Buchanan v. Hicks

136 S.W. 177, 98 Ark. 370, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 177 (Buchanan v. Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchanan v. Hicks, 136 S.W. 177, 98 Ark. 370, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 160 (Ark. 1911).

Opinions

Frauenthal, J.

This was an action -instituted by John T. Hicks as the receiver of an insolvent -corporation to recover from the defendant upon an account which he claimed to be due to said corporation. The complaint contained two paragraphs. In the first paragraph it was alleged that the defendant was indebted for two carloads of lumber in the sum of $637; and in the second paragraph it was alleged that he was indebted in the sum of $32.70 for a balance due for wares and merchandise sold to him; and recovery was sought for ¡both of said amounts.

The defendants filed a demurrer to the second paragraph of the complaint on the ground that the amount therein sued for was below the jurisdictional limit of the circuit court. The court overruled said demurrer, and the defendant thereupon filed an answer in which he admitted the shipment of the two carloads of lumber, but denied that he owed plaintiff as receiver therefor, and alleged that he had made payment thereof to the proper person entitled to receive same. He did not deny owing for the balance of account set forth in the second paragraph of the complaint. Upon the trial of the case the court directed the jury to find in favor of the plaintiff for the amount sued for, which was done. From this action defendant has appealed to this court.

It appears that the Camden Lumber Company was a corporation duly organized under the laws of the State of Arkansas, and was located in the county of Ouachita, with its place of business at a postoffice in said county called “Lumber,” at which it operated a sawmill plant. On October 3, 1905, said corporation having become insolvent, J. T. Flicks was regularly appointed receiver thereof by the United States Circuit Court for the Western District of Arkansas, and duly qualified as such receiver on October 5, 1905. No question was made in the lower court, and none is made in this court, relative to the regularity of the institution of said suit and the legality of the appointment of said Hicks as receiver of said corporation by said court. The sole defense that was made in the lower court, and which is pressed here, against the recovery for said two carloads of lumber, is that'the defendant claims that he bought the same from said corporation prior to the appointment of said receiver, and that he thereafter paid therefor to the manager of said corporation, who was authorized to receive the same.

Inasmuch as the lower court directed a verdict against defendant, if there was any testimony adduced upon the trial of this case which tended to establish an issue constituting a legal defense to a recovery for this lumber, then the lower court erred in giving said peremptory charge for a verdict in favor of plaintiff. We think, however, that the testimony adduced at the trial of this case is virtually undisputed. According to this uncontroverted testimony, the case is this:

The Camden Lumber Company had been engaged in the ■manufacture of lumber for quite a period prior to October, 1905, in Ouachita 'County, Arkansas, and J. J. Cochran was the vice president and manager thereof, with a sales office located at St. Louis, Mo. The defendant, through said Cochran, had purchased from said corporation a number of cars of lumber during the year 1905, and in August of that year made an order for the two cars involved in this suit, one of which he directed to be shipped to his customer at Warsaw, Mo., and the other to be shipped to another customer at Colorado Springs, Colorado.

On the 2d or 4th of October, 1905, and prior to the qualification of said receiver, invoices for said lumber were sent to the office of the defendant at Kansas Cify, Mo. According to the terms of the invoices, the defendant was entitled to a discount on the price of the lumber of two per cent, by paying for same within a certain time after receipt of said invoice; and on October 17, pursuant to the terms of said invoices and according to his prior custom in his dealings with this corporation, he executed a check payable to the corporation for $637, same being the price of .the lumber less the discount of two per cent., and sent the same to its office at St. Louis, Mo. This check was drawn upon a bank located at Kansas City, Mo., and was paid by said bank on October 30, 1905. In the meanwhile, the receiver, on October 7, 1905, proceeded to the place of business and plant of said insolvent corporation in Ouachita County, and took possession of all the assets thereof at that place. Amongst these were the two carloads of lumber involved in this suit, which were on the cars but which had not then been delivered to a common carrier for shipment. The receiver also took possession of all the books and accounts of said corporation, and therefrom found that these two cars had been ordered prior to his appointment, and had been directed to be shipped to the two customers of defendant above named. In order to carry out the contract for the sale of these two cars of lumber, he then obtained bills of lading from the common carrier at that place, consigning the same to said two customers, and on October 14 he attached same to drafts drawn on said customers for the price of the lumber, and on October 17 wrote to each of these customers, stating that he had drawn upon them for the price of the lumber through the bank with the bills of lading attached, and requesting that they honor the same upon presentation thereof. The customers, upon receipt of said letters, immediately wrote to the defendant at his office at Kansas City, notifying him of the receipt of these letters from the receiver, which were received by the defendant on October 22. On October 23 defendant wrote to said receiver, stating that he 'had purchased the lumber, directing it sent to his customers, and that, in accordance with his custom, he had sent a draft in payment therefor to the office of the corporation at St. Louis, Mo., and therein requested the receiver to recall the drafts upon his customers. Further correspondence was exchanged between the receiver and the defendant, in which the receiver insisted upon payment being made to him, and defendant contended that he had rightfully sent payment to -the corporation at St. Louis.

In the meanwhile said draft was received by said Cochran at St. Louis some time after October 17th, and he indorsed the corporation’s name thereon and also 'his own name, and placed same for collection in a bank in St. Louis with direction to place the amount to his individual credit when collected. The draft was paid on October 30th, and said Cochran testified that he thereafter paid the proceds thereof to creditors of the corporation in Missouri.

Subsequently, the receiver made report of his actions relative to carrying out the contract of the corporation for the sale of this lumber and as to the claims of the defendant with reference to the payment therefor, and he was directed by the court to institute this suit against the defendant.

It thus appears that the defendant made a contract for the purchase of this lumber from the corporation prior to the time the receiver was appointed therefor, and sent a check in payment for the lumber some time after the receiver had been appointed and qualified, and prior to the time that the lumber had been delivered to a common carrier for shipment. The question therefore involved in this case is whether or not defendant had a right to make payment for this lumber to any one except the receiver.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 177, 98 Ark. 370, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-hicks-ark-1911.