E. E. Alley Co. v. Ball

136 So. 704, 102 Fla. 1034
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedSeptember 29, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 136 So. 704 (E. E. Alley Co. v. Ball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. E. Alley Co. v. Ball, 136 So. 704, 102 Fla. 1034 (Fla. 1931).

Opinion

Davis, J.

— This writ of error was taken tp a judgment rendered against the claimant in a claim proceeding had under Section 5283, C. G. L., 3430 R. G. S., and Sections 4517 to 4521 C. G. L., 2830 to 2834 R. G. S. By stipulation the trial was had before the court without a jury, and at the conclusion of the claimant’s evidence the plaintiff in attachment moved the court for a directed verdict. The motion was granted and subsequently a new trial was denied. The appeal presents the question as to whether or not *1036 the court below erred in directing a verdict for the original plaintiff in attachment, J. K. Ball, at the close of the claimant’s case.

Ball’s attachment was issed and levied on November 2, 1929, against certain hotel furnishings alleged to be the property of one R. L. Johnson, the defendant in a suit brought by Ball to recover the sum of $425.30 for labor and materials furnished by the plaintiff who was a contractor. The goods levied upon were in the possession of Johnson, who, as the operator of the Hoffman Hotel at Ocala, had ordered the same on October 16, 1929, from the E. E. Alley Company, the claimant. About the same time Ball, the plaintiff in attachment, had performed certain work and furnished certain material to said R. L. Johnson in connection with improving the hotel properties.

The question involved on the trial was whether or not Ball as an attaching creditor of R. L. Johnson acquired rights to the attached property against the vendor of that property E. E. Alley Company, who undertook to re-take the property under a rescission of its sale of the same to Johnson. The Alley Company claimed the right to rescind on the ground that the sale of the goods attached in Johnson’s hands had been obtained by him by fraud on his part as the purchaser, thereby entitling the seller to revoke the sale and recover the goods while they remained in the hands of such purchaser.

The evidence shows that one Ridgewood Phillips, a travel-ling salesman/ travelling for E. E. Alley Company, a New York house, visited Ocala in 1929 and came in touch with Johnson; that Johnson represented to Phillips in substance that he owned the hotel he was then occupying known as the Hotel Hoffman and also had a long lease on the building behind it. Johnson also stated to Phillips that he had sold a farm in Georgia for $75,000.00 and had $25,000.00 coming in shortly by reason of such sale. These representations were wholly false. Two orders for linens on October *1037 16, 1929, amounting to $75.00 and $42.75, respectively, were taken by Phillips. They were shipped to Johnson on open account. Thereafter on October 23rd, two additional orders were taken by Phillips for similar merchandise which was shipped and billed on open account. These two orders were for $117.75 and $215.18, respectively. On October 29-th an additional small order of $20.50 was placed. All these goods were ordered for use in the hotel.

The plaintiff Ball began his contract work for Johnson before Phillips appeared on the scene and never had any contract with Phillips or E. E. Alley Company. Ball’s work seems to have been under way before the first orders were placed by Johnson with the E. E. Alley Company on October 16th. In accepting -the orders and shipping the merchandise on credit the claimant E. E. Alley Company offered evidence tending to show that it relied upon the information reported by Phillips as coining from Johnson, which information, as we have referred to above, was wholly false. Johnson left Ocala and the State of Florida about the last of October, 1929, in the company of Ball, who drove him to Valdosta where Johnson disappeared. Thereafter he never returned to the State, as the result of which the writ of attachment was sued out by Ball and the claim proceeding of plaintiff in error, the E. E. Alley Company, was instituted.

In Upchurch v. Mizell, 50 Fla. 456, 40 So. 29, this court said:

“A person who buys goods upon credit thereby impliedly, if not expressly, represents that' he intends to pay for them. If, therefore, he -then has no such intention, and a fortiori if he has then a present intention not to pay for them and conceals this fact from the seller, there is such a misrepresentation of a material fact as will entitle the seller to avoid the sale. Phis intention must be one existing at the time of the sale, and not merely one formed after the sale. It may be inferred from the circumstances. 2 Meeham on Sales, Sec. 901-903, and notes.”

*1038 In Hammond v. Lynes, 21 Fla. 118, this Court held that a sale of goods obtained under false and fraudulent representation works no change of property or title while the goods remain in the hands of the purchaser and that such a sale may be avoided by the vendor who is entitled to maintain an action in replevin for his goods.

It seems clear from the testimony to which we have made reference that in the absence of any denial or explanation or rebuttal of same that, under the foregoing authorities, the evidence introduced, and before the court at the time the motion for directed verdict' was made and granted, would have been sufficient to at least have gone to a jury on the trial if the action had been brought by the E. E. Alley Company, the vendor, directly against R. L. Johnson, its alleged fraudulent vendee.

So the question to be decided here is one of law, — that is, whether or not the rights of the attaching creditor Ball were shown by the evidence to be superior to that of the defrauded vendor of such property so as to have warranted the court below in directing a verdict in favor of Ball, the attaching creditor, as against the alleged defrauded vendor, E. E. Alley Company. The court did not itself try the facts or as a trier of the facts find any verdict on the facts. So there is no question except the legal one of the propriety of directing a verdict under the claimant’s evidence.

Although the cause was tried in the court below before the court without a jury, it seems to be recognized in this State that the same procedure should be followed on such a trial as would be applicable if a jury was present. In Manatee County State Bank v. Wade Packing Co., 56 Fla. 492, 47 So. 927, it was held by this Court that the fact that the trial was by the judge without a jury and that the finding and judgment were excepted to does not dispense with the necessity of a motion for a new trial to present in the appellate court the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding and judgment. On the same *1039 theory as that on whieh the foregoing ease was decided, it seems to us that a motion for a directed verdict made on the trial of a cause before the judge without a jury should be governed by the same principles of law and tested by the same considerations as would be applicable to such a motion if a jury was present. If, therefore, it would have been error for the Circuit Court in this ease to have granted the motion for a directed verdict on a question of law had a jury been present, it was likewise error for the court to have granted such motion for a directed verdict where ■the jury was waived.

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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 704, 102 Fla. 1034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-e-alley-co-v-ball-fla-1931.