W. Irving Schermerhorn Bros. v. Herold

81 Mo. App. 461 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899

BIGGS, J.

This is an action for damages for the alleged conversion of a lot of hemp twine. It is admitted that in November, 189Y, the Missouri Paper Company executed a deed of trust on its stock of goods to secure certain of its creditors; that the defendant Herold was the trustee in the deed; that at that time the twine in question was in the store room of the Paper Company; that the defendant took possession of it under the deed of trust and refused to surrender it to plaintiffs, and that he subsequently sold it under the deed of trust. The plaintiffs claim that they were the owners of the goods and they sue for their value. At the close of their evidence the circuit court intimated that it would sustain a demurrer to the evidence, and thereupon the plaintiffs submitted to an involuntary nonsuit. The court having refused to set aside the nonsuit, the plaintiffs have brought the case here by appeal.

It is conceded that the twine belonged either to the plaintiffs or to the Missouri Paper Company. The circuit court *464was of the opinion that the evidence introduced by plaintiffs conclusively proved that the title to the property was in the Missouri Paper Company, and that therefore it passed to the defendant under the deed of trust. In reviewing the question the view of the evidence most favorable to plaintiffs must be adopted.

The plaintiffs’ evidence tended to prove these facts: In August, 1891, the plaintiffs were brokers in the city of St. Louis. They handled and sold on commission the goods of the Jacobs Cordage Company, whose manufactory was located in Cincinnati, Ohio. At that time the Missouri Paper Company was doing business in the city of St. Louis. .In the month mentioned the plaintiffs solicited an order from the Paper Company. The latter gave a verbal order for a lot of hemp twine to be shipped in September or October. In the meantime the Paper Company was to advise the plaintiffs of the sizes or specifications of the twine, which it was not then prepared to give. The order was placed by plaintiffs with the Jacobs Cordage Company, the specifications to be sent later. After the order was given but prior to the shipment of the goods, a traveling salesman of the Cordage Company visited St. Louis and represented to the Paper Company that the plaintiffs were not the agents of the Cordage Company, and he induced the Paper Company to place the order with him. Subsequently the plaintiffs applied to the Paper Company for the specifications, and the secretary of the company refused to give them, and then informed the plaintiffs of the statements made by the salesman, and that his company had given the salesman a duplicate order with the specifications. Thereupon the plaintiffs wrote to the Cordage Company protesting against the unwarranted action of its salesman. Soon thereafter a part of the goods were shipped direct to the Paper Company, but the Cordage Company sent the bill of lading to plaintiffs. Immediately upon the receipt of the bill of lading the plaintiffs notified the Paper Company of the fact *465and rendered a bill for the goods in their own names. The Paper Company refused to receive the goods or to pay for them. In response to plaintiffs communication the Paper Company sent the following letter inclosing therein the bill sent by plaintiffs:

“Missouri Paper Company,
St. Louis, Oct. 9th, 1897.
“Schermerhorn Bros., Co.,
No. 413 N. 2nd St., City.
“'Gentlemen: — We herewith return you bill, as we will not accept this twine. You may keep this twine in your stock and if we need it later on, we may take it. Do not send us the balance either. We have had too much unpleasantness regarding this, and do not wish to be at outs with the mill and the broker also.
“Enc. bill.
Yours truly,
Missouri Paper Com.”

Upon the receipt of this letter one of the plaintiff’s representatives had an interview with the secretary of the Paper Company, in which the secretary stated that his company had decided not to receive the goods for fear that the shipment would be duplicated, .as its order to the salesman was outstanding. Thereupon .it was agreed between the parties that the Paper Company would store the goods in its warehouse for plaintiffs, and that it would buy them whenever it received satisfactory assurance that it would have no trouble over the second order. Ten or fifteen days after this agreement was made the Paper Company conveyed its property to defendant without notifying the plaintiffs that it would accept the twine.

In our opinion the ruling of the .circuit court was wrong. Under no conceivable theory-of the law as applicable to plaintiff’s evidence was it right to take the case from the jury. Under the plaintiff’s evidence there was no sale, and hence the title to the goods did not pass. The original order for the twine was not in writing, and no part of the purchase money *466was paid. A part of the goods were received into the warehouses of the Paper Company, but under the plaintiff’s evidence they were not accepted as a purchase. Under all the authorities there must be an acceptance, and delivery does not per se import an acceptance or sale. Grill v. Reed, 55 Mo. App. 246; Lovelace v. Stewart, 23 Mo. 348. But conceding for the argument, as counsel insist, that the letter of the Paper Company above set forth is a sufficient memorandum to satisfy the statute of frauds, yet the plaintiffs evidence tends to show that by agreement the contract of sale was rescinded and another agreement substituted. This new agreement was valid, for it is competent to rescind a written contract by parol. Chouteau v. Jupiter Iron Works, 94 Mo. 388. Did the new agreement vest the title to the twine in the Missouri Paper Company? We answer that it did not. The alleged agreement can not be construed as a conditional sale to be defeated and the goods returned on certain contingencies, but it merely gave to the Paper Company the optional right to purchase the twine upon' the happening of a specified event. Until the event happened and the Paper Company manifested an intention to take the goods the title remained in plaintiffs. The authorities are one way on this question. As was stated by Judge Loomis (Hotchkiss v. Higgins, 52 Conn. 205), “there is a manifest distinction between an optional right in the party receiving the goods to purchase, and an optional right to return ¡the same goods in whole or in part. In the former case the title will not pass until the option is determined, while in the latter it passes immediately to the party receiving the goods subject to be returned.” To the same effect is the decision of this court in Strauss Saddlery Co. v. Kingman & Co., 42 Mo. App. 208.

The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded.

All concur.
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