Columbia Savings Bank v. Kingsburry Bros.
Columbia Savings Bank v. Kingsburry Bros.
Opinion of the Court
From the statements of the respective parties we gather that the defendant Evans was engaged in buying and shipping cattle and hogs. To facilitate his business he had an arrangement Avith a stock commission firm in St. Louis that they would pay his drafts representing the purchase of stock when stock Avas billed to them on shipment. The drafts were to be deposited with plaintiff bank and plaintiff was to honor his checks to farmers for purchase, price. About the first of November, 1896, Evans bought a carload of hogs of his co-defendants, Kingsburry Bros., and contracted for another carload with two carloads of cattle to be delivered about the middle of the month, the first car load of hogs to
The ground of the present action is that there was in reality no sale of the two cars of cattle and one of hogs. That the whole matter of sale and driving stock to pens at Estill shipping station was a sham and a ruse arranged between defendant Evans and defendants Kingsburrys for the fraudulent purpose of entrapping plaintiff into the payment of the check by so arranging appearances as to a sale and prepara
The court sustained a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and entered judgment for the defendants.
The action of the court was undoubtedly right. The evidence in plaintiff’s behalf establishes no more than is set forth above as a statement of the case. There is other evidence which may be considered as formal or introductory and which goes to show or explain the connection plaintiff had with the commission house in St. Louis, with the agent. for such house and with defendant Evans. There is nothing however which in the least tends to sustain the charge in the petition and which is the foundation of the action.
The law of this and similar cases is understood alike by the counsel for the respective parties. That is, that to establish fraud there need not be direct and affirmative proof; circumstances being considered as a frequent and effective way to sustain a charge of that nature. But that mere conjecture, without something of substance upon which to base such conjecture is worthless in and of itself to condemn one under such an accusation. It is in recognition of these rules that we have examined this record. There is not the slightest connection between the acts of the Kingsburrys in placing the stock in the shipping pens for shipment on payment of purchase price, and the charge that all this was done in furtherance of a preconcerted scheme to cheat plaintiff out of the amount of the check aforesaid.
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.