42 Mo. App. 403 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
Lead Opinion
I. This cause is brought to this court from the Jackson circuit court by writ of error. The petition is as follows : “ Said plaintiffs for cause of action against said- defendants state: That said plaintiffs are, and on the several dates hereinafter stated were, partners, doing business under the firm name and style of Thompson, Payne & Co.; on said several dates defendants were, and still are, partners, doing business under the firm name and style of Irwin, Allen & Co. On ■or about the fifth day of July, 1879, said defendants, partners as aforesaid, sold and delivered to plaintiffs seventeen head of beef cattle, in consideration whereof and that said defendants would warrant the title to said cattle as hereinafter stated said plaintiffs agreed to, and did, then and there, pay to said defendants the sum of five hundred' and thirty-six dollars and sixty-one cents, which said sum of money was then and there the
At the trial, the evidence, appearing by the record, Avas in substance thus : First. On the fifth of July, 1879, defendants were the consignees of seventeen head of cattle, at the Kansas City stock-yards purporting to be shipped to them by W. H. Moreland, and on that day sold these cattle to plaintiffs at their market value, and subsequently gave them a memorandum account
II. The instructions asked by plaintiffs, and refused, were to the effect that, if defendants were in possession of the property, and sold and delivered it to plaintiffs for its market value, and for the consideration paid delivered the written statement of sale read in evidence, and that the plaintiffs thereafter sold the cattle to Clark at their market value, and that suit was thereafter brought against Clark, and the cattle recovered from him therein by one Stock, on account of his (Stock’s) superior title thereto, defendants having been previously notified of pendency of Stock’s suit, and that after such recovery plaintiffs paid to Clar.k the purchase price of the cattle and costs of suit, the jury would find for plaintiffs and assess damages at sum paid to Clark, with six per cent, interest. Again, that, even if defendants sold the cattle as agents, and undertook to sell in the name of Moreland, which was not the real and true name of the person from whom the cattle were received, and on whose account sold, then, upon the facts predicated, the finding should be the same. Again, that, even if agency was disclosed during negotiations, the signing of the writing of sale by defendants in their own name made them principals.
The instructions asked for by defendants, and given, against the objections of 'plaintiffs, were to the effect that, if in making the sale of cattle defendants were the agents of Moreland, and that such agency was known at the time to the plaintiffs, and that they dealt with the defendants as agents, the finding should be for defendants ; and that on the question of agency the jury ■should consider all that occurred at the time of the transfer, and all writing and memoranda made at the time bearing on the issue. Again, that, while one selling personal property in his possession is presumed in law to warrant the title, yet his possession must be that of the owner,.or one who sells the property as his own; and if defendants, when they sold the cattle to plaintiffs, had possession as agents of Moreland, and sold as agents of Moreland, and plaintiffs, with full knowledge that defendants were selling the cattle as agents, bought, the finding should be for defendants. Again, that if defendants did not claim the ownership, but sold as agents for another, whose name was disclosed at the time, and it was not the intention of the parties at the time that defendants should bind themselves as «owners, but were understood as selling as agents, the
The jury found for the defendants, and, after the motion for new trial by plaintiffs in due time, which was overruled and denied, which'was duly excepted to at the time, a writ of error was sued out in due course of law, and the case is here before this court for review.
First. It will be seen • from this outline of the pleadings, evidence and instructions, that the issues involved in this controversy are not limited to the inquiry as to whether the defendants sold the cattle in question as principals or as agents, as is substantially done by the instructions given in the cause, as well as by those refused, excepting only as to a point of evidence. Another and controlling issue is as to the ownership of the property sold, for the cattle seem to have been reclaimed by a third party in a trial in which both plaintiffs and defendants were notified to defend, and it .also appears from evidence in the record that these attle were stolen, and that neither the principal of defendants nor themselves, as agents, had any right to them, nor conveyed any title to plaintiffs. This latter .and most important issue was not even submitted to the jury, either by the instructions of the plaintiffs or defendants, and the attention of the very able judge who tried the case was not directed to it. If the cattle were in fact stolen, defendants are liable to plaintiffs, whether they sold as principals or as agents, for, having no title to property which was stolen, they could con-' vey none to plaintiffs ; and, having received the money of plaintiffs on the assertion and claim of ownership, whether as principals or as agents makes no difference, when the property was taken from the plaintiffs’ vendee by the actual owner, and the purchase money was repaid to their vendee by the plaintiffs, with the costs, then defendants are under obligation to make it good .to plaintiffs. Sprague v. Rosenbaum, 38 Fed. Rep. 386.
There are two cases in this state of controlling character and authority, in the determination .of the issues which are involved in this controversy, and in which the dissimilarity of the facts is relatively slight. In both of them there was involved a dealing with stolen property; and in one of them the sale of it by a broker or auctioneer ; these cases are Koch v. Branch, 44 Mo. 542, and Schell v. Stephens, 50 Mo. 375. In Koch v. Branch, the case was thus: “In February, 1864, the plaintiffs (Koch and others) were engaged in mercantile business at Fort Smith, Arkansas, and purchased of one Hunt, an army beef contractor, a commissary voucher issued to him for fourteen hundred and forty-eight dollars. Soon after its purchase it was stolen from the store, and the thief was never discovered.' In February, 1865, one Richard Branch purchased the voucher of a stranger, and forwarded it to his brother (one of the defendants), who collected it of the government and paid over the amount to his brother, charging no commission (he was a partner of the firm of Branch, Crookes & Co., composed of defendants, and made the collection in their name). The suit was by the owner of the property against the commission firm for converting the property and being the cause of the plaintiffs’ ultimate loss. The court, upon this state of facts, held: “That the voucher was property (or convenient representation of property), and when actually sold passes by delivery like other personal property; but the purchaser can acquire no greater right than that of the seller, and when the property is stolen there can be no further transfer ; that the agency of defendants, in the plaintiff’s loss so involved them as to subject
In the other case (Schell v. Stephens), the case was somewhat different and more closely similar to the case under consideration. The defendants were auctioneers, and sold, at auction, a span of horses, wagon and harness, which were bid in by the plaintiff. The property turned out to have been stolen and was reclaimed. Defendants signed their names, with the reputed owner, to the following written instrument:
“Kansas Citx, June 23, 1868.
“Received of J. W. Schell three hundred ($300) dollars for one bay and one gray horse and one two.korse wagon and harness.
“ A. R. Ledeobd,
“ Stephens & Sons.”
Second. As the judgment in this case must be reversed because of the considerations hereinbefore stated (Black River Lumber Co. v. Warner, 93 Mo. 384), it seems proper to refer to some principles of law which should govern in any future trials.
(1) The law of the sales of personal property and of the liability of agents is well established. The
And when a sale by an agent is made, and the purchaser, willing to trust the agent, while the principal is a stranger, takes written evidence of the'sale signed by the agents as principals, they must be held to have assumed the responsibility of principáis; and none the less so because their business implies agency. Persons who hold themselves out as the vendors of the property of others should see to the title of their principals. Schell v. Stephens, 50 Mo. 379, 380. Even where an agent discloses the name of his principal, if he signs a written contract in his own name, which does not show upon its face that it was done as the agent of another, he will be personally bound thereby. Mills v. Hunt, 20 Wend. (N. Y.) 431; Smith v. Spaulding, 13 Mo. 529 ; Schell v. Stephens, 50 Mo. 375. It was held by Judge Gresham in Sprague v. Rosenbaum (38 Fed. Rep. 388), that a brief instrument in the form of a bill of sale (similar to the one here), delivered by the brokers to the purchaser, although not signed by them, was the written contract of sale ; not subject to change or modification by parol testimony ; and that they are personally liable to him on their implied warranty of title.
(2) The law of evidence that parol testimony will not be admitted to contradict or vary a written contract is also well established. The rule is based upon the view that the admission of such evidence would tend, in many instances, to substitute a new and different contract for the one which was really agreed
Third. It seems to be due to refer in a very general way to the points suggested by the eminent counsel, on either side, in the very satisfactory briefs furnished to this court. But this reference cannot be made in detail nor specifically.
(1) The points of ownership and possession are both asserted and denied. It would, seem from the authorities cited in the briefs, as well as those named in this opinion, that defendants stood in the place of owners and in possession of the cattle as to these plaintiffs, and are consequently liable to such obligation and consequences as that relation imposes, since it is not claimed that Moreland took any part in the sale.
(3) Regarding the question as to whether defendants made the sale in this case as principals or as agents, it is as has been just said a question for the jury under proper instructions, which should present also all the issues involved in this controversy. But the case in 27 Kansas, 643, on the point of “the agency business,” is opposed to the decisions in this state which
(4) There seems to be no valid objection to the proof of the fact that the defendants were commission merchants ; but proof of the fact that their business had been exclusively that of buying and selling stock for other persons on commission was not proper; for non constat that they might not have varied in this case, nor was it proper to show that it was not customary to inquire as to the title of those who consigned live stock to them by commission merchants doing business there, as this custom could have no effect towards releasing them from the consequence of their acts, when the rights of others are involved.
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions that the proceedings at the trial shall be in conformity with the views herein expressed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — I am not -willing to concur with the majority. The action is based on an implied warranty of title in a sale of cattle claimed to have been made by defendants to plaintiffs. Defendants claim that they made the sale as agents of one Moreland and that their agency was known to plaintiffs. It is' conceded that the title failed; Moreland having stolen the cattle from the true owner. Plaintiffs and defendants were what is known as commission merchants, and each knew the other to be such. The sale and manner of sale, as testified to by plaintiff Payne, was that he made the purchase at the stock-pens. That the “sale was made and consummated before the
“Kansas City Stock-yards Company.
“I., A. & Co., account of W. H. Moreland, T., P. & Co. 17 cattle, 17,310; taken from block 9, pen 15; yarded in block 9, pen 15.
“ Buffington,
“ Weighmaster.
“Date, July 5, 1879.”
That the weigh ticket always shows who is buying or selling. That thereupon he, Payne, indorsed on the ticket the following: “Account of Clark $3.10, T., P. & Co.;” that afterwards, after calculating the amount due, defendants sent plaintiffs the following written instruments which were delivered to Payne at the same time. '
“ Kansas City Stock Yards,
“West Kansas City, Mo., July 5, 1879.
“ M--T., P. & Co. bought of Irwin, Allen & Co.,
live-stock commission merchants, 17 cattle, 17,310 at $3.10, $536.61.
“Paid. Irwin, Allen & Co.”
“Kansas City. Stock-yards Company,
“ Deliver to Thompson, Payne & Co., account of 17 cattle. Sold for account of W. H. Moreland, in block —— pen ■ — —• scale--.
“( Signed.) Irwin, Allen & Co.
“July 5, 1879.”
It appeared in testimony of defendant Irwin that he told Payne that he did not own the cattle. On this point, Payne testified that he would not say that Irwin did not point out Moreland as the man who shipped in the cattle. He thought probably Irwin did do so. The foregoing facts are sufficient to show the grounds of my dissent.
“Kansas City Stock Yards,
“West Kansas City, Mo., July 5th, 1879.
“M-T., P. & Co., bought of Irwin, Allen &Co., live-stock commission merchants, 17 cattle, 17,310 at $3.10, $538.61.
“ Paid.
*427 ilKansas City Stock-yards Company,
“(Will) Deliver to Thompson, Payne & Co., 17 cattle, sold for account of W. BL. Moreland, in block-pen-scales-.
“ Irwin, Allen & Co.”
Reading in that way, and so it must be read, is it not clear of all doubt that defendants acted as agents for Moreland, and disclosed their agency on the face of the written contract ?
The case of Schell v. Stephens, 50 Mo. 375, relied upon by plaintiffs and by the majority, wherever applicable, is favorable to defendants. That case, like this, was a suit on the warranty, the property being stolen. The court there declares the law to be that if one in possession of personal property sells it as his own, at a fair price, there is an implied warranty of title; but that this was not true in case of agents who sell as agents ; and that possession of such agents as pawnbrokers, factors, auctioneers, etc., did not imply title but rather suggested title in others. While thus stating the law, the case further holds that, while such is true, yet an agent máy contract as principal. That is good, as well as familiar, law. And that case only decides that since the agents there entered into a writing which did not disclose their agency they would be held to have contracted as principals, and the writing could not be altered (being complete in itself) by inserting matters showing their agency by parol. The court there considers, and the case shows, that the plaintiffs there would not accept of the principal’s name alone, but took, in addition thereto, the name of the agents as though they were also principals. The case at bar is altogether different. The written paper here disclosed the agency, and expressly states the sale to be for the principal. In other words, the paper in this case discloses exactly what the court in that case said should have been done by that contract. Much of what is said as to the Schell case applies to Sprague
It is well enough to state that this matter had been in litigation a great length of time. Plaintiffs instituted suit in Kansas. The cause was appealed to the supreme court of that state, and is found reported in 27 Kansas, 643. In an opinion by Judge Brewer the case was decided against plaintiffs, he stating that the defendants should have had the verdict. On reversal the plaintiffs dismissed and have reinstituted the present proceeding in' this state, where it has lingered till now.