G. C. Heberling Co. v. Clark

90 S.W.2d 77, 262 Ky. 324, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 24, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 77 (G. C. Heberling Co. v. Clark) 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
G. C. Heberling Co. v. Clark, 90 S.W.2d 77, 262 Ky. 324, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 29 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This action was brought by the appellant, Gr. C. Heberling Company, in the Carter circuit court against one Martin Shearer, as principal, and the appellees, Clark and Hensley, as guarantors, to recover its account of $553.90 owing for merchandise sold to Shearer under a contract providing a guaranty of payment therefore by the appellees.

The plaintiff, here the appellant, by its petition, alleged that it entered into a written contract with the defendant Shearer and his codefendants, Clark and Hensley (here the appellees), by which it agreed to sell and deliver certain therein described merchandise to Shearer at wholesale prices and in consideration of which he and the appellees, Clark and Hensley, had signed the contract expressly guaranteeing Shearer’s payment of the merchandise sold him thereunder; that, pursuant to the contract, it had sold and delivered Shearer merchandise in the amount of $553.90, for which he had failed and refused to pay it, and for which amount it sought recovery against Shearer and his co-defendants, Clark and Hensley, as guarantors of the account.

Upon call of the case for trial, Shearer introduced no defense, but permitted default judgment to be taken against him in the amount sued for. His codefendants, Clark and Hensley, filed separate answer, wherein they denied duly signing the contract, “except as hereinafter stated,” and further affirmatively pleaded that, although they had signed the contract, their signatures thereto had been obtained by the plaintiff’s agent through fraud and misrepresentation, which deceived them into believing that the contradi provision signed by them was only one recommending Shearer as trustworthy and not one guaranteeing his payment of the goods sold him. Further they pleaded that, upon discovering the fraud practiced upon them, they at once notified plaintiff that they would not be bound under the contract.

*326 Replies were filed, putting in issue the appellees* plea of fraud, and further pleading that, even if defendants had been overreached by the agent in obtaining! their signatures to the contract, after it had duly notified them of the true nature of the contract, they had ratified the same.

The affirmative matter of the reply was by agreement controverted of record.

Upon the later call of the case for trial, it appears from the bill of exceptions that appellees’ counsel, in his opening statement to the jury, told it that Shearer had entered into the contract sued on with the appellant, and that, although the appellees, Clark and Hensley, had also signed it with him, they had been induced to do so through being made to believe, by the fraudulent representations at the time made them by plaintiff’s agent, that they were only signing’ a character recommendation for Shearer, when in fact the contract so signed was not of such nature, but one providing that they were to guarantee payment for the merchandise sold Shearer thereunder.

Thereupon, without a ruling of the court being asked as to who had the opening and closing of the case or as to upon whom rested the burden of proof, plaintiff proceeded to call his witness Shearer, who testified to signing the contract sued on and to permitting default judgment to go against him for the amount of his account owing thereunder. Plaintiff then offered to prove the signatures of appellees to the guaranty provision of the contract, when proof thereof was waived by them and their signatures admitted. Also it offered proof of default judgment having been previously entered in the case against Shearer, when appellees also admitted its entry and waived proof of same. Thereupon plaintiff rested, when appellees, without introducing any evidence in support of the affirmative allegation of the answer, pleading fraud in confession and avoidance of liability under the contract admitted signed by them, moved the court to peremptorily instruct the jury for them, which motion was sustained and a verdict accordingly returned by it, upon which judgment was entered dismissing appellant’s petition.

Plaintiff’s motion and grounds for a new trial having been duly filed and overruled, it has appealed.

*327 The only question, appellant submits, here addressed to the court is as to the challenged propriety of the trial court’s sustaining, under the circumstances stated, the appellees’ motion for a directed verdict, when plaintiff had introduced sufficient proof in support of its petition, aided by the admission of appellees, to make out a prima facie case for it, requiring its submission to the jury, and especially when appellees had altogether failed to maintain the burden of proof imposed on them by the introduction of any evidence whatever in support of their affirmative defense of fraud.

It is shown by the record that appellees by their answer made no direct general denial of having signed the contract’ sued on, but only qualifiedly denied that they “duly signed! same except as hereinafter stated,” and which exception, pleaded in the next paragraph, was to the effect that they were induced to sign the guaranty contract through the fraud of plaintiff’s agent in representing that the contract they were asked to sign was one only recommending Shearer’s character as trustworthy and not one of guaranty. Clearly this affirmative plea of fraud, in effect one of confession and avoidance, imposed on defendants the burden of proving that they had been so fraudulently induced to sign the contract. The rule is well settled that the burden of proving the affirmative defense of fraud practiced in procuring a signature to a contract rests upon him pleading it. Clearly the assertion of appellees’ counsel, made in his opening statement to the jury, that fraud had been practiced on- the defendants, did not constitute evidence tending to support such claim, in the absence of an agreement that it might be so considered. Further, the practice of fraud by plaintiff’s agent in obtaining defendants’ signatures to the contract was expressly denied and put in issue by plaintiff’s reply. Further, plaintiff, in addition to pleading the contract sued on was madfe with and signea by Shearer and the appellees as guarantors and trareversing appellees’ plea of fraud employed in procuring their signatures to the contract, introduced proof in support thereof, as hereinabove set out, sufficient to establish a priina facie case. After plaintiff had thus made out a prima facie case by its pleadings, supporting proof and admissions of defendants, made as stated, the defendants were clearly not entitled to the peremp *328 tory instruction moved for and granted them by the court. Clearly the court erred in directing a verdict for the appellees, when no, evidence whatever had been introduced by them to maintain the burden of proving the affirmative defense pleaded, that their signatures to the contract sued on had been procured by fraud and upon such ground were entitled to avoid the liability otherwise incurred by them in having signed the guaranty contract. The rule is that, where there is a disputed question of fact on a material issue, as was here thus presented, the only principle upon which a directed verdict can be sustained is that, there was a waiver, either expressed or implied, of the right to go to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 77, 262 Ky. 324, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-c-heberling-co-v-clark-kyctapphigh-1936.