Fuqua v. Massie & Sons

25 S.W. 875, 95 Ky. 387, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 17, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 875 (Fuqua v. Massie & Sons) 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
Fuqua v. Massie & Sons, 25 S.W. 875, 95 Ky. 387, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 34 (Ky. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

JUDGE PBYOB

delivered the opinion op the court.

The appellants, Euqua & Smith, made this contract with John Massie & Sons: “ "Whereas, Euqua & Smith have secured an order for 400 or 500 hogsheads of strips, to he put up in Owensboro, Ky. Now, in consideration of John Massie & Sons leasing to Euqua & Smith their tobacco factory in the suburbs of the eastern part of Owensboro, and the further consideration of their putting in their services to assist in the purchase and putting up said tobacco, the said Euqua & Smith agree to give them [389]*389(John Massie & Sons) one half interest in the commissions on putting up said tobacco, after paying all expenses.

“ Said Massie & Sons agree that Euqua & Smith shall take the prior leaf and lugs of their purchase already received at cost originally paid by them, and Euqua & Smith are to have the entire charge and management of the purchase and handling of said tobacco ; and they are to assume the outstanding contracts of John Massie & Sons on all prior tobacco they may have contracted for in the county and not yet delivered.”-

This contract was evidenced in writing on the 1st of April, 1889, although entered into shortly before that date. On the 7th of August of that year, Massie & Sons brought this action to recover on the tobacco sold the appellants under the contract, and also the value of some tobacco- they had raised, as well as to recover damages for other breaches of the contract by the appellants, the main breach alleged being the discharge by the appellants of the appellees from their service, and their refusal to allow the appellees to assist in purchasing and putting up the 400 or 500 hogsheads of strips, for which the appellants were to allow the appellees one half the commissions that amounted, as is alleged, to $8,675 — their half.

It is averred, and the proof shows, the appellees were discharged from the service of the appellants on the 18th of May, 1889, long before the tobacco was put up in hogsheads so as to comply with the order, and they are, therefore, claiming their right to the profits upon the terms set forth in the contract; alleging that their discharge ' was without cause, and averring a readiness on their part to comply with the agreement. The defense, or that [390]*390principally relied on, in' regard to the tobacco of the appellees hanging in the barn at the time of the purchase,' is that the tiers of tobacco on the outside of the bam were filled with good tobacco, and on the inside the tiers were filled with an indifferent quality of tobacco; that the tobacco at the time of the purchase was very dry and could be,examined only on the outside, the plaintiffs (appellees) representing that it was all of a like quality, when they knew the tobacco on the inside was of an inferior quality; that the appellants relied on the representations of the appellees as to the quality of the tobacco on the inside of the barn or beyond the front tiers, and made the purchase upon the belief and the representations of the appellees that the tobacco to be seen was a fair average of the quality.

, As to'their refusal to permit the appellees to remain in their service, or to comply with their agreement to fill the order for the 500 hogsheads of tobacco, the appellants say they discovered the appellees, who were receiving and weighing the tobacco as delivered, were knowingly using false weights for the purpose of defrauding their partners or those of whom the purchases had been made, giving them less weights than they were entitled to, etc.

The action was brought at law and transferred to equity, with the affirmative allegations of the answer traversed by the appellees.

The chancellor, upon the hearing, found as to the tobacco in the barn at the time of the purchase, “ that the representations made by the appellees as to the quality were false and fraudulent, and not being in a condition to be examined by the appellants, they relied on the representations of the appellees, and the appellees should ac[391]*391count for the difference in the value as represented and as it was in fact.” lie fixed the value at $3.25 per hundred, and in that conclusion we boncur, it being amply sustained by the testúponj-. The appellants had paid $5,000 on the-tobacco, and at $3.25 per hundred, there was an excess in payment of $1,212.88.

He also adjudged the appellees used false weights, or loaded peas, in weighing and receiving the tobacco, and when .discovered the appellants discharged them and ceased to buy tobacco to be handled in the factory. The ■court further adjudged that the commissions to be paid by Bird & Co. to the appellants, under- the order, were $2.50 per hundred pounds, and as appellants had stemmed or prepared 308,610 pounds, on which they made $3,600.25, the appellees were entitled to one-half.

The court below concluded that the appellees and the appellants had embarked in a joint enterprise, and the interest the appellees had in it was still retained, or not forfeited, by reason of their discharge on account of their fraud and dishonesty in using false weights; that their discharge, however, ended all obligation on the part of the one to the other as to the performance of the contract, and while the appellees were entitled to their half commission, less the cost of putting up the tobacco, they were not liable iii damages to the appellants for a failure to render the personal services agreed upon by the contract.

It is proper to determine first the interest the appellees had in this contract. They were certainly not partners in the tobacco, as the court properly adjudged, nor were they partners in the commissions, but were entitled to a half interest in the commissions as a compensation for [392]*392their services and the use of their tobacco- factory. Their right to the one-half commission depended on the performance of the services they had agreed to render, and failing to render this service, they are entitled to a reasonable rental for the use of their factory so long as appellants used it, and to the value of their services actually rendered, less the damages, if any, the appellants sustained by reason of their abandoning the contract. The pleadings make this issue, and the fact the appellees were ready and willing to perform the service when- properly discharged by the appellants, affords no reason- for denying to the appellants the right to recover for the failure of the appellees to perform the services.

The chancellor, in his judgment below, gives to the appellees either a joint or partnership' interest that can in. no manner be lessened except by deducting the actual, cost of putting up the tobacco, and if this is the proper-version of the contract, ho is undoubtedly right; but we think it manifest that the one-half commission was intended as compensation only for the use of the warehouse and for the personal services to be rendered, and if no-services had been rendered, the only recovery woxild be for the use of the factory, less the damages sustained by-reason of the failure to perform the services.

The appellees had no interest in the tobacco. Their credit was in no Avise involved. They had sold their tobacco to the appellants — not only the tobacco in theA\rarehouse, but that they had purchased and had not been delivered. The appellants had the entire charge and management of the purchase and handling the tobacco, and: the appellees Avere only employes, at one-half of the commission, to be paid when they did AAfhat they agreed to do..

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 875, 95 Ky. 387, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuqua-v-massie-sons-kyctapp-1894.