Yeater v. Hines

Citation24 Mo.App. 619
PartiesJOHN J. YEATER ET AL., Respondents, v. VINCENT K. HINES, Appellant.
Decision Date08 February 1887
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas

APPEAL from Saline Circuit Court, HON. JOHN P. STROTHER, Judge.

Reversed.

Statement of case by the court.

This was an action for money had and received.

It was alleged, in substance, in the petition that the plaintiffs were partners, engaged in the buying and shipping of live stock, and that, as such partners, they bought of one Reynolds a certain lot of cattle in the year 1880; that before receiving the cattle, the defendant represented to plaintiffs that he held three notes against Reynolds for the various amounts named, and that they were all secured by chattel mortgages on the cattle purchased of Reynolds whereas, in truth, as the defendant well knew, he had no mortgage on said cattle, or any part of them, and that notwithstanding such knowledge the defendant demanded payment of plaintiffs of the three notes before he would permit the plaintiffs to move or ship the cattle; that plaintiffs believing the representations made by the defendant, and relying thereon, and being deceived thereby, paid to the defendant the sum of twelve hundred and ten dollars on December 22, 1880, the amount claimed by defendant to be a lien on the cattle; that the price agreed upon with Reynolds for the cattle was $7,468.20, and that in payments made by plaintiffs prior to the payment aforesaid to defendant, and in payments of valid liens on said cattle, made after said payment, plaintiffs paid, and were compelled to pay, exclusive of the sum paid to the defendant, more than the value and contract price of said cattle; that defendant had no mortgages or liens on said cattle, as claimed by him, " and by reason of said deceit practiced upon plaintiffs the defendant procured from them the said sum of $1210.20, which he now holds to their use and benefit, and for which, with interest from December 22, 1880, they ask judgment."

The jury, under the instructions of the court and the evidence, found a verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum sued for, and from a judgment accordingly entered, the defendant has appealed to this court.

Under our view of the law of this case the judgment must be reversed, and that, too, upon the assumption that the facts are as claimed by the plaintiffs. Hence, in the statement of the facts now to be made, we shall state the facts most favorably to the plaintiffs, and as they are claimed by them to be.

As alleged in the petition, the plaintiffs purchased a lot of cattle from one Reynolds, in December, 1880. Reynolds, at the time of the sale, stated that he was induced to accept a former offer made by the plaintiffs and refused by him, by reason of the fact that he owed the defendant money, which the defendant needed, and for the payment of which the defendant was pushing him. The sale was completed, and it may be conceded, although it may not be a fact, that the plaintiffs had paid something on the purchase, when one of the plaintiffs proceeded to interview the defendant on the subject of his claim against Reynolds. The testimony of that plaintiff concerning the interview and the transaction that took place between him and the defendant is as follows: " I hunted him up and asked him if he had a lien on the cattle. He said he did, but could not tell how much. He went to Chapman's office and got the papers. Hines said he did not have the mortgages there, but he would send for them, and I got the notes and supposed the mortgages covered the cattle. Did not think anything else, just took his word for it. I believed the statement that he had liens on the cattle and relied on that. Would not have paid the money if I had not. I disremember whether I got the mortgages there, right then, or not, but I got the notes. The mortgage for the $150 note, I don't remember that I ever got. That was about all that was said. It was late in the evening. I went to Bass & Kelley's store, in Windsor, and Mr. Hines soon came to me and said he had discovered that he had a mortgage which covered a stag that was in the feed lot. I told him I would pay him what the stag was worth, and paid him $25 for it, and I asked him if that was all the liens he had now on the cattle, and he said it was. I paid Hines $1,210 on the mortgages." On cross-examination, the said plaintiff testified in relation to said subject as follows: " I took the notes and chattel mortgages so we could have them settled with Reynolds. The reason I did not surrender those notes to Reynolds was because he had not paid them to us. The cattle did not come to that much. We still hold them against Reynolds. They never have been surrendered to Reynolds. I did not ask to have the assignments endorsed on the notes and mortgages. Chapman wrote it on them. What I wanted was the notes."

The plaintiffs introduced the said notes and mortgages in evidence. Upon each an assignment by the defendant to the plaintiffs without recourse was endorsed. It may be assumed that said mortgages did not include the whole or any part of the lot of cattle purchased by the plaintiffs of Reynolds. It may be also assumed that, as alleged in the petition, the sum paid by plaintiffs to Reynolds prior to the transaction with the defendant, and the sums paid by them after that transaction, in satisfying valid liens on said cattle, amounted to more than the contract price of the cattle. And it may be further assumed that, as the jury found under an instruction submitting that question to them, the plaintiffs did not pay the amount of the notes held by defendant to defendant, in pursuance of the terms of the sale of the cattle by Reynolds to them.

M. A. FYKE, for the appellant.

I. The court erred in admitting in evidence the mortgages given to the bank.

II. The court erred in permitting the plaintiffs to answer the following question: " Did you have any claim against Reynolds for corn?" It was not claimed that plaintiffs had any lien on the cattle for their debt, or that defendant had any knowledge of the existence of such debt. No ground was laid in the petition for such testimony.

III. The court erred in sustaining plaintiffs' objection to the following question propounded on cross-examination to the plaintiffs: " Did you get all of the property which was described in the various mortgages paid off by you?" And in refusing to allow defendant to show that plaintiffs, after they received the fat cattle, also received all the property described in the mortgages paid off by them, consisting of cows, calves, hogs, horses, etc., of the value of over a thousand dollars. If plaintiffs in fact paid said debts and took the property included in the mortgages, in addition to the fat cattle of the value of one thousand dollars or more, and sold the same and retained the proceeds, their loss or damage would be reduced by that amount.

IV. The court erred in overruling defendant's demurrer to the evidence. There was no evidence showing or tending to show that defendant's mortgage did not cover part of the cattle. Plaintiffs did not pretend to know the brands of the cattle they bought or received. There was no evidence showing, or tending to show, that Hines knew, or had reason to believe, that his mortgages did not cover the cattle. The evidence of the plaintiffs showed that, before paying the money to Hines, they had examined the cattle and had better opportunities to know whether or not the Hines mortgages covered the cattle than defendant. Dormitzer et al. v. Green, 3 Mo.App. 593; Merchants' National Bank v. Sales, 3 Mo.App. 85; Leversing v. Schnell, 8 Mo.App. 580; Joliffe v. Collins, 21 Mo. 338; Anderson v. McPike, 86 Mo. 293; Arthur v. Wheeler & Wilson Machine Co., 12 Mo.App. 335; Franklin v. Hall, 7 Mo.App. 241; Cagney v. Cusan, 77 Ind. 494.

V. The court erred in giving plaintiffs' instructions. Before the plaintiffs can recover, they must show: That defendant represented that his mortgages covered the cattle; that such representation was not true, and that defendant knew it was not true, or that, not knowing whether it was true or false, he made it as of his own knowledge, for the purpose of deceiving plaintiffs and inducing them to pay his notes, and that by such representations plaintiffs were deceived and induced to pay defendant's claim, and that they sustained damage. The gist of this action is fraud. The instruction given for plaintiffs authorizes a recovery, even though defendant was honestly mistaken and honestly believed that his mortgages covered the cattle; such is not the law." " There must be fraud as distinguished from mere mistakes." Dulaney v. Rogers et al., 64 Mo. 201; Dunn v. Oldham, Adm'r, 53 Mo. 181; Merchants' National Bank v. Sells, 3 Mo.App. 85; Parker v. Farquis, 64 Mo. 28; Joliffe v. Collins, 21 Mo. 338; Anderson v. McPike, supra; Peers v. Dennis Adams, 29 Mo. 184; Levering v. Schnell, 8 Mo.App. 589; Walsh v. Morse, 80 Mo. 568; Caldwell v. Henry, 76 Mo. 254.

VI. The court erred in overruling motion for new trial and in arrest of judgment.

GEO. P. B. JACKSON, for the respondents.

I. The petition was sufficient, and the objection to the introduction of any evidence was properly overruled. Koontz v. Cent. Nat'l Bank, 51 Mo. 275, and cas. cit.; Menefee v. Arnold, 55 Mo. 368; Harris v. Board of Education, 3 Mo.App. 570; Magoffin v. Muldrew, 12 Mo. 512; Columbus Ins. Co. v. Walsh, 18 Mo. 229; 3d National Bank v. Allen, 59 Mo. 310; McDonald v. Lynch, 59 Mo. 350; Matthews v. Kansas City, 80 Mo. 231-235.

II. The defendant, after filing only a general denial, could not be permitted to introduce evidence of new matter, in defence of which plaintiffs had no notice, and which they were entirely unprepared...

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