A. Rose & Co. v. Schlessinger

Mississippi Supreme Court
A. Rose & Co. v. Schlessinger, 105 Miss. 876 (Miss. 1913)
63 So. 276
Beed

A. Rose & Co. v. Schlessinger

Opinion of the Court

Beed, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

William Schlessinger was engaged in business in the city of Vicksburg. On June 2, 1910, he was adjudged a bankrupt. Before that time he became indebted to A. Bose & Co., wholesale dealers in Vicksburg. The balance owing on the account was four hundred and seventy-seven dollars and eighty-nine cents. Prior to the bankruptcy he delivered to Bose & Co. a lot of shoes, the value of which amounted to more than the account. These *877shoes were delivered and accepted as a pledge or security for the payment of the account.

At the bankrupt sale^ the stock of goods of the business of William Schlessinger was purchased in the name of J. Schlessinger, his wife. The business was thereafter continued in her name, with William Schlessinger as manager. Before the bankruptcy, the business was in the name of William Schlessinger, the husband. After the bankruptcy, it was in the name of J. Schlessinger, the wife. William Schlessinger was manager all the while. He bought goods from and dealt with Rose & Co., when the business was in his name, and also when it was in his wife’s name.

After the bankruptcy sale, and while the business was in the name of J. Schlessinger, checks were taken by William Schlessinger to Rose & Co. for various amounts, usually fifty or sixty dollars, and a part of the pledged goods, not less in value than the amount paid, would be turned over to him. The checks were signed in the name of J. Schlessinger, and the goods were taken into the business conducted in her name. This continued till the full amount of four hundred and seventy-seven dollars and eighty-nine cents was paid and all of the pledged goods were returned.

A. Rose & Co. on September 20, 1911, brought suit against J. Schlessinger to recover the balance due on account for goods sold and delivered after the bankruptcy. The purchases totaled thirteen hundred and thirty-seven dollars and forty-five cents, and were credited with payments aggregating nine hundred and fourteen dollars and twenty-eight cents, leaving a balance of four hundred and twenty-three dollars and seventeen cents, for which judgment was demanded. J. Schlessinger defendant, claiming that William Schlessinger was not authorized to apply her checks to the payment of the amount owing by him, and an offset was filed, consisting of the payments made to release the pledged goods, four hundred and seventy-seven dollars and eighty-nine cents.

*878There is no affirmative testimony that J. Schlessinger authorized William Schlessinger to pay the checks and get the goods released; but it clearly appears that he was general manager for J. Schlessinger, in the business, and that when he delivered the checks he obtained thereby goods which went into the business and were for her benefit. After appellants had introduced their evidence and rested,the court sustained a motion to exclude the testimony and direct a verdict for appellee, and judgment over was rendered against appellants for fifty-four dollars and seventy-two cents and costs. We think the trial court erred. Appellant’s evidence was sufficient to put appellee upon proof.

Reversed and remanded.

Reference

Full Case Name
A. Rose & Company v. Mrs. J. Schlessinger
Status
Published
Syllabus
Husband and Wife. Agents. Sufficiency of evidence. Where a husband while in business for himself contracted a debt with a merchant and pledged certain goods as security and after failing in business conducted business for his wife and while so managing her business gave the merchant certain checks to redeem the goods, which went into the wife’s business, and also contracted for the wife another debt with the same party and on being sued for the last debt the wife defended on the ground that her husband had no authority to apply her checks to his debt, but that the same should be applied to her own account, it was error in such case to give a peremptory instruct tion for the wife as the evidence was sufficient to put her upon proof.