Black Motor Co. v. Howard

126 S.W.2d 1092, 277 Ky. 638, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 697
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 24, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 1092 (Black Motor 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
Black Motor Co. v. Howard, 126 S.W.2d 1092, 277 Ky. 638, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 697 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Bell circuit court, entered in favor of the appellees, Jake and John Howard, in an action brought by the appellant to recover certain deferred installment payments alleged owing upon a truck sold to Nathaniel Bingham, which were assumed by them.

It is disclosed by the record that on Oetobei 5, 1935, the appellant, Black Motor Company, entered into a conditional sales contract with Nathaniel Bingham, whereby it sold and delivered him the Dodge truck here involved, for the agreed price of $1,102, on the deferred payment plan. $400 was at the time of its sale paid on the purchase price and the remainder of $702 was to be paid in eighteen monthly installments of $39 each. Bingham in December following the sale having defaulted in the payment of these deferred installments, plaintiff’s agent and collector, S. R. Riley, called and demanded their payment, when he reported that he had transferred the truck sold him to the appellee, Jake Howard, upon the latter’s agreement made with him, when taking over its possession, that he would assume and pay the deferred installments owing upon it, as by the contract provided for.

The agent testified that he thereupon contacted Jake Howard, whom he found in the possession of the truck and engaged in hauling a load of furniture with it; that upon conferring with Howard as to Bingham’s transfer of it to him he explained that it was the company’s truck upon which two installment payments were due by Bingham and that he would have to repossess it for the company; that Jake Howard told him that he had bought the truck from Bingham, who had transferred it to him with the understanding that he would carry out his contract of purchase therefor, and that he “wanted to pay the contract up,” but didn’t have the money with which to pay but one of the installments at that' time.

*640 "Witness stated that he refused to accept the proffered payment of the one installment, telling Howard that if he wanted to keep the Bingham truck he would have to pay for a transfer of it to him and also pay up the installments then due, to which Howard answeied that he didn’t then have the money to pay for a transfer, nor more than enough to make payment of one installment, but that he could make payment of it on the 15th.

Further witness stated that while Howard didn’t make this promised payment on the 15th, he brought and paid it the following Saturday to appellant at its Harlan office, when Howard was told that another payment had become due and that the company would have to repossess the truck, if he didn’t bring all the payments up to date, when Howard promised him that he would pay all the amounts then due, and further said, “I have to have that truck in my business,” and also that he and his brother, John Howard, were operating a transfer business for which they then particularly needed the Bingham truck.

The witness further stated that Jake failed to make this promised payment and that, due to his default, on March 7, he went to Howard’s home to see him, where he found that some of his family were sick, and Jake told hi-m he didn’t have the money to bring the payments up to date and for such reason had turned the truck over to his brother, John Howard, who would keep up the payments and complete Bingham’s contract.

Witness stated that he then, checking up on this report, went to see John Howard, who told him that his own truck (an International) which he had. bought of appellant was then broken down and that his brother’s (Jake’s) Dodge truck (also bought of appellant, and similar to the one here involved sold Bingham) was also wrecked and that they needed this Bingham truck, which had been transferred them, to operate their trucking business. Further, he said that he would take over or assume Bingham’s payments owing on it and pay them; also that John Howard did, pursuant to such promise, make him one installment payment of $39 thereon; but that failing’ to make the later payments as promised, he went to Barton’s restaurant, looking for Howard, when Barton told him that Howard had gone to Richmond, Kentucky, where this Bingham truck, when *641 out on a trucking trip for Howard, had by his driver been wrecked the night before; that he again went to see Howard on the Saturday next following March 15, the day on which the truck was wrecked, when he asked him if he had brought the truck back from Richmond, as he had promised, and was answered that he had not, but that he had a load of freight on the truck when it was wrecked near Richmond and that he was going to get it; that he also stated he could not make the payment upon the Bingham truck at that time, on account of having to bring back this Bingham truck and the loss occasioned by its wrecking.

Witness stated further that the defendant, John Howard, then told him that he was using Nathaniel Bingham’s truck in his business, when it was wrecked some four miles beyond Richmond and that his driver had there left it stored in a barn, and again promised that he would go after it and would pay the remaining installments owing thereon; that following this agreement and promise of payment given him, he again (on April 13) talked with John Howard, who then paid him a further $39 installment owing on the wrecked truck and told him that he hadn’t brought the truck back because his and Jake’s trucks were both wrecked and he had no truck to send after it. Also witness testified that while the truck was stored in the barn near Richmond it was so stripped and robbed of its parts and accessories that only its mere frame was left.

After these reported happenings and none of the defendants, who plaintiff claimed had promised to carry out this sales contract,.having lived up to their agreement by making any further payments on the truck, this action was brought against Nathaniel Bingham, the original purchaser of the truck, and Jake and John Howard, as transferees, seeking to recover $507, the amount alleged remaining unpaid on its purchase price.

The petition alleged substantially the above facts and also that the Bingham truck after it was taken over by John Howard had been wrecked through the negligence of his driver and had been thereafter robbed by Howard of its parts. The plaintiff, waiving the tort, sued upon the contract allegedly made by Jake and John Howard with Bingham to carry out his contract with plaintiff (here appellant) for the purchase of the truck. .....

*642 To the petition the defendant Howards filed answer, which was a traverse of all the allegations of the petition and completed die issues.

Upon trial before a jury plaintiff's agent, Riley, testified as to these interviews had with Bingham and Jake and John Howard, in the course of Ms efforts made to collect the installment payments due and owing upon the Bingham truck.

TMs testimony of Riley was in some measure corroborated by that of appellant’s other witnesses, Barton and Shelburne, in regard to the Howards’ assumption of Bingham’s contract, and that John Howard had the truck in Ms possession and was using it in Ms trucking business when it was wrecked.

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Related

Young v. Vista Homes, Inc.
243 S.W.3d 352 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2007)
Black Motor Co. v. Howard
159 S.W.2d 10 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 1092, 277 Ky. 638, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-motor-co-v-howard-kyctapphigh-1939.