Allen Lumber Co. v. Howard

72 S.W.2d 483, 254 Ky. 778, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 8, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 72 S.W.2d 483 (Allen Lumber Co. v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen Lumber Co. v. Howard, 72 S.W.2d 483, 254 Ky. 778, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 165 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This action was brought by O. M. Howard against the Allen Lumber Company, of Middlesboro, Ky., tlie present appellant, to recover $313.68 and interest claimed paid it by mistake. The defendant 'by answer and terclaim denied owing the claim and sought dismissal *779 of the petition and a judgment upon counterclaim against-plaintiff for the sum of $436.74. The pleadings presenting equitable issues, the case was transferred to equity, where it was prepared and tried as a suit in equity. Upon its final submission, judgment was given for the plaintiff for the relief sought and the defense- and counterclaim of defendant rejected.

Complaining of this judgment, the defendant has-appealed.

The facts out of which this litigation arose are undisputed and it is agreed are substantially as set out in appellant’s brief, which may be summarized as follows: The appellee, Howard, being the owner of certain real estate in Harlan, Ky., contracted with the firm of Crider & Dunavent for the construction of certain building" improvements on it, for which in September, 1927, he owed it an agreed balance of $1,283. Also, these contractors were at the same time indebted to the appellant lumber company for a like or larger amount. Looking to the satisfaction of these accounts, Howard — upon, the request of Crider & Dunavent — agreed that he would execute^ it his note for the $1,283 owing it, which it-would in turn indorse over to its creditor, the Allen Lumber Company, as a payment upon its account.

Pursuant to such understanding, Howard on September 27, 1927, called by the office of its attorney, Mr.. G-. A. Eversole, to execute the agreed note. As Mr. Eversole was advised at the time that his client, Crider' & Dunavent, intended to indorse the note over to one of' its creditors as a payment upon account, he wrote in the-upper left-hand corner of the note only the figures. $1,283 (for which amount he knew and was told the note was to be executed) when it was in such incomplete-form signed by Howard. Thereafter Mr. Eversole wrote - in the name of Crider & Dunavent, as payees, and by an admitted error and inadvertence also wrote into the body of the note as the amount for which it was executed the words “fifteen hundred and eighty-three-dollars,” or for a larger amount by $300 than authorized. The note was in February, 1928, indorsed by the payees over to the lumber company in the following form:

“$1,283 00/100
“Fifteen months after date I promise to pay to the order of Crider & Dunavent, B. B. Crider *780 and Earl Dnnavent Fifteen Hundred Eighty Three and no/100 Dollars with interest from date- till paid by installment of fifty dollars per month after maturity.
“Value received
“No-Due- O. M. Howard
“Int to June 17-1931 33 00
“Oct. 12-31 $345.00”

' Upon indorsement of this note by Crider & Dunavent to the appellant as a credit upon its account owing the Allen Lumber Company, the latter credited its account with $1,283, that being the amount for which it understood the note was payable, and placed it in its collection file. The note was afterwards indorsed with the monthly payments as made by Howard thereon, amounting to some $1,804 in 1932, when he ceased to make them. In the following February, 1933, the appellant wrote Howard, notifying him that unless lie paid the balance of the principal and interest past due upon his note, it would be placed with an attorney for collection. Howard replied, requesting that it advise him as to what was the balance of principal and interest owing upon the note as shown 'by its records ,and further stated that while he was anxious to settle the matter, he did not have the money with which to do so and would like to sell them upon the debt a house and lot which he had in Harlan, Ky., for $750. After an ■examination of the property, the company declined to take it in at the price named.

Later upon being advised by appellant that the balance owing by him upon the note it held was $834.24, he answered offering it again the said house and lot at $650 and stating that he would also execute it his note for the then unsatisfied balance of $184.24, payable $20 monthly. The company advised him of its acceptance •of this propositon, when he executed it a deed to the property and his note for $184.24, upon receipt of which the company returned him his original note.

Upon receiving it and discovering that the company had, in requiring him to thus pay $834.24 as the balance due upon the nóte, charged him such amount as upon one given for $1,583 or $300 more than the amount of $1,283, for which it was understood it was given, and had also charged him by so doing some $173 more interest upon the note than was owing when computed *781 upon its rightful amount for which executed, he at once ■called upon defendant for its correction of the overcharge. Failing to secure the claimed rightful adjustment of the matter, by restitution of his admitted overpayment made it, he visited and conferred with appellant in Middlesboro and exchanged several letters with it in regard to the matter, but the company refused to •do more in the way of making restitution of the overcharge than to offer to return him his new note for $184.24 and deed him back the house and lot and take from plaintiff his note covering the sums of $128.10 principal and $208.22 interest, or $336.32, to be secured in its payment by a mortgage on the property redeeded him.

Howard, refusing to accept such offer of restitution, which required him to take back the property, filed his action as stated, seeking recovery against it of the ¡sum of $313.68, representing the overpayment made appellant upon the note as one for $1,583.

It is further admitted that after the indorsemént ¡over to the appellant of the note in question, the discrepancy between the statement thereof made by the .figures ($1,283) and its statement made by the written words ($1,583) was corrected by appellant’s changing the figures to $1,583, so as to correspond with its written amount. In justification of its making this change, the appellant contends that under section 3720b-17 of the Statutes providing that where the sum payable in a note is expressed in words and also in figures and there is a discrepancy between the two, the sum denoted by the words shall be the sum payable, it was authorized to change the figures so as to correspond in their amount with that expressed in its words as payable; but that, even if the note were treated as being one for the ■amount expressed by its figures of $1,283, with the result that there was an overcharge to the plaintiff of $300 principal and $97.50 interest thereon, after deducting such an amount from $834.24 found due upon it as unpaid principal and interest computed upon the note .as being for $1,583, there yet remained owing it by plaintiff the sum of $436.74, after deeding back to plaintiff the house and lot which it bought only for the purpose of applying its sale price as a credit upon the mistaken balance of $834.24, treated as due through their .alleged mutual mistake.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 S.W.2d 483, 254 Ky. 778, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-lumber-co-v-howard-kyctapphigh-1934.