Gordon v. Kentucky Midland Coal Co.

278 S.W. 56, 152 Tenn. 367
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1925
Docket13
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 56 (Gordon v. Kentucky Midland Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Kentucky Midland Coal Co., 278 S.W. 56, 152 Tenn. 367 (Tenn. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The hill in this cause was filed by complainants L. M. Cordon and W. D. Cordon, doing business as the Cordon Coal Company, against the defendant, Kentucky Midland Coal Company (a corporation), with its situs and place of business located at Central City, Ky., to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract in the delivery of coal alleged to have been purchased by complainants of defendant in September, 1916.

The bill alleged that in September, 1916, complainants purchased from the defendant one hundred cars of coal, to be delivered as ordered; that defendant breached its said contract, in that it delivered only seven cars of the coal purchased from it, and refused or failed to deliver' the balance, and the bill sought a recovery of the defendant for the sum of $9,300, which complainants alleged they sustained as damages by reason of the alleged breach of said contract by defendant.

The bill also made the Southern Coal Company, J. R. Collins, and S. H. Fraser defendants, and alleged that they were indebted to the defendant, Kentucky Midland Coal Company, in the sum of $-, and defendant sought to and did attach by garnishment the fund in their hands owing to the defendant, Kentucky Midland *370 Coal Company, that the same might be subjected to the satisfaction of any recovery that might be decreed against the coal company.

The defendant, Kentucky Midland Coal Company, answered the bill, and denied that it had entered into with complainants the contract alleged in the bill, and averred that, if he did make such a contract with complainants, complainants breached said contract and thereby relieved defendant from any liability, and it denied that it was liable to complainants for any amount whatever, but that complainants were indebted to it in the sum of $69.55 for a car of coal shipped and delivered to them on October 9,1916.

The other defendants answered the bill, and admitted that the Southern Coal Company (Collins and Fraser being officers of said company) was indebted to the Kentucky Midland Coal Company at the time of the service of the attachment by garnishment on them in the sum of $15,112.12.

While the cause was pending the Kentucky Midland Coal Company moved for permission to file a replevy or refunding bond in lieu of the fund owing to it and attached in said cause, and to have said fund released and paid over to it. This motion was granted, and said defendant filed a refunding bond in the sum of $12,000 with the National Surety Company as its surety thereon

Proof was taken, and the cause was tried before the chancellor, who was ■ of the opinion that complainants were not entitled to any of the relief sought. He therefore dismissed the bill and taxed them with the costs of the cause.

*371 The answer filed by the Kentucky Midland Coal Com pany having been, by agreement of the parties, treated as a cross-bill in so far as said coal company sought to recover for the price of one car of coal shipped to complainants, the chancellor rendered a decree in favor of said defendant and against complainants for the sum of $69.55; that amount being the price of the car of coal shipped, and for which complainants were indebted to said defendant.

Complainants’ hill having been dismissed, and it having been adjudged by the chancellor that complainants were not entitled to the writ of attachment for which they prayed, which had theretofore issued in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and it appearing that the aggregate of the premiums paid by defendant, Kentucky Midland Coal Company, to the National Surety Company for the replevy or refunding bond made, together with interest, was $984, and that the premiums paid were, the usual premiums paid for such bond and were not excessive ; and, it further appearing that said attachment had been wrongfully sued out, the chancellor held, and accordingly decreed, that said defendant was entitled to recover of complainants and the surety on their attachment bond said sum of $984, as damages.

To the action of the chancellor in dismissing their bill and denying them the relief sought, to his action in decreeing that defendant, Kentucky Midland Coal Company was entitled to recover for said car of coal, and to his action in decreeing that defendant was entitled to recover said sum of $984, as damages, complainants excepted and appealed to the court of appeals, and assigned errors in that court. The court of appeals affirmed the *372 decree of the chancellor in all respects, and the cause is now before this court upon complainaints ’ petition for writ of certiorari and for review.

Through their assignments of error complainants insist that the court of appeals erred in its construction of the contract entered into between complainants and defendant, Kentucky Midland Coal Company, and in holding that said contract was conditional; that is, that said defendant agreed to ship to complainants one hundred cars of coal of the kind described in the contract,-at the price therein stated, contingent on car shortages, strikes, accidents, and other causes beyond its control, and with the understanding that all coal furnished in any month should be paid for on the first of the following month, and also conditioned on complainants’ account not exceeding $300 at any one time.

The court of appeals also held that, if the contract were unconditional, complainants could not recover upon it, even if breached by the defendant, because no proper proof was introduced by complainants from which the court could ascertain and fix the amount of the damages sustained. This holding is also assigned as error.

The court of appeals further held that complainants were not entitled to recover of the defendant because the contract clearly stipulated that the terms upon which the defendant agreed to deliver the coal to complainants was that all coal received during one month must be paid for by the first of the succeeding month, and that defendant shipped to complainants a car of coal on October 9, 1916, the price of which was $69.55; that under the contract payment for this car was due November 1, 1916; that defendant sent complainants a bill for this car of coal No ■ *373 vember. 1, 1916, but complainants did not remit for the coal and had not done so when the bill in this canse was filed. No error is assigned by complainants to this holding of the court of appeals.

It is further assigned as error that the court of appeals erred in holding that the attachment, hereinbefore referred to, was wrongfully sued out by complainants, and that the defendant, Kentucky Midland Coal Company, could recover as damages the premiums paid to the National Surety Company, as its surety on its re-plevy or refunding bond which it filed to have the fund owing it, and in the hands of the Southern Coal Company, released from said attachment.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 56, 152 Tenn. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-kentucky-midland-coal-co-tenn-1925.