39 Mo. App. 214 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion oi the court.
This suit is for a balance of one hundred and thirty-five dollars and forty-eight cents, claimed to be due upon a bill of lumber sold and delivered. The answer admits the sale and value, but avers a counter-indebtedness of the plaintiff to the defendant to the same extent, and claims a set-off, and judgment for costs. Upon the trial of the cause before a jury, the defendant recovered a verdict, and judgment was entered accordingly, from which the plaintiff prosecutes-this appeal.
The errors assigned are, that the answer stated no valid set-off, and that the court erred in admitting any evidence in its support, and that the coart erred in admitting illegal evidence for the defendant, and misdirected the jury in its instructions.
The answer of the defendant states, in substance, the following facts: That, heretofore, J. M. True & Co. were indebted to Herriman and others in the sum of four hundred and fifty-one dollars and fifty-nine cents; that this claim was transferred for value to the defendant, whose corporate name is the Herriman & Curd Lumber Company, but which is also known as the Herriman & Curd Company; that, after defendant acquired such claim, the said J. M. True & Co. sold to the plaintiff all its stock in trade, and the plaintiff agreed, in consideration thereof, to pay sundry debts of said J. M. True & Co., including the debt of four hundred and fifty-one dollars and fifty-nine cents due to this defendant; that the defendant demanded payment of such claim from the plaintiff, and the plaintiff did, prior to the institution of this suit, pay to the defendant three hundred and sixteen dollars and eleven cents, leaving the balance of one hundred and thirty-five dollars and forty-eight cents unpaid, which balance the defendant claims to offset in the present proceeding.
There is nothing in the plaintiff’s contention, that the Herriman & Curd Lumber Company and the Herri-man & Curd Company are two different corporations, and that the Herriman & Curd Lumber Company was never sued in this action, but entered its appearance voluntarily, and could not, by so doing, give the benefit of a claim, which it held against.the plaintiff, to another defendant who is sued. A party sued by a wrong name may appear to the action by his right name, and it is his duty so to do. Here it appears, from the very inception of the litigation, that there never was but one corporation, and that its corporate name was the Herriman & Curd Lumber Company, although, right or wrong, it sometimes dropped the word “lumber” from its name for sake of brevity or convenience. This appears not only by the uncontroverted evidence, but by many of the original papers filed in the case by the plaintiff itself, in which the Herriman & Curd Lumber Company is named as the sole defendant.
“Hannibal, Mo., January 7, 1884.
“ T. W. Haney Lumber Company, Chicago, III.:
“Gentlembh: — We have been waiting a good while, thinking we would hear from you in regard to the amount you owe us, $451.59, this being the amount you agreed to assume, according to our contract with J. M. True, of Maryville, Missouri. We would be glad to hear from you in regard to it, as we need our money.”
And received in return plaintiff’s check for $316.11 within a week thereafter, and duly credited the amount of such check on the account, and at once mailed to the plaintiff a receipt, advising the plaintiff that it had been credited on the J. M. True & Co. account with this amount of $316.11. The plaintiff’s contention of want of notice is, therefore, disproved by the record, and untenable.
The defendant took in. Nebraska the deposition of J. M. True, a resident of that state. As part of such deposition, it offered in evidence a copy of the agreement, mentioned in the answer, between the plaintiff and J. M. True & Co., and this was attached to the deposition and verified by the notary and J. M. True as a true copy. The plaintiff objected to the paper, because it was only a copy and the original was unaccounted 'for. This objection was properly overruled..
The paper, thus offered in evidence, purported to be a memorandum or receipt executed by plaintiff to J. M. True & Co., reciting a number of items consisting of stock in trade and accounts as received by plaintiff, and a number of liabilities of J. M. True & Co. (including the claim of Herriman & Waples, which forms the subject of the present set-off), which apparently formed the consideration of the transfer to plaintiff. The paper did not purport to set out the entire contract between plaintiff and J. M. True & Co., and the defendant proved by True and another witness that it was only a memorandum forming part of an oral contract, by the terms of which the plaintiff, in consideration of the transfer of these assets, agreed absolutely to pay the claims therein enumerated in full.
The plaintiff claimed that the paper on its face indicated that it was an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and that it was chargeable only as trustee, with the amounts realized, and was so chargeable for the benefit of all the creditors of J. M. True & Co., pro rata, and the plaintiff also objected to the evidence of True, because it tended to vary and contradict the written instrument. There is nothing in either of these objections. Where a part only of a contract has been reduced to writing, oral evidence is always admissible to show the residue of the contract. O'Neil v. Crain, 67 Mo. 250; Life Ass’n v. Cravens, 60 Mo. 388. The paper, upon its very face, was incomplete and untelligible without proof of the contract of which it formed part, and, under the evidence before the court,
It necessarily follows that the instructions asked by the plaintiff, to the effect that, as a matter of law, the defendant was not entitled to recover on its set-off, and that the transfer from J. M. True & Co. to plaintiff was in the nature of. a general assignment, making the plaintiff chargeable only as trustee, were properly refused.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.