Caywood v. Timmons

31 Kan. 394
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 Kan. 394 (Caywood v. Timmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caywood v. Timmons, 31 Kan. 394 (kan 1884).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

This was an action commenced before a justice of the peace by E. P. Caywood and E. W. Cay-[397]*397wood, partners doing business under the firm-name of Cay-wood & Go., against George Timmons, to recover the sum of $151.50, alleged to be due from the defendant to the plaintiffs. After judgment in the justice’s court, the case was appealed to the district court, where a trial was had before the court and a jury, which resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiffs for $50 and costs. The plaintiffs bring the case to this court for review.

The record brought to this court shows, among other things, the following:

“The undisputed evidence introduced in said action proved that said plaintiffs were grain merchants doing business in Clifton, Clay county, Kansas, and that said defendant was a farmer, as alleged in his bill of particulars; and that he had a number of. wheat stacks or ricks on his farm, as alleged in his said bill of particulars.
“The testimony on behalf of both plaintiffs and defendant also showed that on the 14th or 15th day of September, plaintiffs had a conversation at said farm concerning said wheat, but the evidence for plaintiffs and defendant conflicted as to the details of said conversation.
“Plaintiffs’ evidence tended to prove, and if uncontradicted would have proved, that he examined all of said wheat except one yard, there being three, and that they were in good sound condition, and that the wheat therein, if then threshed out, would have been worth $1.05 per bushel; and that he did examine and go to all of said stacks except those at one yard, and could have seen all the rest of said wheat, but defendant represented all of said wheat to be as good as the wheat examined by said plaintiff, and that it was thereupon agreed between plaintiffs.and defendant that defendant should thresh out all of the wheat on said farm and deliver the same, except 75 or 100 bushels, to said plaintiffs at their place of business in said Clifton, on or before the 20 th day of October, 1881, and that said plaintiffs should take whatever said stacks of wheat might produce, less 75 or 100 bushels, and pay $1.05 per bushel for the same, if the same should be delivered at said Clifton on or before October 20, 1881.
“The evidence for defendant substantiated the evidence for plaintiffs as to the price per bushel, and as to the 75 or 100 bushels to be retained by^ defendant, but tended to show [398]*398that plaintiffs examined all the wheat at the time except the most distant stack yard, and that there was no definite time agreed upon for the wheat to be delivered, but that it was to be delivered after he should finish certain specified work, namely, seeding, setting water tank, and setting up a pair of scales.
“The evidence for both plaintiffs and defendant showed that plaintiffs at that [time] paid to defendant $50 in cash on the contract between them,-and afterward, and on the 3d day of October, 188 — , also delivered and sold a pair of scales to defendant at and for the agreed price of $100, to be credited on said contract.
“Defendant’s evidence was to the effect that nothing was said or agreed upon as to the condition the wheat should be in at the time of delivery, nor as to whose risk the wheat should be at uutil threshed and delivered.
“It was established by both defendant and plaintiffs that so much of the wheat as was to be delivered to plaintiffs was to be weighed at Vining, and paid for according to the weights there.
“It was established by the evidence that said stacks or ricks were threshed out, [and that] they produced 800 bushels, and that the same were not threshed out until after October 20, 1881, and that when defendant offered and attempted to deliver said wheat that it was then found to have been damaged by rain. That said defendant did not haul any of said wheat to Clifton and tender the same to the plaintiffs until after October 20, 1881, was established by undisputed evidence.
“It was established by uncontradicted testimony that defendant had never repaid plaintiffs the $50 cash received by [him], nor the $100, [but had paid the $1.50 for coal received by him] nor any part of either of said sums, and the plaintiffs never received any of said wheat from said defendant, and refused to receive the same.
“E. P. Caywood testified as follows: ‘I finally dropped the matter of delivery before seeding. I-kept hurrying Timmons up about hauling the wheat in. Wheat was not worth over ninety cents at the time the offer of delivery was made by defendant.’
“And the above and foregoing was all the evidence offered or given by either party on the trial of said action.”

After the evidence was all introduced, the plaintiffs asked [399]*399the court below to give four certain instructions to the jury, which raised the question, among others, whether the original contract between the parties constituted a completed sale of the wheat, or constituted only a contract to sell such wheat; but the court refused to give these instructions, and the plaintiffs duly excepted; and the court then gave full instructions to the jury, which were given upon the theory that the original contract between the parties constituted a fully-completed sale of the wheat, that the property in the wheat immediately passed from the defendant to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs took all the risk of loss or damage which might result from rains or storms, or other casualties. The court gave among others the following instruction, to wit:

“4. The plaintiffs refused to receive the wheat for two reasons, as they now claim: First, that it was not delivered within the time limited by the terms of the contract; and second, that it was damaged. On this question yon are instructed that if the contract was that the wheat was to be delivered on or before the 20th day of October, the plaintiffs had a right to refuse to receive it; as it is conceded the wheat was not offered to be delivered until after the 20th.
“If you find, however, that the contract in regard to the time of the delivery was as claimed by the defendant, Timmons, and that the wheat was offered to be delivered within the time stipulated, then the plaintiffs had no right to refuse to accept it, even though it was damaged, unless the defendant had been guilty of fraud in the sale to plaintiffs.
“If the plaintiffs examined the wheat in the stacks, and bought the wheat on their own judgment, then they had no right to refuse to receive the wheat because it might not have been as good as they had thought, or because they might have used poor judgment in regard to the quality of the wheat at the time of the purchase. The plaintiffs would only be justified in refusing the wheat on the ground that it was damaged, in case it has been shown that the defendant made willfully false representations in regard to its quality — that is, representations which he knew to be false — which were relied upon by the plaintiffs at the time of the purchase; or that the defendant fraudulently concealed the quality of the wheat for the purpose and intent of deceiving, plaintiffs, and did in fact so deceive plaintiffs.

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129 P. 181 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)
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19 N.W. 565 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Kan. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caywood-v-timmons-kan-1884.