Field v. Stubblefield
Field v. Stubblefield
Opinion of the Court
This was a suit on an account for $163.65 for the alleged sale by plaintiffs to the defendant of certain merchandise. The answer is a denial of every allegation in the petition.
This case must be reversed, on account of irrelevant and incompetent evidence admitted by the circuit court on behalf of the plaintiff. The only direct evidence in the case upon the question of the sale and purchase of the merchandise sued for, is : (1) That of James A. Field, one of the plaintiffs, who says.: “I received some orders from J. D. Wildfong, Dundee, Franklin county, Missouri, for goods. The goods ordered were shipped in the regular way to J. D. Wildfong, at Dundee, Missouri. * * * The bill sued for is a true and correct bill of the amount J. D. Wildfong is owing to said firm. I know all from my own knowledge that the goods were shipped to J. D. Wildfong in the regular course of business. J. D. Wildfong at different times sent us
The plaintiffs undertook to connect the witness, Wildfong, with defendant as a partner and general agent by circumstantial evidence, by showing that the witness acted as clerk in defendant’s store, and ordered goods when needed, and signed the name of defendant to notes; and by running and managing mills and threshing machines at various times for defendant. The plaintiffs offered one Springate as a Witness, and he was permitted to swear that he was present at a trial as to the ownership óf a threshing machine, in which defendant testified he was the owner of the machine. The court permitted plaintiffs to read in evidence an interplea of defendant in an attachment suit before a justice of the peace in the case of Herndon v. Wildfong, in which he laid claim to certain moneys for threshing which had been garnisheed. Plaintiffs were permitted to read in evidence a note dated in 1876, made by Wildfong and Stubblefield & Company to the Washington Savings Bank. Also, two notes dated in 1875, in favor of Nichols, Shepard & Company, signed by Wildfong and William Bray and Richard Bray.
A very wide range is allowable in investigating questions of fraud, but these papers read in evidence in this case go beyond any legitimate inquiry, especially in a case in which appears such slight foundation for the
The judgment below is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reference
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