67 Mo. App. 163 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
The contract on which this action was brought is alleged in the petition to contain the following recitals:
First. That August Schuman (deceased father of plaintiff, administrator), on August 29, 1888, had stolen from him twenty-eight head of cattle. Second. That plaintiff on the second of September following bought a lot of cattle which were supposed to be said, stolen cattle. Third. That plaintiff afterward sold said cattle, whereby they passed into the hands of other, purchasers and it was not known to either of the parties exactly where they were. Fowrth. That it was, therefore, agreed that plaintiff would immediately begin to assist the said Schuman in searching for and finding said cattle, upon the condition that the latter hold the former harmless to the extent of $490. Fifth. If the cattle were not found, the agreement to be void, but if the same or any part of them were found, then the plaintiff was to be held harmless from all' the parties by reason of the transaction therein referred to, to the’ extent of $490 and no more. The petition alleged further that said cattle, by the work and assistance of plaintiff, were found and restored to said Schuman, and that plaintiff was compelled to pay to his vendees the purchase price, $498, whereby said Schuman became indebted to plaintiff in that sum, etc.
The answer pleaded a number of defenses, but the one upon which the principal reliance was placed at the trial was that of a want of consideration for the undertaking of the said Schuman. At the trial it was admitted that the cattle were stolen by Anna Doning and Ira Robinson, and that both of them had been indicted, tried, and sentenced to the penitentiary for
The uncontradicted evidence disclosed the fact that immediately after the execution of the contract, plaintiff and young Sehuman, the son of said August Schuman, got into a buggy and after riding a couple of miles, they came to the residence of a Mr. Burk, whom the plaintiff directed to show young Sehuman the fifty head of cattle which he (Burk) had previously purchased of plaintiff; and that accordingly Burk took young Sehuman to his pasture some miles away and there showed him (Sehuman) the cattle, among which he identified sixteen head of those stolen from his father. On the next day, plaintiff enabled said August Sehuman to get four more of his cattle which were found in the pasture of a Mr. Stephens, who had purchased them of plaintiff. It was in this way twenty head of the cattle were found and returned to said owner.
The uncontradicted evidence shows that the plaintiff made restitution to his vendees of the purchase price of the cattle so returned to the owner.
The defendant contends that the contract which is the foundation of this action is void and against public policy and, therefore, it will not be enforced by the •courts. It is conceded that the plaintiff was not accessory to the theft of the cattle, but was a born fide purchaser for value. He was not guilty of the violation of any law. If he had been the. thief who stole the cattle, then, obviously, the contract in question, though performed by him, would be void. If he sustained this relation to the larceny, then the rule invoked by defendant, which is to the effect that when either party to an illegal contract or transaction applies to a court for aid, if the plaintiff can not open his case without showing
How can the principle ex dolo malo non oritur actio apply in a case like this? The evidence does not tend to show that the plaintiff's cause of action arose ex turpi causa, or from the transgression of a positive law of his country. There is nothing in the transaction which shows that the plaintiff has broken the law and, therefore, he is not within its'' inflexible interdict. ’' In Hatch v. Hanson, after rather an extensive review of the cases where the courts had refused to lend their aid to the enforcement of contracts founded on moral turpitude, it was said by us: "In most, if not all, of these, the plaintiff was either compelled to prove am illegal contract in order to establish his claim or the action arose ex turpi, or from the transgression of a positive law of the state where the same was brought.” But we have been unable to discover that this case falls within any one of the classes just referred to. The defendant cites a multitude of cases to show that it is the law in every jurisdiction, that a promise to do what a party is already bound to do, is a mere nudum pactum. But the question is not as to the existence of the rule, but rather as to its applicability. If the plaintiff had stolen Schuman’s cattle, then he would have been under obligation, implied by law, to return them. It would have been, in such case, his moral and legal duty, to make restitution. But he was a purchaser from the thieves, in good faith, and a subsequent seller, without any knowledge that the cattle were the property of said Sehuman. By that act he made himself liable to Sehuman for conversion. Duskey v. Rudder, 80 Mo. 400; Koch v. Branch, 44 Mo. 546; Williams v. Wall, 60 Mo. 318;
The cattle having passed through his hands under these circumstances, he became liable as in trover and conversion. A stolen chattel may, in that way, pass through the hands of many innocent persons and each would be liable to the owner as for conversion, though there could be but one satisfaction. But it will not do to say that each of such persons is under legal obligation to hunt up and return the chattel, which he has thus honestly and in good faith bought and sold. It might not avail a person who has thus converted a chattel to go to the expense and trouble of hunting it up and offering to return it, since the loser is under no obligation to receive it back. Higgins v. Whitney, 24 Wend. 379; Otis v. Jones, 21 Wend. 394; Brewster v. Sullivan, 38 N. Y. 423. If the person who has, in good faith, purchased a chattel of a thief and is still in possession, it is his duty to return it when demanded by the owner, but when it has passed out of his hands, it is not his duty to do so, for this may be out of his reach. His duty is to pay the damage occasioned by his wrongful conversion. This is as far as the law goes in such case. It thus appears that the plaintiff was under no contractual or implied, legal obligation to return the cattle to Schuman. The promise of the plaintiff to assist Schuman in finding his cattle was not one that he was already under and bound to perform. It was no more the duty of the plaintiff to hunt up the cattle than it was that of any other person. Although liable for the conversion of the cattle, there is no reason why he could not contract with Schuman to assist in the work of hunting up and regaining the possession of such cattle, nor why the performance of this contract by plaintiff would not constitute a suffi
Assuming, as we must, that- the plaintiff was not bound by any prior contract or other obligation to -assist Schuman in finding and recovering possession of his cattle, the question remains to be considered whether the plaintiff performed the service contemplated in the contract, and if so, was the same a sufficient consideration to support the promise of Schuman therein contained. As has already been stated, the plaintiff did render Schuman such assistance as enabled him to find and recover his cattle. It is true that this was accomplished in a very short time. Through the active agency of plaintiff, the cattle were found and returned to Schuman, in less than two days. This was the consideration on which Schumanns promise rests. If the least benefit or damage be received by the promisor from the promisee, or a third person, or if the promisee sustain any, the least injury or detriment, it will constitute a sufficient consideration to render the agreement valid. Marks v. Bank, 8 Mo. 319; St. Louis v. Gas Co., 70 Mo. 116; Stillwell v. Aaron, 69 Mo. 545; Lancaster v. Elliott, 55 Mo. App. 219; Given v. Corse, 20 Mo. App. 132. Inconvenience to the promisee is a sufficient consideration and when the court can see that there may have been such inconvenience, it will uphold the contract. It will shut its eyes to the inequality between the consideration and the promise. Williams v. Jansen, 75 Mo. 681.
. In the last cited case it was stated that any trouble or labor, however slight, undertaken by one person, at the request of another, will support a promise by such other, although the trouble or labor be of no benefit to the promisor. Numerous cases are to be found in the reports illustrative of the application of the foregoing rules, but these need not be cited here, since they are
The provisions of the unsigned contract, to which Sehuman objected and which were not incorporated in the one he did sign, had no greater force than any other parol declaration not assented to and not incorporated in a subsequent written contract between the parties, and proof of the contents of such unsigned and objected to provisions, was clearly inadmissible, under
The defendant further objects that the trial court erred in rejecting his offer to prove by himself as a witness, the conversation which took place between his father and the plaintiff, at the time the contract was signed, for the purpose of showing the consideration thereof; or rather; that the consideration was the reimbursement of the plaintiff in the amount he had lost on account of the purchase of the cattle. This evidence was manifestly inadmissible, for the reason that the defense pleaded is that there was no consideration passing from plaintiff to Schuman to support the contract. It is not pleaded that the consideration for the plaintiff’s promise was a promise on Schuman’s part to pay plaintiff the amount of money which he had paid the thieves for the cattle, nor indeed is it alleged that his promise was immoral or contrary to public policy, and that the contract was void for any such reason. Under the issues made by the pleadings, Schuman was liable on his. promise, unless he showed that such promise was based on no consideration passing from plaintiff to him. Therefore, evidence tending to prove that plaintiff demanded of him a return of the purchase money paid by him for the cattle, or that he had agreed to pay the same if plaintiff would assist him in finding the cattle, would not be relevant to the issue.
No harmful error is perceived in the action of the court in the giving or refusing of instructions. It results that the judgment, which was for plaintiff, must be affirmed.