Doyle v. Offutt

122 S.W. 156, 135 Ky. 296, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 288
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 156 (Doyle v. Offutt) 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
Doyle v. Offutt, 122 S.W. 156, 135 Ky. 296, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 288 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

The appellants are seed -warehousemen, and in July, 1907, the appellee Doyle stored in their warehouse some 600 bushels of wheat. In the. fall of the same year the appellee sold this wheat to a number of farmers, who wanted it for seeding purposes. The farmers to whom the wheat was sold sowed it, and it failed to germinate. Thereupon the farmers brought suits against appellee for damages, and each of them recovered judgment against him for the price paid for the wheat. The suits of the farmers were based on the ground that the wheat was bought to be used [299]*299as seed wheat, and for no other purpose, and that appellee warranted it to be good seed wheat.

In his answer to these various suits, which was in substance a traverse, appellee made his pleading a cross-petition against appellants, averring in the cross-petition: That, when he stored the wheat in the elevator of appellants, he informed them that it was to be sold as seed wheat, and they agreed to store the same in a separate bin or elevator and deliver to him, or the persons to whom he might sell, the identical wheat stored, and also to deliver No. 2 wheat. That in violation of their agreement appellants failed to keep the wheat in a separate bin or elevator and mixed it with other wheat, allowing it to become overheated, and also that they failed to deliver to him No. 2 wheat.

. He also averred that by mistake appellants issued to him the following receipt: “Deceived in store from Ed. Doyle, 601 bushels of wheat, grade No. 2, which we will deliver to Ed. Doyle, or order, upon presentation of this receipt properly indorsed, on payment of charges. This property is held for the owner in store at his risk as to fire or depreciation from any cause. This grain may be mixed with grain of like quality, and may be delivered from any bin containing like quality of grain. ’ ’ And that, when he learned the contents of the receipt, he notified them th{it a mistake had been made in its issual, and they told him to keep the receipt, and they would store his wheat in a separate bin or elevator. He asked judgment against them for the amount of any judgment that might be obtained against him by the farmers who had sued him. To this cross-petition the appellants filed an answer denying all its material allega[300]*300tions, but they did not set up or rely on the receipt as containing the contract between them.

It appears from the record that three of the suits filed by the farmers against appellee were tried before juries without the issues made- by the cross-petition being beard or disposed of, and that after verdicts had been returned in favor of the farmers in these cases the actions of appellee against appellants on his cross-petition in the cases in which the farmers had obtained judgments were by consent consolidated and called for trial at the same term of the court at which the farmers who sued appellee had obtained judgments against him. When the consolidated actions on the cross-petition were called for trial, the appellants moved the court to continue the case or impanel a new jury to try the issues upon the ground that the jurors upon the regular panel had served in trying the issues on the original petition between the farmers and appellee. The court overruled the motion, and the record shows that the panel of jurors who tried the case on the cross-petitions of appellee against appellants was composed, with one exception, of the same persons who sat as jurors in the cases of the farmers against the appellee. We are asked to reverse the verdict in favor of appellee for the alleged error of the court in refusing to continue the case or select new jurors before whom it might be tried, and for error in giving and refusing instructions.

Although the record does not contain, the evidence heard in the cases of the farmers against Doyle, it is entirely probable, and we so assume, that in those cases the juries heard a good deal about the suits pending on the cross-petition of Doyle against Offutt & Blackburn and possibly they formed some opinion [301]*301as to the merits of the case pending between Doyle and Offutt'& Blackburn. The issues in the two cases, however, were very different. In the suits between the farmers and Doyle there were really only two questions in dispute: One, whether the wheat was bought for and represented to be good seed wheat, the other whether or not it germinated; whereas, in the suit between Doyle and Offutt & Blackburn, the issues were first whether or not Offutt & Blackburn agreed to keep the wheat in a separate bin, or so that it would not become heated; and, second, whether or not they committed a breach of this agreement in putting it in bins with other wheat and permitting it to become overheated, and in failing to deliver No. 2 wheat.

But without respect to the similarity or difference in the facts in the cases between the farmers and Doyle, and those between Doyle and Offut & Blackburn, it is a sufficient answer to the argument of counsel to say that the court in its discretion might have directed the actions of Doyle against Offutt & Blackburn to be tried with the suits of the farmers against Doyle. Doyle’s cause of action against Offut & Blackburn was affected by and grew out of the original cause of action against him. If his contention was true, the suits of the farmers against him were caused by the negligence or breach of contract on the part of Offutt & Blackburn. If the court had directed the original cause of action, and the cause of action arising on the cross-petition to be heard at the same time before the same jury, the jurors in place of hearing both cases at different times would have heard both of them together, and it is plain that the effect on their minds would be precisely the same. If the facts they heard in the cases of the farmers [302]*302against Doyle operated to prejudice them in any way against Offutt & Blackburn, it would have affected them the same way if the cases had been heard together. And so we are unable to perceive how Offutt & Blackburn were prejudiced by the ruling of the court.

It is quite common practice for the trial court to order an original cause of action and a cause of action presented by cross-petition to be heard together the same jury; and, although this practice may sometimes operate to the disadvantage of one of the litigants, it will not be ground for reversal unless it is made to appear that in the exercise of a sound discretion the trial court should have ordered separate trials and before jurors who did not sit in the first trial, It is, of course, of the highest importance that jurors wno are called upon to decide issues of fact should be free from bias or prejudice for or against either of the parties to the litigation, and that their minds should be in such condition as to receive, free from former opinions or impressions, the evidence introduced in support of the respective contentions of the parties. But this much-desired end cannot in all cases be obtained; and in trials where cross-petitions are allowable, and the court in the exercise of a sound discretion directs the issues on the original and cross-petition to be heard together, the jurors necessarily hear evidence in one branch of the case that may have a tendency to influence their judgment upon the other.

We may further add that, if a new jury had been impaneled, they would necessarily have learned all about the suits of the farmer's in the trial of the case between Doyle and Offutt & Blackburn.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 156, 135 Ky. 296, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-offutt-kyctapp-1909.