E. M. Brash Cigar Co. v. Wilson

1911 OK 463, 121 P. 223, 32 Okla. 153, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1911
Docket1186
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1911 OK 463 (E. M. Brash Cigar Co. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. M. Brash Cigar Co. v. Wilson, 1911 OK 463, 121 P. 223, 32 Okla. 153, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 234 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

*154 Opinion by

HARRISON, C.

In April, 1908, J. H. Barlow, one of the defendants herein, brought suit in the county court of Pottawatomie county against the Peerless Cigar Company of Toledo, Ohio, a corporation, for the sum of $512.46, for commissions and salary, alleged to be clue him from said company as sales agent. Simultaneous with the filing of the suit, he instituted attachment proceedings and attached ten separate shipments of cigars then in the possession of the Wells Fargo Express Company, at Shawnee, Okla., which cigars were alleged to be, and were attached as, property of the Peerless Cigar Company of Toledo, Ohio. Thereafter, on application of J. H. Barlow, an order of sale was procured from the court, and said-goods sold by the sheriff of Pottawatomie county and purchased by J. PI. Barlow. On May 16th J. H. Barlow obtained judgment against the Peerless Cigar Company of Toledo, Ohio, in the sum of $512.46. On May 13th E. M. Brash Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa., claiming that the Peerless Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa., and the E. M. Brash Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pai, are one and the same company, filed suit in replevin against W. PI. Wilson and E. A. Pierce, claiming the cigars in question as their own, and took possession of same.

To the petition of plaintiff, W. PI. Wilson and E. A. Pierce each filed his separate answer, denying generally the allegations in the petition; Wilson answering further that he held the goods as bailee of J. PI. Barlow; and E. A. Pierce answering that he had sold the goods, pursuant to order of court, as sheriff of Pottawatomie county.' Also, about this time, J. PI. Barlow, claiming said cigars by virtue of his purchase at sheriff’s sale, was allowed to intervene and set up his claim to the property.

Thereafter plaintiff, E. M. Brash Cigar Company, filed separate reply to answers of W. PI. Wilson and E. A. Pierce and separate answer to J. PI. Barlow’s petition in intervention. Some amendatory pleadings were afterward filed, and the case finally went to trial on the question whether the cigars belonged to1 the E. M. Brash Cigar Company or to J. PI. Barlow, by virtue of his purchase at sheriff’s sale of the goods attached as the property *155 of the Peerless Cigar Company of Toledo, Ohio; J. H. Barlow, the intervener, contending that he was sales agent for the Peerless Cigar Company of Toledo, Ohio, and the goods in question were goods shipped to Shawnee by the Peerless Cigar Company, of Toledo, Ohio, in fulfillment of orders taken from retail merchants and sent in by him to said company, and that, said company being indebted to him for salary and commission, payment of which had been refused, he had attached their property to satisfy his claim against them.

On the other hand, the E. M. Brash Cigar Company con- • tended that it was the owner of the cigars in question; that it had a contract or agreement with the Peerless Cigar Company of Toledo, Ohio, whereb)' said company should sell the E. M. Brash cigars, and that in all cases where the said Peerless Cigar Company of Ohio made sale of the cigars of the E. M. Brash Company, such sales should be made C. O. D., and that the title ■ to the goods should, in all cases, remain in the E. M. Brash Company until they were paid for, and that the cigars in question were goods which had been sold by the Peerless Cigar Company of Ohio under this agreement, and that at the time the goods were attached at Shawnee they were then in the possession of the express company, had not been paid for by consignees, or delivered to consignees, and therefore belonged to the E. M. Brash Company.

On November 16, 1909, upon the issues thus joined, a jury having been impaneled, the cause went to trial. At the close of the testimony, counsel for plaintiff and intervener each moved the court for an instruction in his favor. The court instructed in favor of the intervener, and, a verdict being returned in accordance therewith, 'judgment was rendered in favor of inter-vener and against plaintiff for the return of the property in question, and, in the event return of the property could not be made, judgment for $479.77, and damages, in case the property should be returned, in the sum of $239.8S. Motion for new trial was overruled, and cause brought here on appeal.

*156 There is but one question here for determination. That is whether the court erred in instructing the,jury to return a verdict in favor of the intervener, and this depends upon whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant the instruction.

It is contended by counsel for plaintiff in error and conceded by counsel for defendants in error that, where goods are consigned on a condition that they are to be paid for before delivery to the consignee, the title remains in the consignor until the conditions are complied with. This we believe to be' the established rule of law, and we must therefore look to the evidence herein to ascertain whether this rule is applicable to the case at bar, or whether, under the evidence, the rights of .the parties hereto are properly determined by this rule.

Mr. C. N. Davenport, agent for the Wells Fargo Express Company at Shawnee, testified that the goods in question, consisting of ten separate consignments or shipments, were received at his office; that before they were delivered to the consignees they were taken charge of by the officers under attachment proceedings; that they -were shipped under instructions to collect on delivery; that the money was to be returned to the Peerless Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa.; that his records showed that each of said shipments was from the Peerless Cigar Company at Lancaster, addressed to the consignee, C. O. D., amount of shipment; and testified in detail to date, amount, and name of consignee in each shipment. A copy of his record — that is, the record of the express office — was introduced in evidence by the intervener and made a part of the record here. This record shows, under the column “From Whom and Where,” that each of the ten shipments in question came from the Peerless Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa., giving the name of the consignee in each shipment and amount to be collected on each shipment. The witness, on cross-examination, stated that there was nothing in the information he had as to where the goods were loaded on for shipment, or whether loaded by the Peerless Cigar Company of Toledo, Ohio, or the Peerless Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa.; nor had he any information as to where the Peerless *157 Cigar Company was located, only that he was to return the money collected on these shipments to the Peerless Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa.

E. M. Brash testified by deposition that he was secretary and treasurer of the E. M. Brash Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa.; that the E. M. Brash Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa., and the Peerless Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa., were one and the same; that the Peerless Cigar Company of Lancaster, Pa., was neither a corporation nor a copartnership, but merely a trade-name adopted by the E. M.

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 463, 121 P. 223, 32 Okla. 153, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-m-brash-cigar-co-v-wilson-okla-1911.