Burton v. Morrow

32 N.E. 921, 133 Ind. 221, 1892 Ind. LEXIS 267
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1892
DocketNo. 16,557
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 921 (Burton v. Morrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton v. Morrow, 32 N.E. 921, 133 Ind. 221, 1892 Ind. LEXIS 267 (Ind. 1892).

Opinion

McBride, J.

The firm of "Wood & Smith was engaged in the cooperage business at Indianapolis, and manufactured tierces for Kingan & Co. By oral agreement between the parties, the tierces were to be delivered to Kingan & Co. at their packing house, subject to inspection and counting by a representative of the purchaser. Air-tight tierces thus delivered and accepted were to be paid for; butr [223]*223if, on inspection, any were found not air-tight, they were to be taken away by Wood & Smith and made air-tight.

If tierces were at any time manufactured faster than they were needed by Kingan & Co., the surplus tierces were to be stored by Wood & Smith in their warehouses until needed. For tierces accepted without being stored, Kingan &■ Co. paid $1.27|- each.

When tierces were stored, Wood & Co., from time to time, furnished to Kingan & Co. written statéments showing the number stored and when they were stored; and on such written statement, Kingan & Co. advanced $1 for each tierce stored. When the stored tierces were needed, they were delivered to Kingan & Co., subject to a similar inspection to that given the tierces not stored, and when accepted 37|- cents additional was paid for each tierce — ten cents more being paid for each tierce stored than for those not stored, to cover the expense of storage, insurance, etc.

On the 15th day of August, 1891, more than 5,500 tierces were stored in warehouses belonging to Wood & Smith. Under this oral agreement, and on written statements furnished by them from time to time, Kingan & Co. had paid them $1 each on such stored tierces. At the same time Wood & Smith were indebted to one Mrs. Ada M. Carey in a. sum exceeding $4,000, all of which was due. She, being in urgent need of money, demanded of them $1,793.19 of the sum thus due her, but they were unable to pay it at that time.

The appellee, Wilson Morrow, who was at the time attorney for Mrs. Carey, had some money; and it was orally proposed that if he would advance to Wood & Smith said sum of $1,793.19 for her use, they would execute to him their note for that sum, due in ninety days, which she should then endorse to Morrow, and that said Wood & Smith should then give to Morrow what they called a warehouse receipt for 5,500 of the tierces stored in their warehouses for Kingan & Co., on which said advance had [224]*224been made, and would transfer -to Morrow the remaining sum of 37-|- cents which was to be paid on each of said tierces, when they were delivered and accepted. Wood & Smith also said at the time that they thought they would be able to pay a part of the sum due on the note at its maturity, with money other than that coming to them from Kingan & Co., and that they would do so, if possible; in which case any money received from Kingan & Co. for the 5,500 tierces in excess of the amount necessary to pay the note should be paid to Mrs. Carey on the remainder of her claim against them.

This proposition was, on the same day, accepted and acted upon. The money was furnished by Morrow and applied upon the claim. The note was executed by Wood & Smith to Mrs. Carey, and was endorsed by her to Morrow; and Wood & Smith at the same time, executed to Morrow a writing, of which the following is a copy:

“Indianapolis, August 15, 1891.
“We hereby agree to pay balance due on tierces stored in our brick warehouse, viz.: (3,500) thirty-five hundred tierces, and (2,000) two thousand in Patrick Manley’s cellar; balance to be 37J cents per tierce; amount subject to Wilson Morrow’s demand as fast as tierces are delivered during the packing season of 1891-92. Above tierces are fully insured by us. Wood & Smith.”

With the exception of this writing and the note, nothing was reduced to writing.

The note was never paid. On the 6th day of October, 1891, and before its maturity, the firm of Wood & Smith had become insolvent; and Smith, one of the partners, commenced suit, in the Superior Court of Marion County, against his co-partner Wood, praying in his complaint for a dissolution of the partnership, and for the appointment of a receiver to take possession of its assets and settle up its affairs. He was successful, and the appellant was ap[225]*225pointed as receiver. He qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties as such, and is still thus acting.

The immediate controversy now before us grows out of the filing by Morrow of an intervening petition, after the maturity of the note, based upon the ground that, by virtue of the transaction, the details of which we have above recited, the property in the 37J cents due on each of the 5,500 stored tierces passed to him and Mrs. Carey, and asking an order on the receiver to account to him for an amount thereof sufficient to pay the amount due on the note, and to account to Mrs. Carey for the balance.

Kingan & Co. also filed an intervening petition claiming that title in the stored tierces Ayas in them, and for an order protecting their rights, and obtained a decree adjudging them to be such owners, subject to their compliance with the terms of their contract relative to inspection, the payment of the balance due, etc.

In that adjudication, the court left the rights of the appellee undetermined, but directed the payment by Kingan & Co. to the receiver of the balance due on the tierces; and further decreed that such rights, if any, that the court might thereafter determine existed in favor of the appellee therein, should be transferred to the fund in the receiAmr’s hands.

The Superior Court, in special term, having made a special finding of the facts, adjudged that the appellee was not entitled to any preference in the specific fund, but that' the receiver was entitled to hold it as a part of the general fund for the benefit of the general creditors of the firm of "Wood & Smith.

On appeal to the general term, this judgment was reversed, and the cause was ordered remanded to the trial court, with direction to set aside the judgment previously rendered, and to render a judgment which, in all material [226]*226matters, was in accordance with the contention of the appellee.

Two propositions are presented and argued by the appellant :

First. That the court erred in considering evidence of any parol contract or understanding between the parties, either prior to or contemporaneous with the execution of the writing above copied.

Second. That the court erred in adjudging that the appellee was entitled to a preference in the specific fund in controversy.

"We will consider these questions in the same order.

The appellants base their first contention on the ground that the writing in question must be regarded as embodying the entire contract of the parties; that whatever may have been said at or prior to its execution must be regarded as superseded by the writing, which is, therefore, in and of itself the only competent evidence of the contract as finally consummated.

No question was raised on the admissibility of parol testimony, counsel explaining this on the ground that the trial being by the court, without a jury, it was assumed that incompetent and irrelevant evidence would be rejected and not considered.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stephen Turner v. KLS Services, LLC
Indiana Court of Appeals, 2025
Citizens Progress Co. v. James O. Held & Co.
438 N.E.2d 1016 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1982)
Gentry v. Gentry
110 N.E.2d 509 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1953)
Abdon v. Wallace
165 N.E. 68 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1929)
Hilgemeier v. Bower Manufacturing Co.
139 N.E. 691 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1923)
Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. State ex rel. Leavenworth State Bank
109 N.E. 237 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1915)
Hatfield v. Rooker
104 N.E. 798 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1914)
Smith v. McDonald
97 N.E. 556 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1912)
Stockwell v. Whitehead
94 N.E. 736 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1911)
Buffalo Oölitic Limestone Quarries Co. v. Davis
90 N.E. 327 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1910)
Fleming v. Greener
90 N.E. 73 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1909)
Boyd v. State ex rel. Board of Commissioners
84 N.E. 350 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1908)
Coulter v. Bradley
71 N.E. 61 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1904)
Goodwine v. Cadwallader
61 N.E. 939 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1901)
Midland Steel Co. v. Citizens National Bank
59 N.E. 211 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1901)
Cincinnati Barbed Wire Fence Co. v. Chenoweth
54 N.E. 403 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1899)
Bucklen v. Johnson
49 N.E. 612 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1898)
Citizens' National Bank v. Judy
43 N.E. 259 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1896)
Reynolds v. Louisville, New Albany & Chicago Railway Co.
40 N.E. 410 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 921, 133 Ind. 221, 1892 Ind. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-morrow-ind-1892.