Giddens v. D. S. Etheridge Co.

2 Tenn. App. 324, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 13, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 324 (Giddens v. D. S. Etheridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giddens v. D. S. Etheridge Co., 2 Tenn. App. 324, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 29 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

The plaintiff, M. J. Giddens, .a minor, by next friend, C. E. Giddens, brought this suit before a justice of the peace to recover of the defendant, D. S. Etheridge Co., Incorporated, what had been paid on a trade for an automobile, to-wit: the value of an old car taken in and certain cash, which together, as was alleged, aggregated the sum of $179.50. He sought to disavow the trade and recover upon the ground of his minority. The justice gave judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $100. The defendant appealed and the cause was heard before the circuit judge without the intervention of a jury, when the circuit judge dismissed the case, under a written finding of facts, and taxed the plaintiff with the costs. There was a motion for a new trial, which, being overruled, the plaintiff perfected an appeal to this court. The circuit judge based his holding upon two grounds; first, that the automobile was such a necessary as that it thus falls within the exception where a minor can bind himself without authority to repudiate; second, that the minor was estopped to deny liability by reason of the fact that he fraudulently represented himself to be twenty-one years of age.

There are but two assignments of error, and they are:

“The trial court erred in the following particulars, to-wit:”
“First: In holding that in view of the circumstances the automobile was a necessary to the plaintiff.”
“Second: In holding that plaintiff was estopped to maintain an action to rescind the trade and recover the purchase money paid by reason of his misrepresenting his age at the time of the contract to be twenty-one (21) years.”

Limiting the investigation to' the assignments, we agree with and sustain them both. Whatever may have been the extension of the rule in other jurisdictions, we think, upon the authority of Grace v. Hale, 21 Tenn. (2 Humph.), 26, that an automobile can not be regarded as a necessary. In that ease a minor, though living with his father, was permitted by his father to possess and cultivate for his own use and benefit about twenty acres of land, jointly with one John Rutledge, and they commenced the crop accordingly. Plaintiff had a horse, which his father had furnished, but which *326 was not fit to use in tilling the farm. He exchanged horses with the defendant, with the view of getting a good work horse. It also appeared that the defendant had gotten much the best horse in exchange, and that the plaintiff requested him to dissolve the contract, and proposed that each should restore to the other his property. This the defendant refused, and thereupon the action was instituted. The judge charged the jury that “if the plaintiff was a minor, liis contract of exchange was viodable at his election; that the question whether the horse procured was or was not ‘a necessary’ in the meaning of the law, was a question of law for the court to determine; that a horse was not in this case to be regarded as ‘a necessary,’ and that the plaintiff, if entitled to recover at all, was entitled to the whole value of his horse, and that the jury had no right to make any equitable adjustment between the plaintiff and defendant.” The jury returned a verdict of $53 for the plaintiff, and this judgment was affirmed. The court said:

“The supposed error in the judgment below which was in favor of the infant and here mostly insisted on, is that the court charged the jury that the question whether necessaries or not, is one exclusively for the court, with which the jury had nothing to dp. In the sense in which this was said the court was certainly correct. It is a matter of law that the necessaries for which an infant may bind himself by contract consist of diet, apparel, washing, lodging, schooling and medicine; but whether within these limits certain articles were in fact necessary, and to what extent, becomes, in the language of Lord Kenyon (1 Esp., 212), a relative fact, to be governed by the fortune and, circumstances of the infant. 8 T. R., 578. But it seems to us that this question did not here arise. The question here is, not for what necessaries and to what extent an infant may make himself liable, but whether an infant can sell or exchange his property.”

It is true that in this case the court said that the question involved is not for what necessaries and to what extent an infant may make himself liable, but whether or not an infant can sell or exchange his property, which they held under the facts in that case that he could no.t do. But the court in that case said further:

“But it is said that the contract of sale or exchange in this case is rendered valid because the horse was, under the circumstances, necessary for the infant. But it has been ruled that if an infant become a shop keeper, and buy goods and wares for the use of his shop, the contract does not bind him. 1 Rol., 729; 2 Cro., 494. If he borrow money, though he after-wards employ it for necessaries, he is not liable to vendor, *327 (1 Rol., 279) or, even, if it were loaned to Mm for the purpose of procuring necessaries, for the vendor ought to provide them. 1 Rol, 386, 387. The sale or exchange, therefore, by parity of reasoning, would not be rendered valid merely because the thing obtained thereby might be necessary. But we are of opinion, also, that in this case the horse procured was not a necessary, within the meaning of the law. . . .”

The case at bar differs, we think, from the case just cited, only in some immaterial particulars. While the minor in this case was boarding with his sister, living east of the ridge on the Bird’s Mill Road some miles distant from his place of employment, and by permission or otherwise was permitted to keep and retain his own earnings, which he received from the Chattanooga Plow Company, a wage of $22 to $24 per week, managing his own affairs and not living with his parents at the time of the transaction, and while the automobile or some other means of conveyance might have been useful, had he continued to reside that far away from the work, to transport him to and from his work, it does not appear to have been a necessity, as he might have obtained board nearer, or there might have been other means more economically suited to get him to his place of employment, or there may have even been no necessity for his working at all.

The fact that he was working and earning his own living, and that the automobile may have been a useful or even a necessary incident thereto, is not what lends inviolability to his contract. It is the fact that the things purchased may be proximately referable under some one of the foregoing heads of diet, apparel, washing, lodging, schooling or medicine. Our courts have not extended this latitude to articles of convenience or pleasure, nor have they allowed any indirect consideration to enlarge the scope of inquiry, or to invest the minor’s contracts with sanctity.

In the ease referred to the court said:

“But it is said the contract of sale or exchange in this ease is rendered valid because the horse was, under the circumstances, necessary to the infant.”

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 324, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giddens-v-d-s-etheridge-co-tennctapp-1926.