D'Armond v. Baker

10 Tenn. App. 28, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 4, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 28 (D'Armond v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Armond v. Baker, 10 Tenn. App. 28, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

On April 9, 1923, Artel D’Armond (colored) executed to James Donaldson his negotiable promissory note for $350, due fourteen months after date, with interest from date, and provisions for ten per cent attorney’s fee. W. F. Holland and W. B. Ladd signed said note as sureties. Said note represented the purchase price of a second hand Republic automobile, truck which Donaldson sold to D ’ Armond.

*29 Prior to December 1, 1924, Donaldson died, and William Baker became the administrator of his estate.

On December 1, 1924, Baker, as administrator, sued D’Armond before a Justice of the Peace on said note. The justice rendered judgment in favor of D’Armond, and Baker appealed to the circuit court. While the case was pending in the circuit court, and on August 5, 1925, D’Armond filed the bill in this cause to restrain the action at law on said note. The bill alleged that said note had been given for the truck; that it had been procured through fraud and misrepresentations upon the part of said Donaldson; that complainant, D’Armond was a negro engaged in the hauling of lumber for hire when Donaldson in selling him the truck represented to him that lie could use it to great advantage and reduce thé cost of his hauling; that he (D’Armond) knew nothing about automobiles and trucks, their value, mechanism, etc., and relied solely and completely upon Donaldson’s -representations to him that said truck was in good condition and would perfrom said work of hauling lumber; that said representations and warranties were, false and fraudulent and were made with the intent and purpose of pawning-off on complainant said truck which was old, worn and worthless and could not be used in said hauling which was the only use complainant had for it; that said truck could not 'be put in condition to do said work; that he undertook to redeliver said truck to Donaldson and procure the return of said note but Donaldson refused to accept said truck and surrender said note, although Donaldson, knowing said note had been procured through fraud, never in his lifetime attempted to collect it; and that said truck had been standing for a great length of time with no one claiming ownership of it, etc. ,

Baker filed an answer denying the allegations of fraud and misrepresentations, warranties, etc., and a cross-bill seeking a recovery of principal, interest and attorney’s fees on said note. The cross-bill also made one of the sureties on said note, Ladd, a party defendant. . The other surety, Holland, was not made a party defendant because he had died, -and the cross-complainant did not know whether any one had ever qualified to administer upon his estate.

D ’Armond and Ladd filed an answer to the cross-bill denying that they were liable on the note and standing on the allegations of fraud, misrepresentations, breach of warranty, etc., contained in the original bill. Later, they filed an' amendment, to their answer and averred:

“That there was no consideration for the execution of the note sued on in the cross-bill in the first instance, but even if there had been any consideration for the execution of said note at the time it was given, there was a failure of such consideration while said note was in the hands of the said James Donaldson, deceased, who *30 was not a holder of said 'note in due course, and these respondents aver that by reason of the want or failure of the consideration for said note sued on, they are in no way liable or indebted to the estate of the said James Donaldson, deceased, by reason of the execution of said note, or otherwise.”

The Special Chancellor who heard the cause made a finding of fact (incorporated in the decree) as follows:

“1. That Artel D’Armond executed and delivered the note sued on in the cross-bill to James Donaldson, deceased, as a consideration for one certain second-hand automobile truck which said D’Ar-mond was undertaking to purchase for the purpose of hauling aiid delivering lumber from near Kingston, Tennessee, to Harriman, Tennessee, so as to fulfill a contract said D’Armond had entered into with one Neergaard for the hauling and delivering of said lumber.
“2. That said D’Armond’s sole purpose in the purchasing of said truck was to transport said lumber pursuant to his contract, and that he had no other use for said truck except for this particular purpose.
”3. That said James Donaldson, deceased, at and before the time he sold the truck, and at the time the note sued on was given, was apprised of and knew the purpose for which said D’Armond wanted and was buying the said truck.
”4. That said truck so sold to said D’Armond was at the time it was sold wholly unfit and unsuitable to do the work of transporting or hauling said lumber, or for fulfilling the purpose for which it was sold.
“5. That said D’Armond when he negotiated for the purchase of said truck and delivered the note sued on was unacquainted and unfamiliar with the workings and mechanisms of automobile trucks, and had no experience in their use and operation.
“6. That there was no warranty either expressed or implied on the part of said James Donaldson, deceased, as to the condition of said truck or its suitability for the purpose of hauling or transporting lumber.
“7. The truck when sold was an old, worn and second-hand truck, and its defects in this respect were patent and apparent to any one.
“8. Before the consummation of the sale of said truck to said D’Armond, the said James Donaldson,.deceased, employed one Roy Leffew to go with him to Kingston, Tenn., to show D’Armond the said truck.
“9. The seller of the truck was not a manufacturer or dealer in trucks.
“10. There is no competent proof of expressed warranties on the part of James Donaldson, deceased, as. to the condition of the truck and its suitability for the purpose of hauling, transporting and delivering said lumber.
*31 “11. The purchaser after buying the truck involved consulted a mechanic and ascertained it was ■ unsuitable for the purpose for which he had bought it, and then attempted to put it in proper working repair, and retained it in his possession.
“The court, applying the law to the foregoing facts as found, dismisses the original bill and dissolves the injunction issued thereunder, and sustains the cross-bill in the case.”

The decree then awarded the cross-complainant, Baker*, administrator, a recovery of $350, principal, interest from April 9, 1923, amounting to $95.20, and $44.52 attorney’s fees — a total of $489.72 and the costs of the cause. The complainants, D’Armond and Ladd, have appealed to this court and have assigned error.

The assignments of error accept the correctness of the first five paragraphs of the finding of fact but challenge the others and the decree thereon.

We might state here that D’Armond testified and that Baker objected to those parts of his testimony which are made incompetent by Shannon’s Code, section 5598.

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161 S.W.2d 1005 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1940)
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Bluebook (online)
10 Tenn. App. 28, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darmond-v-baker-tennctapp-1928.