Green v. May

147 S.W. 428, 148 Ky. 783, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 528
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 7, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 428 (Green v. May) 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
Green v. May, 147 S.W. 428, 148 Ky. 783, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 528 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle —

Affirming.

On April 5, 1910, the appellant, R. C. Green, entered into a written contract with D. May, whereby he sold to him at the price of 7% cents per pound, from eighteen hundred to twenty-five hundred marketable lambs, grown in the year 1910, to be delivered by appellant to May on the cars at Sanders or Sparta Station, one half June 20, the other half July 20, 1910, and paid for by May when delivered.

The contract was awkwardly written upon a -single leaf of a small day book and is here copied in its crude form;

[784]*784“April 5th, 1910.
“We this day bought up from R. C. Green from eighteen hundred to twenty-five hundred lambs to be put on the market at Sander or at Spartiy from June 20th, until July 20, at 7% cents a lbs to be Murchable First Delivery June 20, Second July. 20, there- is not to be any waid furder off than Harrisburg.
“R. C. Green,
“D. May,
“Alson Callender.”

;' It appears that D. May received and paid for 682 of the lambs thus purchased of the appellant, Green, but that he refused to receive or pay for 1,607 others, which appellant offered to deliver him. Thereupon appellant brought suit in the court below against him and the appellee, Alson Callender, for the damages he sustained by May’s breach of the contract. The petition, in appropriate terms, set out the contract; alleged its breach; the weight of the lambs May refused to receive and the loss resulting to the appellant therefrom, which was the difference between the price appellant was to receive under the contract from May for the lambs at the place of delivery, and what he was compelled to sell them for on the market at the same place; this difference or loss being, as alleged, $1,707.04.

The appellee, Alson Callender, was joined as a defendant in the action, because, as alleged in the petition, he signed and became bound on the contract as surety for May. It was further alleged in the petition that Callender had, with the intent to defraud his creditors and to evade paying appellant loss he sustained by reason of May’s violation of his contract in respect to the lambs, conveyed and otherwise disposed of his property of every kind. Upon these averments appellant caused to be issued a general attachment against the property of Callender. The latter filed an answer denying liability upon the contract and, in substance, averring he was not a surety thereon, but only signed it at the request of appellant as a witness in attestation of the signature of D. May; but that by the fraud of appellant and mistake on his part he was entrapped into signing his name under that of the principal, May, in a manner that made .him appear as the latter’s surety. The answer also controverted the grounds alleged in the petition for the attachment procured by appellant, and prayed [785]*785that the attachment be discharged. Appellant filed a reply containing a traverse of all affirmative matter of the answer, which completed the issues between himself and the appellee, Callender. The defendant, May, though duly summoned, failed to answer or otherwise make defense to the action. The trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the appellee, Cal-lender; and appellant’s dissatisfaction with the judgment and refusal of the circuit court to grant him a new trial, led to this appeal.

The facts disclosed by the bill of evidence were, in brief, that appellant was in the. spring of 1910 engaged in the business of buying lambs, and that he had, prior to the making of the contract with May, purchased of many farmers in Owen and Grant counties their lambs of that year. He made May’s acquaintance through the appellee, Callender, who introduced him to ' appellant as a lamb buyer from “Jersey City.” The contract made by appellant with May was written by the appellee, Callendar, in the presence of the contracting parties.

According to the testimony of the appellant, before the contract was written or signed by the parties, he, in substance, informed May and Callender that, as he was unacquainted with the former or his financial condition, he (May) must furnish security for his compliance with the contract; whereupon the appellee, Cal-lender, agreed to become his surety, to which appellant assented; and that the contract was then written by' Callender and signed by the appellant, May and Callender; the latter attaching his signature to the paper as May’s surety.

Much of appellant’s testimony was directed to showing that the appellee, Callender, was interested, either as a silent parner with, or agent for, May, in the contract made by the latter with the appellant for the purchase of the lambs; and that he not only introduced May to appellant and assisted him in procuring the contract, but that he also bought with May, or for him, other lambs than those purchased from appellant. W. T. S. Blackburn, cashier of the Dry Ridge Bank, testified in appellant’s behalf as to appellee’s association with May in the purchase of lambs from persons other than appellant, and as to appellee’s leaving in the hands of his (Blackburn’s) wife, a check or money appellee had received from May to be used in paying for lambs. The purpose of this testimony was to show that' appel[786]*786lee was a silent partner of’ or agent for, May, and had snch an interest in the purchase of lambs from appellant under the contract of* April 5, 1910, as made him willing to become the surety of May therein.

Although appellant’s testimony as to what occurred when the contract with May was written and signed, was not corroborated by that of any other witness, it shows that what he claims to have done with respect to the transaction, was consistent with what would be expected of an ordinarily prudent business man, similarly situated; for naturally a man of., ordinary business sagacity, in dealing with a stranger like May, would demand of him, as appellant claims he did, security for the performance of the contract. Besides, the contract itself’ imports that appellee’s name was signed thereto, either as principal or surety, for neither in language or form does it indicate that his relation to the instrument was that of an attesting witness. That his relation to the instrument in question was that of surety is averred in the petition, and, in order to overcome the presumption arising on the face of the instrument that appellee signed it as surety, it was incumbent on him not only to allege and prove that he signed the contract as an attesting witness, but also that his failure to indicate on the instrument that such is his relation thereto, was caused by the fraud of appellant or his own mistake.

May was not at the trial and consequently did not testify in the case; but appellee in testifying admitted, as in his answer, that he signed the contract, claiming, however, that he did so only as an attesting witness, at the request of appellant, and that he placed his signature at the place designated by appellant. He also testified that he was not asked by appellant to become surety on the paper, nor did the latter demand of May security thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 428, 148 Ky. 783, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-may-kyctapp-1912.