140 Mo. App. 572 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is a garnishment proceeding at law. Plaintiff recovered and the garnishee appeals. It appears that plaintiff instituted his suit by attachment against defendant, William Morningstar, and summoned the Meyer & Schmid Grocer Company as garnishee of said Morningstar. The attachment was sustained and judgment given for the plaintiff against the defendant, Morningstar. The Meyer & Schmid Grocer Company, garnishee, defended, however, and denied that it was the debtor of the defendant, Morningstar. The garnishee asserted that while it had purchased a considerable quantity of vinegar from defendant, Morn-ingstar, it owed the American Fruit Product Company and not Morningstar the purchase price thereof. Plaintiff joined issue on this matter and a trial was had before the court sitting as a jury. The court gave judgment for the plaintiff to the effect that the garnishee was the debtor of Morningstar, and not the debtor of the American Fruit Product Compány. The facts out of which the controversy arose, are as follows:
William Morningstar, defendant in attachment, was conducting a wholesale vinegar business under the
“Eochhsteb, N. Y., July 28, 1904.
“We, the American Fruit Product Co., of the first part, have under the above date sold to Wm. Morning-star, of the second part, two thousand (2000) barrels, with the privilege of three thousand (3000) barrels of cider vinegar, to contain not less than four and one-half per cent of acetic acid, at eight cents per gallon, F. O. B. such mills of ours as said Morningstar might deem necessary to instruct shipment from, no charge for cooperage; cooperage must be first class. This vinegar is guaranteed to Morningstar to be pure apple cider vinegar and to comply with the laws of such States as he may deem fit to ship it into.
“Morningstar, of the second part, agrees to accept these goods under the above contract, and furthermore agrees to dispose of this contract between now and Jan. first, 1905. It is also understood that we, the American*580 Fruit Product Co., are to accept such orders from the jobbing trade as we deem safe and reliable to ship, and that the goods are to be billed by us and collected for in the usual manner, crediting Morningstar with the difference between the cost price to him and their proceeds received from the jobber.
“We have also agreed to furnish him with what white distilled vinegar his orders may call for at seven cents per gal. for fifty grain, no charge for cooperage; cooperage to be first class.
“We, the American Fruit Product Co., have also agreed, to take charge of such advertising matter as Morningstar deems necessary to furnish the trade in selling these goods.
“Morningstar, of the second part, has agreed to leave in our hands at all times a sufficient amount of money to cover the expenses of these inducements.
“In case Morningstar should require some cider vinegar with less strength than the strength mentioned above, the price is to be in proportion.
“Terms of this contract, sixty days net, or two per cent ten days.'
“In case we are not able to ship from such mills as Morningstar should request, we agree to stand half the difference in freight between the two mills.
‘ “In case Morningstar orders vinegar in half barrels, the price is to be nine and one-quarter cents per gallon F. O. B. mills.
“American Fruit Product Co., “By L. Shepard Foster, Gen. Mgr.
“William Morningstar.-”
The record discloses that Morningstar negotiated the sale of four hundred barrels of vinegar to the garnishee, Meyer & Schmid Grocer Company, at the agreed price of thirteen cents per gallon. The order for this vinegar was taken by Morningstar upon billheads under his trade name (that is, Purity Vinegar Works) and
The case was tried before the circuit court without a jury. By declarations of law given, it appears the court declared as a matter of law that the transaction evidenced by the contract hereinbefore set out, operated as a sale of the vinegar and vested the title thereof in Morningstar, and that therefore when Morningstar resold the four hundred barrels thereof to the garnishee, the Meyer-Schmidt Grocer Company, this transaction created an. indebtedness of the garnishee in favor of Morningstar, the defendant in attachment. By instruction number two, on behalf of plaintiff, the court further declared as a matter of law on the facts stated that if it appeared the Meyer & Schmid Grocery Company had in its possession, yet unpaid, sufficient of the money due on said invoice of vinegar to satisfy plaintiff’s demand and costs, then the money in the hands of the garnishee, Meyer & Schmid Grocer Company, was owing to the defendant in attachment, Morningstar, and subject to the garnishment in this case. The court refused instructions on the part of the garnishee to the effect that if it found from the evidence that the course of dealing had under and contemplated in the contract between the American Fruit Product Company and Morn-ingstar was that the American Fruit Product Company shipped and charged all vinegar disposed of by Morning-star direct to the parties ordering the same and collected the proceeds from such sales and paid itself therefrom and then paid or credited Morningstar with the balance
The contract recites that the American Fruit Product Company have, under the above date, sold to William Morningstar, two thousand barrels of vinegar F. O.. B. such mills of the American Fruit Product Company as Morningstar might deem necessary to instruct shipment from, and that Morningstar agreed to accept these goods and dispose of them prior to January 1, 1905. The terms of payment therein provided for was sixty days net, or two per cent ten days. These words certainly import a present sale of the vinegar to Morn-ingstar. They signify a passing of title and a vesting of the same to Morningstar on a credit of sixty days from the time the vinegar was delivered to him F. O. B. cars. The contract being in writing, sufficiently definite and certain, the question of the sale is thereby removed from
It appearing the indebtedness of the garnishee to the defendant, Morningstar, had been assigned to the American Fruit Product Company in good faith and for a valuable consideration prior to the garnishment herein, there was no indebtedness of the garnishee to the defendant in attachment against which the plaintiff’s rights attached upon garnishment. In this view, the judgment must be reversed. It is so ordered.