Johnston v. Parrott & Barnes

BROADDUS, J.

On the ninth day of September, 1896, the defendants as partners, were doing business as commission dealers in Kansas City, Missouri, and on said day sold and delivered to the plaintiff ten head of cattle, which afterwards were proven to have been stolen by one Harry Orme from one D. W. Laughlin near Baird, Kansas. Plaintiff afterwards, and before it was ascertained that the animals had been stolen, sold them to one J. H. Donner of the State of Iowa, from whom they were subsequently recovered by the owner. Donner thereupon sued the plaintiff and recovered their value, with interest and costs, amounting in all to $196.35. This suit is for said sum paid out on the Donner ease and $44.65, attorney’s fees paid by plaintiff in defending the suit. The contract of sale was made in the forenoon, but the transaction was not closed until the afternoon of that day. The cattle were weighed by the agent of the stock yards company, and a scale *202ticket was made out by bim which, on its face contained the following memoranda, viz:

On the adverse side thereof the following memoranda was made:

“The Kansas City Stock Tards Co.,
“Deliver to I. M. Johnson and Sons....
“Account of ten (10) cattle.
“Sold for account of Smith.In
“Block.Pen. 9-9-1896.”
“Barnes & Parrott.”

In addition there was also a health certificate made by the United States inspector which also disclosed that Smith was the owner of the cattle.

The transaction occurred in the State of Kansas. The court sitting as a jury found for the defendants. The plaintiff appealed. The plaintiff asked eight instructions, all of which were given except number one. There is no complaint made on account of the declarations of law given for the defendants. Instruction number one in the nature of a declaration of law, asked by the plaintiff and refused, is as follows:

“The court declares the law to be, that if the plaintiff *203made an oral agreement with tbe defendants for the purchase of the cattle; and said cattle were then delivered to the stock scales and weighed, and then delivered into . the plaintiff’s hands at the stock yards, this constituted a complete and valid sale, although the purchase price of said cattle was not paid until a later hour in the day.” This declaration of law was properly refused, because it was not supported by the facts of the case. ¥m. E. Johnston, who negotiated for the purchase of the cattle, testified that “this purchase of the cattle was a cash transaction — cash on delivery.” ¥m. A. Durham testified that sales of cattle at the Kansas City Stock Yards are for cash — “cash on delivery sales.” The plaintiff himself testified that the sale in this case was for cash on delivery and that that was the custom.

It is the well-settled law of this State, that when a sale is made for cash on delivery, the transaction is not complete until the purchase price is paid, and until then the purchaser gets no title unless the seller waives payment. Johnson-Brinkerman Co. v. Railroad, 72 Mo. App. 437; Southwestern Freight and Cotton Press Co. v. Standard, 44 Mo. 71; Johnson-Brinkerman Co. v. Central Bank, 116 Mo. 558; Hall v. Railroad, 50 Mo. App. 179.

The plaintiff further contends that it is the prevailing custom in sales made at said stock yards to rely on the commis-sionman for warranty of title. But the trouble with this claim is that the evidence does not sustain it, but on the contrary the custom, with one exception, was just the reverse. It was shown that the Armour Packing Company alone refused to comply with the otherwise universal practice of the commissionmen not to warrant title. A custom to be good must be general, uniform, and notorious. Southwest. Freight and Cotton Press Co. v. Standard, 44 Mo., supra. This is but the assertion of a common-law principle, upon which much of the common-law that we inherited from England is based. Custom in early times made the law. It might be said that as *204exceptions prove tbe rule, by tbe refusal of the Armour Packing Company alone, to comply with the practice' at the stock yards, the rule is established at said stock yards that in sales, commissionmen do not warrant title.

It is also contended strenuously that it was the duty of the defendants to have disclosed their principal, and having failed in that respect they are liable to the plaintiff. It was the duty of defendants to have disclosed their principal. “When an agent intends only to bind his principal it is his duty to disclose him.” Hamlin v. Abell, 120 Mo. 188; McClellan v. Parker, 27 Mo. 162. Here the evidence, shows most clearly. that the defendants did disclose their principal. The stock yards weighmaster’s scale ticket, on its face showed that one Smith was the owner, and on the back of the same was a statement of defendants that he was such owner; besides, the health certificate showed the same. It is undisputable that the agency was disclosed before the money was paid by plaintiff and the sale completed.

Finding no error in trial, the cause is affirmed.

All concur.