Coe v. Kutinsky

74 A. 1065, 82 Conn. 685, 1910 Conn. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 18, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 74 A. 1065 (Coe v. Kutinsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coe v. Kutinsky, 74 A. 1065, 82 Conn. 685, 1910 Conn. LEXIS 10 (Colo. 1910).

Opinion

*687 Thayer, J.

The plaintiff by this action seeks to recover a judgment against the defendants Kutinsky, Alder & Company, hereinafter called the defendants, for the price of certain tobacco sold by him to the other defendant, Luther M. Case, the plaintiff claiming that these defendants were either partners of Case or his undisclosed principals in the transaction. Case has become bankrupt and made no defense.

The complaint is substantially identical, except as to dates and amounts, with that in the case of Arnold v. Kutirisky et als., the same defendants, reported in 80 Conn. 549,69 Atl. 350. The answer was a denial of all the allegations of the complaint, except that the execution of the written agreement, Exhibit A, which was made part of the first paragraph, was admitted. After the plaintiff had introduced his evidence and rested his case, the court rendered judgment as of nonsuit in favor of these defendants, and later denied a motion to set aside the judgment. The court’s denial of this motion, and its rulings in excluding evidence offered by the plaintiff, are made the grounds of this appeal.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff sold the tobacco in question to Case, that he was to be' paid for it in cash as soon as it was sorted and weighed at the packing house of H. L. Miller in Southwick, Massachusetts, and that he knew nothing of Kutinsky, Alder & Company in the transaction. There is no evidence tending to show that these defendants were partners or undisclosed principals of Case in the transaction. The nonsuit was properly granted, therefore, and the judgment cannot be set aside unless there was error in the rulings complained of in rejecting evidence offered by the plaintiff, which tended to prove such partnership or agency.

The excluded evidence consisted of (1) an oral statement made to the plaintiff by Case, at the time of the purchase of the tobacco, that he had parties behind him that enabled him to pay cash for it; and (2) the written agreement, *688 Exhibit A, made part of the complaint, which was offered in evidence by the plaintiff. Each of these offers was for the purpose of showing that Case was acting for these defendants, or that they were partners with him in the purchase.

Case’s statement to the plaintiff was made in the absence of the defendants, and, so far as appears, without their knowledge, and was properly excluded. It was inadmissible against these defendants for the purpose of proving that they were either his undisclosed principals or his partners. An agency or partnership cannot be thus proved, as against others than the declarant, by his declarations. Fitch v. Chapman, 10 Conn. 8, 12 ; Butte Hardware Co. v. Wallace, 59 id. 336, 342, 22 Atl. 330 ; Robins v. Warde, 111 Mass. 244, 245. His declarations are mere hearsay as to them. The agency must be proved in some other way before his declarations can be admissible against his principals or associates. The statement was far from being a representation that these defendants, or any one else, were Case’s partners in the purchase, or that he was acting as agent therein for them or any other person. But the authorities cited show that, had he in express terms held himself out to be the partner or agent of the defendants, such representation, in the absence of facts estopping the defendants from denying it, would not be admissible to prove the agency or partnership.

The first paragraph of the complaint is wholly unconnected with any other allegation in the complaint, and is merely impertinent surplusage. Arnold v. Kutinsky, 80 Conn. 549, 550, 552, 69 Atl. 350. The agreement, Exhibit A, was not offered for the purpose of proving the allegations of that paragraph, and, had it been, would have been properly excluded, because it is unnecessary and improper to offer proof of impertinent allegations; but it was offered as tending to prove the allegation of the second paragraph, that the sale to Case was a sale to the defendants, and was *689 claimed, as already stated, as showing that they were his partners or undisclosed principals.

The agreement is too long to be quoted here in full. It purports to be made in consideration of 81 to each of the parties paid by the other, and of an advancement of money to be made by these defendants, parties of the second part, to Case, party of the first part. The first clause reads as follows: “The party of the first part agrees to sell and deliver to the party of the second part, all of the tobacco of the Connecticut and Massachusetts crop of 1905, which are known as ‘Dark Wrappers’ packed at H. L. Miller’s at Southwick, Mass., and L. M. Case packing house, Barkhamsted, Ct., and ‘Seconds’ which have been or shall hereafter be packed or caused to be packed by the party of the first part, at all his warehouses or otherwise, éxcept that part which is packed at the warehouse of the party of the first part, at Pine Meadow, Connecticut, and the price of said tobacco shall be fifteen cents per pound, packing weight, to be paid for by the party of the second part, when the party of the second part shall have examined and accepted same, less the amount of such goods as may be rejected by the party of the second part, and the party of the first part agrees to sell and deliver to the party of the second part all of the tobacco of the Connecticut and Massachusetts crop of 1905, which are known as ‘Top Leaves’ and ‘Fillers,’ which have been or shall hereafter be packed or caused to be packed by the party of the first part, at his warehouses, L. M. Case packing house, Pine Meadow and Barkhamsted, and H. L. Miller, Southwick, Mass., or otherwise, and without exception, the ‘Top Leaves’ at the rate of eight cents per pound on the scale after sweating and sampling and the ‘Fillers’ at the rate of five cents per pound after sweating and sampling, to be paid for after examination and acceptance, less the amount of such goods as may be rejected by the party of the second part.”

*690 The second clause provides that Case shall keep an accurate record of all Connecticut and Massachusetts tobacco purchased by or for him, showing in detail all-“dark wrappers,” “seconds,” “top leaves” and “fillers,” which record is at all times to be open to the inspection of the defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 1065, 82 Conn. 685, 1910 Conn. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coe-v-kutinsky-conn-1910.