Commonwealth v. Parlin & Orendorff Co.

80 S.W. 791, 118 Ky. 168, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 10, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 80 S.W. 791 (Commonwealth v. Parlin & Orendorff Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Parlin & Orendorff Co., 80 S.W. 791, 118 Ky. 168, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 25 (Ky. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE O’REAR

reversing.

This is a penal action, under section 11 of the Criminal Code of Practice, against appellee company, a corporation, for the alleged violation of section 571, Kentucky Statutes 1903. It is charged that appellee carried on business in this State, in Todd county, without first having filed in the office of the Secretary of State the statement required by section 571; giving the name of an agent, and location of his place of-business, where* process could be had upon him for the corporation. At the close of the evidence for the Commonwealth, the court peremptorily instructed the jury to find' the defendant not guilty. This appeal involves the determination of whether there was any evidence tending to establish appellee’s guilt.

Appellee is an Illinois corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of farm implements and vehicles. One Leander Gates, of the firm of .Glenn & Gates, dealers in such implements at Kirkmansville, in Todd county, was introduced as a witness for the State, He testified that his firm, within a year before the beginning of this proceeding, had in their custody a lot of buggies, wagons, and farm implements, the property of appellee, which they, as agents for appellee, were offering to sell, and thát they had sold some of them, although the witness could not recollect and would not undertake to [172]*172detail any transaction where an actual sale had occurred within the year. The witness was asked whether his contract with appellee was in writing. He answered that it was. Upon being requested, he produced what he said was understood to be a copy of it. He would not say, however, that it was a copy, or whether he had ever compared it with the original. The original contract was not produced, nor was its absence! accounted for, nor was a notice served upon appellee to produce it. The objection of appellee to the introduction of the alleged copy was' therefore properly sustained.

It is argued that, as the contract between appellee and its agents Glenn & Gates was not proven, the Commonwealth failed to establish its case. We think not. The terms of the contract do not appear to us to be at all material to this, prosecution. The fact that Glenn & Gates conducted appellee’s business in Todd county, in this State, within a year before the beginning of the prosecution, by selling or offering to sell thejr wares at an established place of business, and not as drummers — the wares being stored and kept at the agents’ place of business — was enough to sustain the prosecution. What appellee was to pay its agents for their services, or how, or when, or at what prices the goods were to be sold, does not appear to us to be material in this case. The copy of the contract above alluded to, if it is a copy, would be relevant only as indicating whether Glenn & Gates were agents of appellee in the sale of the goods, or whether they wei’e themselves purchasers of the goods; the contract alluded to being the evidence of the terms of the sale, securing to appellee payment of the selling price of the goods. The latter seems to be appellee’s version of what the contract is. The contract — at least, the purported copy — is as follows :

[173]*173“Agency Contract.”

“This agreement, made and entered into this' second day of October, 1901, by and between Parlin & Orendorff Company, of St. Louis, Missouri, first party, and Glenn & Gates, of Kirkmansville, Kentucky, second party;

“Witnesseth: Said first party does hereby appoint said party its agent for the receiving, keeping and selling in its behalf, of such goods as are designated, in the price list hereto attached, such agency to continue until the first day of January, 1903, unless sooner, terminated by the said first party. ' .

“Said first party agrees to furnish to the said second party any such goods mentioned in the price list hereto attached as may be ordered by said second party during the continuance of this agency, upon the following terms and conditions, viz.:

“Said second party shall, at his own expense, keep all goods shipped by first party under this contract, insured against loss by fire, to the benefit of said party, to an amount not less than two-thirds of the invoice price of the goods so shipped, while in his custody, and shall safely house or store, and keep free from taxes or other charges to said first party, all such goods, and shall be responsible for saidl goods, and for all damages to said goods while in his possession. First party is to have insurance issued, send invoice for cost of same to second party, who agrees to remit for the expenses of same immediately upon the receipt of such invoice.

“Said second party is to have the exclusive sale in Kirkmansville, Kentucky, of all implements, manufactured by the first party, as shown by the list hereto attached, during the continuance of this contract, and is not to handle any other goods of such classes manufactured by any party other than the first party.

“All goods shipped to said agent under this contract will [174]*174be invoiced to him at a certain price to be agreed upon at the time of such order, and such agent to sell said goods as far as possible for cash, and when sale can not be made for cash, In no cáse shall the time of payment of any note extend beyond January first, 1903. He shall take the notes only of parties of well-known responsibility and good reputation, for the payment of their debts in the locality where they reside; and the saidl first party reserves the right at any time to reject any note taken by agent, in case it shall' not be deemed good by the first party, in which event said second party agrees to take up said note in cash or in commercial paper satisfactory to said party.

“Said second party is to see that all the implements are properly set up, and is to deliver no goods until settled for by cash or notes taken on blanks furnished by first party, duly filled out, without alteration or erasures.

“Said second party agrees to keep all moneys and notes received on said sales separate and apart from other transactions, and to remit the full invoice price of all goods sold in cash or note to said first party, first endorsing each note in the following form, viz.: For value received, I hereby promise to pay the within note at maturity or any time thereafter, or any renewals of the same, and hereby waive protest, demand and any notice of nonpayment thereof.

“Any notes turned over to first party by second party that shall remain unpaid sixty days after maturity, are to be taken up by said second party. This contract is to be a full guarantee for the payment of all notes turned over to first party by second party and a failure of said agent to endorse said note shall not affect this guarantee. Said second party agrees to defend and collect said notes without expense to said first party.

“The ownership of all goods under this contract shall re[175]*175main in said first party until sold in the usual course. of trade by said agent, and the proceeds of all sales of goods to the amount of the invoice price thereof, whether in cash, notes or accounts, shall at all times be the property of the said first party. Settlement between parties to be made on the first of each month for all goods sold during the previous month, and remit proceeds of all sales for goods furnished under this contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 S.W. 791, 118 Ky. 168, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-parlin-orendorff-co-kyctapp-1904.