6 Mo. App. 384 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the court.
The second count of plaintiff’s petition alleges that defendants were factors and commission-merchants; that plaintiff shipped to them a car-load of goods worth $474, which defendants received and agreed to sell for a commission of five per cent, and guarantee the payment of the proceeds to the plaintiff; that defendants sold the goods to Eox & Co., which firm was then, and ever since has been, insolvent ; that plaintiff has received no part of the proceeds of the sale, though demand was made of defendants. Judgment is asked for $474 and interest. There was a general denial, and a counter-claim for commissions. The first count of the petition was abandoned at the trial. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and the cause comes here by writ of error.
The testimony was contradictory. There was, however, some evidence that the goods were sold on a del credere commission. There was also testimony tending to prove the other material facts alleged in the second count of the petition.
1. An instruction in the nature of a demurrer to tiie evidence was asked by defendants and refused; and it is claimed that, as the contract was not in writing, there was no evidence to support the verdict.
It was formerly said by learned writers that the contract of a factor binding him in the terms implied in a del credere commission was a collateral obligation and within the statute. Chitty on Con. (10th ed.) 209. And it was held in
The rule that in the case of factors who have possession of the goods, and sell under a del credere commission, the agreement is not collateral, and therefore not within the statute, is now too well established to be disturbed. 1 Am. Ld. Cas. 659-663; Bradley v. Richardson, 23 Vt. 720; Swan v. Nesmith, 7 Pick. 222; 2 Denio, 228; Story on Ag., sect. 215. The factor’s promise stands upon the consideration of his own duty and responsibility growing out of his employment. If it terminates in a liability to pay the debt of another, that is a mere incident; and one ought
2. A letter written by defendants to plaintiff, three months after the sale, was offered in evidence by defendants and excluded. This letter was one asking instructions as to whether defendants should at once sue the purchaser or whether they should wait. We think the letter was too late in time to be considered as connected with the original transaction so as to afford any illustration of its character as part of the res gestee.
3. Defendants offered to show that the goods were not-sold to Fox & Co. as stated in the petition, but to the firm of Spencer & Walls, and that Spencer & Walls were solvent at the time. This testimony was excluded. The contract created by a del credere commission is an absolute agreement by the factor, private between himself and the principal, and distinct from the sale that he makes, that the debts to which it refers shall be paid at the time they are due ; that they shall be cash in the principal’s account at the time they are due. In fact, it is by thus regarding it as an original absolute agreement that it is taken out of the Statute of Frauds. If the goods were sold by defendants, and the
No statement or brief has been filed by counsel for defendant in error. They submit the cause upon the record alone. As nothing appears in the record to warrant a reversal of the judgment, it is affirmed.