American Buttonhole Overseaming Sewing Machine Co. v. Burlack

35 W. Va. 647
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 35 W. Va. 647 (American Buttonhole Overseaming Sewing Machine Co. v. Burlack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Buttonhole Overseaming Sewing Machine Co. v. Burlack, 35 W. Va. 647 (W. Va. 1891).

Opinion

IIolt, Judge :

On the 26th day of June, 1890, the Sewing Machine Company, plaintiff below, defendant in error, brought in the Circuit Court of Cabell county this action of debt against J. E. Wood et als, defendants below, on what is called a “bond of guaranty” in which the Sewing Machine Company was obligee, Burlack & Hank obligors as principals, and Wood and Kahn obligors as their sureties.

Defendant Wood appeared and demurred to the declaration, and, that being overruled, he tendered and filed the common or general plea of non est factum; and defendant Kahn also filed a general plea of non est factum ; defendant Wood claims that the instrument was not to be delivered as his deed except upon a certain condition, made known and required at the time of signing, and the condition was not complied with. Kahn claimed that before acceptance he ordered his.name tobe stricken off.

A jury was impanelled and sworn to try these issues, [649]*649evidence was introduced on each side, and at the conclusion the petitioner moved the court to strike out all defendants’ evidence, because it was all in under objection, and to strike it all out as not being material to the issue, and as not competent aud proper; and the court sustained the motion and struck out all the testimony of defendants, and defendants excepted; whereupon the jury found a verdict for plaintiff, and assessed the damages at four hundred and eighty dollars. And, defendants having moved the court to set aside the verdict, the court overruled the motion and gave judgment against the “said defendants,” and defendants excepted.

Defendant J. S. Wood alone brings the cause here on writ of error.

Wood, the appellant, claims that the evidence stricken out, was competent and proper, material to the issue, and tended to prove that he signed the bond with the express condition that it was not to be delivered aud become his bond, unless and until a second security as good as himself should be procured, and, after such security had been obtained, the bond returned to him, iu order that he might judge for himself of such sufficiency; that, notwithstanding this agreement, and condition, Burlaek & Hank the agents of the obligee, and the persons with whom the agreement had been made, procured the signature of defendant, Lee Kahn, who then was and now is insolvent, and, without the knowledge of defendant, Wood, delivered the bond to plaintiff; and that subsequently defendant visited Cincinnati, and had a conversation with Clark the manager and general agent of the Sewing Machine Company, the plaintiff below and defendant in error, in which conversation Clark admitted to him that he knew the bond was a fraud before and at the time of the shipment by him of the company’s goods to Burlaek &-IIank.

Five questions, one of substantive law, one of pleading proper, one of evidence, aud two of procedure or practice, each of some interest, are presented by this record: (1) The doctrine of escrow and conditional .delivery, as far as it has been settled by our own cases on the subject, and that is far enough for the purposes of this case; (2) [650]*650the defence that can be made, under the common or general plea, of non est factum; (3) the evidence admissible, as to fraud in the delivery of the instrument; (4) the competency, admissibility in evidence of the declaration, material if admissible, of the general agent to whom the whole management of the business has been committed by the corporation, made about such business within the scope of his employment and during its continuance, but not a part of the res gestae nor specially authorized; (5) how this Court is to consider the action of the Circuit Court, when plaintiff, having moved to strike out all the evidence of defendants as not being material to the issue, and as not competent and improper, and the Court sustains the motion, and strikes out all of the testimony of the defendants, and any of it turns out to be competent and proper, but of itself not sufficient to sustain the issue, or leaving the evidence wholly wanting on an essential point.

In the present attitude of the case, if we are to take the evidence as clearly insufficient as one of the grounds for the exclusion of it as a whole, it is not important whether we regard it as proving certain facts or as only tending to prove them, • or whether we state them as facts proved, or as facts which the evidence tends to prove ; but it can not escape observation and may be said here once for all, that there is but little conflict in the evidence, and that all the important and material facts are established beyond reasonable ground of controversy, if the testimony be competent, and that we shall assume for the present in stating the facts proved or the facts the testimony tends to prove, not caring, because it is not essential as the case stands, to discriminate in the mode of statement; .and, as to the question of competency, that is reserved to another part of this discussion.

The Sewing Machine Company, the plaintiff’ below and the defendant in error, was and is a corporation, and as such appears throughout this whole transaction. It sues as a corporation created and existing by the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, and nowhere appears in the flesh, otherwise than in the person of S. E. Clark, of Cincinnati, the apparent sole manager and general agent., So far as [651]*651appears, the management of the whole business, or of this particular branch of it, was committed to. him as a general agent, and that continuously throughout this whole transaction. He is the sole apparent representative of the corporate entity. lie made the contract with- Bur-lack & Hank; required them to give the bond of guaranty with two sureties, the bond sued on, refused for a time to accept the bond, sent it back to Burlack & Hank with directions to get Kahn to fill and swear to the blank printed affidavit on the back of the bond, which Kahn refused to do and ordered his name to be taken off. It was sent back to Clark without that being done.

While the place on the face of the bond for the names of the obligors was still in blank, unfilled, Burlack & Hank, dealers in sewing machines and pianos, together with witness T. E. Stout, who was their attorney, and also a notary present for the purpose of taking and certifying the acknowledgment of the bond, and the making of the affidavit on the back of the bond, on 19th July, 1889, went to the office of defendant Wood in the town of Huntington, and Woods then executed and acknowledged the bond on the express condition that it was not to be delivered until and unless another one as good financially as himself also executed it, and before delivery of the bond it was to be again shown to him, so that he mightjudge for himself of the financial ability of his intended co-surety. By the way it may be said this conditional delivery was proved by Wood, Stout and Hank, the whereabouts of Burlack not then being known, not even by his partner Hank. The bond was then taken to Lee Kahn, shown to be then insolvent, who executed the bond and acknowledged it in the presence of Stout, a subscribing witness, but he failed and refused to make the affidavit on the back, above the one made by Wood. But the bond -was sent to Manager Clark at Cincinnati, his place of business.

Clark did not accept it, neither did he reject it, but, to use his own language, “holding it statu quo,”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 W. Va. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-buttonhole-overseaming-sewing-machine-co-v-burlack-wva-1891.