George Bohon Co. v. Moren & Sipple

152 S.W. 944, 151 Ky. 811, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 572
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 30, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 944 (George Bohon Co. v. Moren & Sipple) 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
George Bohon Co. v. Moren & Sipple, 152 S.W. 944, 151 Ky. 811, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 572 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

The appellant company brought this suit in January, 1911, in the Meroer circuit court against the appellees, Moren and 'Sipple, to recover $902 on account, alleged to be due for buggies sold to Moren and Sipple as partners doing business under the name of Moren & Sipple. Summons on this suit was executed on (Sipple in Meroer county and on Moren in Laurel county. Sipple made no defense but Moren filed an answer pleading to the jurisdiction .in two paragraphs. In the first he pleaded in bar a suit by the same plaintiff against the ©ame defendants on the same account pending in the Laurel circuit court at the time the action .in the Mercer circuit court was instituted. In the second paragraph he averred:

“That at -the time of the institution of this suit the defendant, O. J. Sipple, was a bankrupt; that he was adjudged a bankrupt on the-day of August, 1910, by an order of the United States Court in the Eastern District of Kentucky, and that C. J. Sipple was a bankrupt and known to be such by the plaintiff at the time of the institution of this action. That, in order to get jurisdiction in Mercer county, the plaintiff induced the defendant, C. J. Sipple, who' was then a bankrupt, to go- from his home and residence in London, Laurel county, Kentucky, to Harrodsburg, Mercer county, Kentucky, for the purpose of attempting to get jurisdiction of the defendant, Moren, by serving the defendant, Sipple, with summons in this action when he reached Harrod-sburg, Kentucky, in response to a request made of the ©aid Sipple by the plaintiff. The defendant, Moren, says that he does not live or reside in Meroer county, Kentucky, and did not so reside at the time of the institution of this action, and never resided in Mercer county, Kentucky, but did live and reside in London, Laurel county, Kentucky, and that the service of the summons' herein on the defendant, C. J. Sipple, who was at that time, and is now, a bankrupt, having been adjudged such as herein stated, [813]*813did not give this court jurisdiction over the defendant, T. J. Moren, and he now comes -and pleads these facta as constituting a -bar to- the recovery against him in this action.’

On motion of the Bohon company the court struck out the second paragraph of the answer, and also refused to permit to be filed an amended answer offered by Moren, in which he averred in .substance that the claim sued on accrued before Sipple was adjudged a bankrupt, and that this action was instituted while the bankruptcy proceedings of Sipple were pending’ in the bankrupt court, in which court they were yet pending, and that this action should not be tried until it was determined by the bankrupt court whether or not the defendant, Sipple, was entitled to a discharge in bankruptcy.

Thereafter a reply was filed by the Bohon company to the first paragraph of the answer pleading in bar the pendency of the action in Laurel county. In this reply it was averred, and the record so showed, that the Laurel county ‘suit had been dismissed after the plea in abatement was made, but before the reply was filed. This being so, the plea in bar was not available. Citizens National Bank, v. Forman, 111 Ky., 206.

After these orders had been made, Moren, not waiving hi® plea to the jurisdiction of the .court on account of the bankruptcy proceedings, denied in his answer that he and Sipple were partners in the purchase of the buggies bought by Sipple, or that as partners they bought from the company the buggies, or that the company sold to the firm .of Moren and Sipple as partner® the buggies, or that the firm agreed to become, or did become, liable for the price of the buggies. He further averred that it was agreed between himself, Sipple and the Bohon company that it .should look to Sipple alone for payment of the buggies, and that he should not be responsible for any part of the purchase price thereof. He did not, however, deny that he and Sipple were at the time partners in the buggy business or that the buggies were bought to be sold by the firm.

For reply to this answer the Bohon company, after traversing the material averments, pleaded that at the time it sold and shipped the buggies to Sipple it had no knowledge or information that Moren was a partner of Sipple, although in truth he was a partner, and the buggies were bought to be used in the partnership business, [814]*814and that these facts were fraudulently; concealed from it -by Moren.

With the pleadings in this condition, and taking no account of the legal question arising on the answer setting up the bankruptcy proceedings, the only issues between the parties were: (1) Was Moren a partner of Sipple at the time the buggies were sold and shipped to Sipple, and were the buggies bought by Sipple for the partnership and used in the firm business! (2) Was the fact that they were partners known to the Bohon company, and did it, with knowledge of this fact, agree to look alone to Sipple for payment for the buggies, or did it make the sale in ignorance of the fact that Moren and Sipple were partners?

Upon these issues the parties went to trial before a jury, each of them introducing evidence in support of their respective contentions. The evidence for Moren showed that he and Sipple were partners in the purchase and sale of buggies at the time the buggies in question were bought by Sipple, and that these buggies were bought by Sipple for the partnership and were sold by the firm of Moren and Sipple under the contract of partnership by which Moren was to- receive one-third and Sipple two-thirds of the profits. It further tended to show that jthe Bohon company knew that Moren and Sipple were partners, and that with knowledge of this fact it sold the buggies to Sipple on his credit alone, not intending to look to the firm or to Moren for payment, and that the sale of the buggies to Sipple was an individual transaction between him and the Bohon company.

The evidence for the Bohon company was to the effect that although it sold the buggies to Sipple and took his individual note therefor, it did so under the mistaken impression that Sipple and Moren were not partners, which impression was created by the false and misleading statements of Moren. It further conduced to show that the Bohon company did not have any knowledge or information of the fact that the buggies were bought by Sipple for the partnership -of Moren and Sipple, or that Moren ^and Sipple were partners until some time after the buggies had been sold and delivered to Sipple.

With the issues and evidence in this condition the court instructed the jury in- substance that if they believed -from the evidence that at the time the plaintiff, the George Bohon Company, sold and delivered to the [815]*815defendant, Sipple, the -buggies described in the petition, the plaintiff had no knowledge of the partnership existing between Sipple and Moren, they should find for the plaintiff, and that on the other hand if they believed from the evidence that the Bohon company, at. the time it accepted Sipple’s note for the buggies, knew that the defendants were partners in the buggy business, they should find for Moren.

Under the evidence and instructions the jury found a verdict for the Bohon company, and judgment was entered accordingly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 944, 151 Ky. 811, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-bohon-co-v-moren-sipple-kyctapp-1913.