Gay v. American Trading Co.

215 S.W. 73, 185 Ky. 305, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 10, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 73 (Gay v. American Trading Co.) 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
Gay v. American Trading Co., 215 S.W. 73, 185 Ky. 305, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 290 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

[307]*307Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Reversing upon the direct and affirming upon the cross appeal.

Upon a former appeal of this ease a judgment; upon a settlement of accounts, in favor of the plaintiff, now appellee, for $6,854.40, with costs and interest, was affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cause remanded for a trial upon a reference to the master of two complicated items asserted in appellant’s counterclaim — 179 Ky. 94.

These two items were: (1) $2,484.62 claimed by appellant as a balance due him on a settlement of his accounts for the year 1910, and (2) $1,042.59 on account of 1908 tow destroyed by fire of April 6, 1910.

Upon a trial of these issues, the only ones left open by the former opinion, the chancellor, approving the master’s report, rejected the whole of the first and allowed $924.41 of the second.

Appellant, who was defendant below, on this appeal complains of the rejection of his claim for $1,125.00 for storage, and $537.10 for hauling, in connection with the 1910 crop of hemp-, and plaintiff, by cross-appeal, complains of the allowance of the $924.41 for 1908 tow destroyed by fire.

1. A disputed question with reference to the first of these two matters was whether or not the contract of 1905 referred to in our former -opinion, was continued in force by agreement of the parties for the year of 1910, but we are sure we would not be justified upon the proof in disturbing the findings of the court and master that it was so extended, as is practically conceded by both parties, so this fact must be accepted as established. Based upon this conclusion is plaintiff’s argument that since the contract obligated the defendant to provide storage in consideration of the stipulated commission on each ton of hemp handled, he cannot under the contract claim storage or expense incident thereto, but was entitled to commission only for which he did not sue, and it seems that the commissioner, upon this theory alone, refused the claim for $1,125.00 for storage of the 1910 hemp salvaged from the /fire of April 6, 1910, until the expiration of the contract on December 19, 1910, for he says in his report •‘the commissioner has omitted from the expense on salvaged' hemp to December 19, 1910, the item of storage, [308]*308nine months at $1.25, $1,125.00, as shown on first page of defendant’s exhibit No. 27, for the reason that under the contract the defendant was not entitled to charge storage during the existence of the contract.”

It is quite true that the commission provided for in the contract covered compensation to defendant for the use of his warehouse in Winchester for storage of 1910 hemp, but defendant was not obligated thereby to furnish storage in any event, for by the contract he only leased to the plaintiff his warehouse in Winchester for storage and handling purposes. The contract between the parties, in its essential features, made the defendant the agent of the plaintiff, not only in the purchase of hemp and tow, but also in handling and "caring for it, and when the warehouse, which plaintiff had leased for the purpose and in which its hemp and tow were stored, was destroyed by fire for which defendant was in no wise responsible, it became his duty as agent for the company, to look after and take care of the hemp and tow salvaged from the destroyed warehouse, but certainly not at his own expense even though the contract provided “he shall himself pay all of the expenses of the business so conducted by him as such agent,” as this plainly means the expenses of conducting the business in the warehouse plaintiff leased for the purpose and not in providing a new place for the business when the one furnished by the company was destroyed by fire, an unavoidable and unforeseen casualty not within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made. By the very terms of the contract the burden of furnishing a place in which the business of the plaintiff was to be conducted by defendant as its agent was acknowledged and assumed by the plaintiff. Whether or not he might also have recovered the commissions due him under the terms of the contract we need not decide, as he has made no claim therefor, but certainly under such circumstances he was entitled to be reimbursed for such unforeseen and extraordinary expenses as he necessarily incurred in caring for and storing plaintiff’s hemp and tow after the place provided by it for storage had been destroyed by fire.

It is therefore apparent that the reason assigned by the commissioner', and presumably accepted by the court, for the disallowance of the claim for storage from the time the warehouse was destroyed by fire in April to the [309]*309expiration of the contract in December, a period of nine months, is not a good one. Proof of the destruction by fire of the warehouse which plaintiff had provided for the purpose is sufficient proof of the necessity of providing storage for it, and at its expense, of the salvaged hemp and tow, but as to the value of this storage furnished by the defendant, the proof is conflicting, and as we think the proof justified the master’s conclusion that the storage, after the expiration of the 1910 contract and until the salvaged hemp and tow were sold, was worth fifty cents per ton per month, we think this rate should have been allowed as well for storage for the nine months just before the contract expired. The number of pounds of 1910 hemp' and tow that was. salvaged is fixed by the commissioner’s report at approximately 92 tons, of which about 14 tons were sold during the year 1910, leaving on hand about 78 tons on December 19, 1910. So, accepting these figures as correct and taking one-half of the sum of what was salvaged and what was on hand at the expiration of the 1910 contract, we have 85 tons as the average amount on hand during the nine months, which at fifty cents a ton per month for the nine months makes $382.50 that should have been allowed to the defendant for storage of the salvaged 1910 hemp and tow from the time of the fire until the expiration of the contract.

Counsel for plaintiff, however, insist most earnestly the chancellor’s decision of this question ought not be disturbed under the familiar rule that where upon a question of fact the proof is so conflicting as to leave the mind in doubt his decision will be accepted, but here that rule does not apply, since, as we have seen, the error is one of law as to liability under the contract upon facts about which there is practically no doubt on the testimony and accepting the master’s report, as was evidently done by the chancellor, upon the facts we áre forced to a different conclusion as to liability.

2. Appellant claimed $1,500.00 for expenses in hauling the salvaged 1910 hemp and tow from the burned warehouse to the barns in the country in which he stored it after the fire. The proof shows that with the intention of making a charge for this expense he kept an itemized account of such expenses and this he produced in his evidence, showing an expense of $962.90, which the master allowed him. He testified, however, that in addition to [310]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 73, 185 Ky. 305, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gay-v-american-trading-co-kyctapp-1919.