnant upon partial payment, a part payment was made in cash, and said remnant was kept by
After making these allegations, the plaintiff avers that he sold the remnant, and it “was made into a package and marked as aforesaid.” Who marked it “ as aforesaid ” is not stated. Construing the previous averments, we would say that the proprietors of the store or floor manager had marked this package, but we cannot say how it was marked. The proprietors of the store or floor manager had no doubt put letters on it indicating the price at which it should be sold, and the premium or reward the salesman selling it should receive, but what those letters were, is not disclosed ; “pm” did not indicate the amount of the premium ; it simply stood for the word premium. This package was evidently not marked “cf,” for defendant demanded that plaintiff “put cf on that goods or leave the house,” and besides that “cf” stood for seventy-five cents, and the package was sold for more than $1.
The colloquium fails, therefore, to show how this remnant was marked, or how much it was sold for, or ought to have been sold for, or how much premium plaintiff ought to have received for making the sale, or how much he did receive, or that he received anything, and it nowhere appears that plaintiff was required in the performance of his duty as defendant’s salesman to mark the package, or that he did mark it, and we cannot see how the words defendant spoke of plaintiff can be construed into a charge of larceny of seventy-five cents, or any other sum, or of fraud, as defendant’s agent. Defendant said of plaintiff, “You know you