93 Mo. App. 178 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
This is an action by plaintiffs to recover of the defendant the sum of $372.10, the amount paid by them to the defendant as the purchase price of .a .quantity
Some of the goods were sold by plaintiffs to customers who notified them that they were not merchantable catsup. Upon examination they were found to be practically worthless. On the trial it was shown that the original sale was made by sample of standard quality. There was no conflicting evidence except the claim made by the defendant that the goods had been injured by the cold weather, in transit, for which he was not liable. The samples upon which the catsup was sold and that delivered were offered in: evidence. The court found for the plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs, in aid of .their suit, also instituted an attachment, the ground for which was: “That the debt sued for was fraudulently contracted on the part of the debtor.” The defendant interposed a plea in abatement. The case was tried by the court sitting as a jury. The finding was in writing, which, among other matters, is to the effect that the defendant shipped the goods to the plaintiffs with tire intent to defraud them, and that they were worthless and could not be sold as catsup. The attachment was sustained and the defendant appealed. There was only one instruction asked. The defendant requested the court to declare as a matter Of law, “that the evidence does not sustain the allegations in the affidavit in attachment,” which was refused. The defendant
If the foundation of the plaintiffs’ claim is not a debt, within the meaning of the fourteenth subdivision of the attachment law, the plaintiffs’ case falls. The word “debt” is defined to be, “A sum of money due by certain and express agreement; it denotes any kind of a just demand.” Bouvier’s Law Dictionary. The definition is equally as comprehensive and correct as any of those given by other lexicographers. A “del mand,” by the same author, is defined as “a claim, a legal obligation.” The defendant contends that the debt meant by the statute, must be a “direct obligation to pay money, a sum certain,” and that “if there is a claim or right of action, the value or amount of which can not be fixed without judicial inquiry and ascertainment, it can not be a debt within the meaning of the statute.”
We will not attempt to analyze the entire contention of the defendant, but will confine ourselves to the main point in issue, viz.: Was the suit founded on such a debt as would
authorize an attachment under the attachment law ? In the first place, when the defendant sold the plaintiffs the goods in question, it was the plaintiffs and not the defendant who contracted the debt, and it was they who' became the debtors. The question naturally suggests itself, when and how did the defendant contract the debt, if it be a debt ? Certainly not by express contract. And it is not claimed that the claim in suit was the result of an express contract. The contract in suit is such as is implied by law, that is, the defendant obtained money from plaintiffs for his worthless goods by fraud, and the law implies a promise to pay it back to plaintiffs. People v. Spier, 77 N. Y. 144; Ogden v. Saunders, 12 Wheaton 213; Beach on Modern Law of Contracts, sec. 15. We are of the opinion that the contract implied by law, from the wrongful
In Finley y. Bryson, 84 Mo. 664, where the facts showed an unlawful conversion by the defendant of the plaintiff’s money, the court held that the debt sued for would not authorize an attachment. The facts were that the defendant had received four mules from the plaintiff with directions to sell them and deposit the proceeds to the plaintiff’s credit. The defendant sold the mules and converted the proceeds to his own use, together with the sum of $180, the money of the plaintiff, which he drew from plaintiff’s deposit without authority. Martin, Commissioner, who delivered the opinion of the court, said: “Debts induced by fraud are common things in our reports; and as such they answer the language of the fourteenth subdivision without goipig further. The fraudulent transaction referred to must culminate in a debt. The debtor must have been guilty of some material deceptive act, word or concealment, done or suffered by him with the intent to induce the opposite party to consent to the debt. . . . But the unlawful conversion of property or money results only in damages so far as the acts of the wrongdoer are concerned. As a matter of fact he agrees to no debt, nor can he lawfully treat it as such. That privilege belongs to the other side, not to him.”
The present case is not unlike the one referred to, in principle, for in both, the alleged debt is founded upon tort, pure and simple, and not upon contract. There was no agreement that the defendant would pay the demand in suit. We believe that for the reason given in Finley v. Bryson, supra, which is approved by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Sunday Mirror Co. v. Galvin, 55 Mo. App. 412, that the trial court erred in not sustaining defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s ease.
Eor the reasons given the cause is reversed so far as relates to the attachment branch of the case.