Denton v. White

4 S.W.2d 412, 223 Ky. 640, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 400
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 9, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 412 (Denton v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denton v. White, 4 S.W.2d 412, 223 Ky. 640, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 400 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Reversing.

In July, 1926, the appellant and the appelleeentered into a contract whereby the appellee was to convey to the appellant a farm of 91 acres he owned in Allen county, Ky., and the appellant was to convey to the appellee therefor a vulcanizing plant and *641 the equipment of an oil and gasoline service station, which the appellant owned and operated in connection with a tire business he was conducting in Bowling Green. In addition to the vulcanizing plant and this equipment, appellant was also to transfer the agencies under which he was then selling the Gates and Miller automobile tires to the appellee, and to pay the latter $250 in cash. By this same contract, it was further provided that the appellant was to sell to the appellee, and the latter was to buy from the former, the tires and other stock of merchandise which appellant then had in his store, at the invoice price of the same. This contract was later duly executed. The invoice of the tires and stock of merchandise came to $1,828.50. The appellant, instead of paying the appellee the $250 in cash called for by the contract, gave the latter credit by this amount on the invoice price of the stock, leaving the net sum of $1,578.50 due from the appellee to the appellant.

■When the appellee came to convey the farm in Allen county to the appellant, it was discovered that there was a $600 mortgage on it, which it was not convenient for the appellee to remove, and so the appellant agreed to assume it. This assumption by the appellant made the appellee indebted to the former on this trade in the sum of $2,178.50. The appellee executed his three notes to the appellant in the aggregate sum of $2,100, secured by a mortgage on the vulcanizing plant and equipment which the appellant had conveyed to him. The appellee agreed to pay the appellant the balance of $78.50 in cash. The appellee then took possession of the store and business, and ran it until the early part of August, when he brought suit against the appellant to rescind the contract and conveyances above mentioned on the ground of fraud. A few days after the appellee filed his suit, the appellant filed this suit on his three notes executed by the appellee. Later the appellant filed an amended petition, setting up certain items which he claimed the appellee owed him in addition to the three notes, and which we shall mention more in detail hereafter. By agreement the two suits were consolidated.

In his answer to the suit instituted by the appellant, the appellee abandoned his claim for a rescission, and in lieu thereof asserted a counterclaim in the sum of $2,500 on account of a breach of the contract arising out *642 of the fraud which he had relied on as basis for his suit for a rescission. On final hearing the lower -court adjudged that there was no fraud in the transaction, gave the appellant a judgment for the notes on which he had sued, dismissed his amended petition, and gave the appellee judgment on his counterclaim in the sum of $1,100. From so much of the judgment as dismissed his amended petition, and as awarded the appellee a judgment on his counterclaim, the appellant appeals.

At the time the parties were negotiating their contract, the appellee and the appellant invoiced the vulcanizing plant and the equipment which were to be the subject of the trade. The appellant dictated to the appellee, who wrote them down on a piece of paper, the items of the invoice and the value which he (the appellant) placed on these items. The total value of these items" was $3,050. Underneath this total there was written, “$500 each for Grates and Miller tire agencies.” In the list of the equipment appeared this item: “$600, tools and underground tanks.” The evidence shows that the appellant had bought this plant and equipment in the preceding November for the sum of $2,500, and that he had thereafter added to the plant a boiler and other' equipment, bringing the total cost of this plant to him up to $2,660. It thus appears that, aside from the estimate put on the Grates and Miller tire agencies, the value of the plant and equipment as itemized approximated very closely to what the plant and equipment had cost the appellant. The evidence also shows that at the time of this trade the appellee’s farm was not worth, at the outside, in excess of $1,500.

The fraud upon which the appellee relied as a basis for his claimed rescission, and later for his counterclaim, was based on three grounds: First, that the appellant had agreed that the property was to be transferred to him free from incumbrances, and that it was not; secondly, that appellant represented to him that the item '“tools and underground tanks” covered two underground tanks on the outside of the building, and ten oil tanks inside the building, whereas appellee got only one underground tank and two inside oil tanks; and, thirdly, that the appellant did not own the Grates and Miller agencies and had no right to transfer them.

So far as the first ground is concerned, there is absolutely no merit in it. At the time the transfer under *643 this contract took place, about half of July had expired. The appellant at that time owed about $700 of current bills, which were not payable until the 10th of the following month. These bills were later paid when they fell due by the appellant. It seems to be the appellee’s idea that under our sales in bulk statute (Kentucky Statutes, sec. 2651a-l et seq.) there was a lien on all this property running to the current creditors of the appellant, for which reason he could not and did not transfer this property free from lien. As a matter of fact no creditor ever asserted any claim against any of this property. Under the sales in bulk statute, if any lien arose against this property, it was due to the appellee’s own fault, because this statute makes it the duty of the vendee to procure from the vendor a list of his creditors, and to withhold enough of the purchase price to secure such creditors, failing which the creditors have a right to go against the property transferred. Thus we see that, if any lien arose against this property, it arose because the appellee failed to procure from the appellant a list of his creditors, and failed to withhold enough of the purchase price to satisfy them. Plainly this was due to no fault of the appellant, and the appellee cannot rely upon it as a ground either for rescission or for a counterclaim. Further, as the appellant promptly paid these creditors when their bills fell due, any lien which arose against the property was discharged, and appellee has suffered no damage thereby.

■So far as the second ground is concerned, although the appellant disputes it, the evidence sustains the finding of the trial judge that the contract included two outside underground oil tanks and the oil tanks inside the-building which appellee claimed, but never got. The evidence, however, shows that the value of these missing' tanks, both outside and inside, was not in excess of $100. The appellee makes some contention that the value of $600 placed on the item in the invoice covering these “tanks and tools,” shows that the parties agreed between themselves on a much higher valuation than the evidence discloses the missing tanks were worth, since the major part of that item was for the tanks, and not the tools.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 412, 223 Ky. 640, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denton-v-white-kyctapphigh-1928.