Ades v. Wash

251 S.W. 970, 199 Ky. 687, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 918
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 12, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 970 (Ades v. Wash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ades v. Wash, 251 S.W. 970, 199 Ky. 687, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 918 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

¡Opinion op the Court by

Jud.ge MoCandless

Affirming.

David Ades is a wholesale merchant in the city of Lexington. A retail dealer in that .city owed him a debt and to collect this he took over the latter’s stock of goods and ran the business himself, doing this by agents and clerks and continuing to furnish goods to that store from the wholesale establishment, charging them as he would have done if it had constituted a .separate firm.

In August, 1916, he sold this stock of goods and fixtures to Mrs. 'Wash, she agreeing to pay-him therefor $5,833.00. There was a cash payment on the merchandise and a number of deferred purchase money notes secured by mortgage on land.

This suit was. brought in August, 1918, to recover on three notes for $1,575.00 and to enforce a lien on certain lands in Franklin county. The defendants filed an answer admitting the execution of the notes and pleading breach of warranty and deceit as a counterclaim, it being alleged that at the time of the execution of the contract and prior thereto the plaintiff had represented to them that he had taken an inventory of the stock and fixtures a short time previously, and that there was at that time $5,833.00 worth of goods in the store; that they relied on such representations and were thereby induced to make the purchase contract, but that same were false and untrue and so known to be by plaintiff; that in fact and in truth there was only $3,255.00 worth of goods in the store at that time and they sought damages, for the difference, or $2,577.00.

The court dismissed plaintiff’s petition and gave defendants judgment for the sum of $1,002.80, this being the full amount claimed, and plaintiff appeals.

The appellant says that he had not invoiced the goods prior to the sale and ,did not know their value. The store owed the wholesale house the sum of $5,833>.00, and he wanted to realize from the sale the amount of his debt, and so told defendants, but did not state the value of the goods, or mention a prior invoice. He was perfectly willing for them to invoice or take any -steps they wished [690]*690to ascertain the value of the stock, but was holding it for what the store owed him and was unwilling to take less. This was fully understood by defendants, who saw_ the goods, and went to his wholesale house and examined the books to see the amount of the indebtedness. He did not know that they were claiming a shortage of the goods until this suit was filed, nearly two years afterward. It is shown by his bookkeeper that he pointed out the amount of the indebtedness to Mr. Wash, and another witness states that Wash told him that he purchased the goods at the amount of the indebtedness.

On the other hand the appellee, Mrs. Wash, states that appellant told her he had taken an- invoice and that he had about $6,000.00 worth of goods. On a second occasion he stated the amount as $5,833.00, and he was sure they were there. She had no previous experience in the business and relied on bis statements. The husband of the appellee testified that he acted as his wife’s agent at times when she was not present and that appellant told him he had invoiced the goods some time in May. He did not tell him what the invoice was and said that he would sell them at what his wholesale books were with the house, at what the store owed him for goods at the time he made the transfer.

Further, in answer to another question, he said: “When we were about to close the trade the books showed the house owed him $5,833.00.” Q. “What else did he say?” A. “Well, he said the goods were there, and I said to him that this is a little unusual way to buy goods without invoicing, but he said he knew tie goods were there.” Q. “How much goods did he tell you was in the store at the time the books showed $5,833.00 in debt?” A. “He said the amount of the debt corresponded with the goods.”

He gives as the. reason for taking the goods without an invoice, that the appellant proposed if he would take his invoice that he would accept back as much as $800.00 or $1,000.00 of unsalable goods the 1st of January, and that they believed the goods were there and took him at his word. He had some experience in other lines, but knew nothing of dry goods.

It is further shown that shortly after taking possession of the stock the appellees became suspicious of the deal and took an invoice at wholesale cost, which, together with the amount of their total sales up to that period, amounted to $3,255.00, but they gave no notice of [691]*691this to appellant and withheld all knowledge of it from him until, as they say, in the spring and continued to pay on the installment notes until the spring of 1917.

One witness states that she clerked for appellant prior to the sale and that she knew the wholesale cost mark of the goods;'that there was an invoice taken about the first of May, but she did not know the amount of it, although she gives the names of three or four employes who assisted in taking the invoice. Only one of these testified. He denied that this young lady knew the cost mark but did not deny that the invoice was taken. One of appellant’s witnesses, Lingenfelter, who testified as to negotiating for the purchase of same just a few weeks before Wash’s purchase, admitted that appellant told him that there was about $3,000.00 worth of goods on hand, but says that he wanted the amount of his debt for it, although he did not say how much that was. He states, however, that the stock was increased soon after that but could not say how much. The appellant did not'introduee his. bookkeeper to show any new purchases by the store during that period.

Ordinarily where a written contract is obtained 'by fraud the injured party has his option to tender back the property received and'seek a rescission of the contract, or he may affirm the contract and seek damages for his injuries either by an action for deceit or by way of counterclaim in a suit brought to enforce the contract. 13 C. J., sections 304-5-6-7 and 682-7; Long v. Douthitt, 142 Ky. 431; Lignon v. Minton, 125 Ky. 304. With some exceptions, such as sale by sample, warranty of quantity, etc., where notice is essential, the same principles, apply to breaches of warranty. Hass v. Surron, 168 Ky. 690; G. M. W. v. C. J. C. Co., 173 Ky. 675; Williams v. Shepherd, 181 Ky. 538; Nichols & Shepherd v. Dudderar, 184 Ky. 689. Both deceit and breach of warranty may be relied on in the same pleading. Jones v. Johnson, 10 Bush 652; Gregory v. Woods, 3 Kep. 527.

If the defense is. fraud it is equally applicable to those cases in which the fraud was practiced in the obtention as well as in the execution of the contract; that is, the writing may have been fully understood .and voluntarily executed by the parties, yet, if it was procured by fraud, it is equally as vulnerable as one in which the execution itself is thus secured. Western Mfg. Co. v. Cotton & Long, 126 Ky. 749; Smith & Nixon v. Morgan, 152 Ky. 430.

[692]*692An injured party who also has full knowledge of the fraud may by his action and conduct waive the fraud and be denied a recovery, but in an executed contract such as this it would require an extreme case for its application.

Another question arising in this ease is as to the admissibility of parol evidence to show a contemporaneous warranty not set out in the written contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 970, 199 Ky. 687, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ades-v-wash-kyctapp-1923.