Gimbel v. Hufford

46 Ind. 125
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 Ind. 125 (Gimbel v. Hufford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gimbel v. Hufford, 46 Ind. 125 (Ind. 1874).

Opinion

Buskirk, J.

This was an action by the. appellees against, appellants, to recover the possession of six barrels of whiskey.

There was issue, trial by jury, verdict for appellees, and,, over a motion for a new trial, judgment on the verdict.

The error assigned is for overruling the motion for a new-trial.

The whiskey in controversy was made and originally owned by the appellees, who carried on the distilling business at Uniontown, Kentucky, situate on the Ohio river, some-sixty miles below Evansville, Indiana. On the 20th day of January, 1870, the whiskey was shipped from Uniontown through Richeson & Hatfield, forwarding merchants, to-Humphrey, Lewis & Co., at Evansville, to be forwarded by rail to Vincennes. The barrels were marked “ M. T.” but no bill of lading accompanied the whiskey, or any writing,, indicating who was the consignee, other than said initials. Humphrey, Lewis & Co. received the whiskey January 21st, 1870, and wrote the same day to Richeson & Hatfield to learn the name of the consignee. The latter answered the same day, that the whiskey was shipped by them “per [126]*126account Capt. Jeffries or Hufford & Lytle; M. Thomas, Vincennes, Ind., by rail.” On January 22d, 1870, the whiskey reached the railroad depot of Vincennes, with nothing accompanying, excepting said initials, to indicate the consignee. The depot agent, Agnon, wrote the same day to Humphrey, Lewis & Co., to learn the name of the consignee, and in reply was directed to deliver it to M. Thomas as owner. On the 25th of January, 1870, a stranger called on appellants at their store in Vincennes. He claimed to be “ M. Thomas” and agent for the appellees, and proposed to sell them six barrels of whiskey then lying in the railroad depot. He exhibited a sample of the whiskey and bill of lading for same, issued to Richeson & Hatfield, as consignees. Appellants were wholesale liquor dealers at the time, and agreed to take the whiskey at one dollar per gallon, if it agreed with the sample. The stranger then had a drayman to bring the whiskey from depot to appellants’ store and there consummated the sale, receiving one dollar per gallon, and gave appellants a bill of sale receipted by him as agent for appellees. There was no person living or doing business in Vincennes on or before January 25th, 1870, by the name of M. Thomas. The person claiming to be M.. Thomas disappeared from Vincennes, after making sale of said whiskey, and has not been heard of since. It is very obvious that the appellants at the time of the sale believed that the person who represented himself to be M. Thomas was the person he represented himself to be, and had no knowledge then of Capt. Jeffries, or of his having any thing to do with the whiskey. After the sale and before the bringing of the suit, the appellees demanded of the appellants the whiskey, who refused to deliver the same.

On the trial, the appellees claimed and submitted evidence tending to prove that one Capt. Jeffries, who had been stopping a few weeks at Uniontown, showed them a letter purporting to be from M. Thomas, a wholesale liquor dealer at Vincennes, Indiana, inquiring where he could buy six bar[127]*127rels of copper distilled whiskey; that Jeffries represented Thomas to be responsible; that appellees, wanting to start a trade in Vincennes, shipped the whiskey in suit to Vincennes, marked “ M. T.;” that Jeffries followed the whiskey to Vincennes, and claiming to be M. Thomas, sold the whiskey to appellants; and that the sale was without appellees’ authority and made under circumstances sufficient to put appellants .upon inquiry as to Jeffries’ right to sell.

The appellants, on the other hand, claimed on the trial that the proof would fail to show that it was Jeffries who sold the .whiskey to them; that the proof would fail to show that the person who sold them the whiskey was not M. Thomas; that the proof would fail to show any bad faith or want of caution or prudence on their part; that the appellees had previously sold and delivered the whiskey to Jeffries, and that they had purchased in good faith and for value; that if they failed to prove an actual sale to Jeffries, the appellees were estopped from asserting any claim to the whiskey, because they had intrusted the party selling to them, whether Jeffries, Thomas, or some other person, with the bill of lading for the whiskey, and upon the faith of it and the party’s possession of the whiskey, the appellants had bought the whiskey in good faith and without notice of any fraud on the part of the person selling; that as the appellees had enabled the person selling to them to practise a fraud and deception upon innocent persons, they should suffer the loss, rather than the appellants, who had acted in good faith and with reasonable caution and prudence.

Having thus given the material facts in this unusual and peculiar case, as shown by the record, we proceed to the examination of the errors complained of.

On the trial of the cause, the appellees offered to read in evidence a copy of a bill of lading and the deposition of Hatfield in connection therewith. The appellants objected, because no legal excuse had been shown for failing to produce the original. The depositions of the appellees had already been read, to the effect that they had shipped the [128]*128whiskey to M. Thomas. The court overruled the objection, and the matter objected to was read over appellants’ exception. The appellee Lytle afterward testified on the trial that he had then in his possession at Uniontown, Kentucky, the original bill of lading, shown by copy in Hatfield’s deposition above mentioned. The appellants thereupon moved the court to exclude from the consideration of the jury such copy. The court overruled the motion, and the appellants again excepted. Both these rulings were-assigned as reasons for a new trial.

The evidence was material. It was important to theappellees as tending to prove that the shipment was in fact made by them to M. Thomas, and that Jeffries had no right to interfere with the whiskey. The evidence, in the light of' other evidence, was material and must have had influence with the jury. The copy of the bill of lading admitted over objection of appellants shows a shipment by the steamer- " Quickstep,” and has the words in it “ To be forwarded to M. Thomas, Vincennes, Ind., by rail, per account Hufford & Lytle.” The copy of bill of lading furnished by Richeson & Hatfield to Humphrey. Lewis & Co., the next day after the shipment, shows a shipment by the steamer Fayette, omits the name of M. Thomas and Hufford & Lytle, and simply has the words, “Tobe forwarded by rail.” Kerney swore the whiskey was received from the steamer Fayette. Hatfield in his first deposition says that Jeffries had nothing to do with the shipment of the whiskey. Richeson & Hatfield’s letter, written January 21st, says the whiskey was shipped per account of Jeffries or Hufford & Lytle. Hatfield’s second deposition shows that Jeffries was present and directing the shipment.

Counsel for appellees insist that the copy was properly admitted,and refer us to the case of Thom v. Wilson’s Ex'r, 27 Ind. 370.

In that case the court say: “ It was also objected that the • contract itself was not produced, but only a copy. The appellees requested the witness to file the original, but as [129]*129the paper was the property of the witness, and he was beyond the jurisdiction of the court, the copy furnished and made a part of the deposition was sufficient.”

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Related

Lakin v. Duncan
180 N.E. 676 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1932)
Kelley v. Weber
9 Abb. N. Cas. 62 (New York Supreme Court, 1880)
Nichol v. McCalister
52 Ind. 586 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ind. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gimbel-v-hufford-ind-1874.