Hardy v. New Rocky Grocery Co.

251 S.W. 865, 159 Ark. 109, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 14, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 865 (Hardy v. New Rocky Grocery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy v. New Rocky Grocery Co., 251 S.W. 865, 159 Ark. 109, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 31 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

McCulloch, J.

Appellant, Mrs. Ida M. Hardy, resides in the city of Little Rock, and she owns a farm, consisting of several hundred acres of land in cultivation, near the town of Foreman, in Little River Oounty. ■ Sbe caused the land to be cultivated by tenants from year to year, and in the year 1920 she rented the land to J. D. Hensley and his son, Osh Hensley. She agreed to assist the Hensleys in obtaining supplies during the year, and on March 27, 1920, she joined them in the execution of- a note for the sum of $800, payable to W.. M. Gathright, a merchant at Foreman, with the agreement that the note should be delivered to Gathright for the purpose of inducing him to furnish supplies to the Hensleys to the extent of the amount of the note, which was made payable on October 1, 1920, with interest. Appellant was living in Little Rock at that time, and the negotiations between her and .the Hensleys were conducted by correspondence, The note was mailed to her, and she signed it and returned it to J. D. Hensley, with authority to deliver it to Gathright. Hensley, after receiving the note, decided to trade with appellee, a copartnership composed of certain individuals doing business under the name of New Rocky Grocery Company, and he took the note to the managers of appellee’s business and opened up negotiations in order to have appellees furnish the supplies. Appellees agreed with Hensley to furnish him supplies to the amount of the note, and there was a change made in the note by erasure of the name of Gathright as payee and the substitution of appellees, under their copartnership name.

Appellees proceeded to furnish supplies throughout the year to the Hensleys, and they instituted this action, after the maturity of the note and refusal of appellant to pay, to recover the amount of the note.

The suit was first instituted in the chancery court, but the court treated a demurrer to the complaint as a motion to transfer, and ordered the cause transferred to the circuit court, where an amended complaint was filed, which, in addition to setting out the cause of action on the note, contained k second paragraph asking a recovery on the account. There was a trial of the case before a jury, and a verdict resulted in favor of appellees. Judgment was rendered accordingly, from which an appeal has been prosecuted.

Time was given by the court for filing a bill of exceptions, and what purports to be a bill of exceptions, with, the approval of counsel on both sides, was filed within the time allowed. Counsel for appellees contend, however, that the bill of exceptions was not properly certified. The bill of exceptions was not signed by the judge, but it was signed by counsel on both sides and marked “O. K. ” The bill of exceptions was designated as such in the caption, and was only certified by the stenographer, who stated in his certificate that it was a correct transcript of the oral proceeding. At the conclusion it is marked in pencil, ‘‘bill of exceptions,” immediately preceding the signatures of counsel, and, as before stated, the signatures followed the designation “0. K”

The statutes of this State provide that a bill of exceptions may be certified in a civil case by agreement of counsel, and we have held that it must be an unequivocal certificate.

We think that the use of the well-bnown term of approval is sufficient to indicate that it was intended as a certificate to the bill of exceptions, which bore the caption as such. This term has a well-known significance. While its origin is in doubt, it is now recognized by lexicographers as indicating unequivocal approval, and we see no reason why the term should not be accepted as a certificate of the correctness of the bill of exceptions. The statute provides no express form in which the approval shall be manifested, and any word which clearly indicates the intention of the parties to agree upon the instrument as a bill of exceptions, or history of the trial, will be accepted as such. We therefore accept the bill of exceptions as approved, as far as it goes.. There are, however, many exceptions presented here with reference to the court’s charge,-but the bill of exceptions, as approved, does not contain the instructions nor any call for them, therefore we are not at liberty to consider these exceptions. It is true that on certiorari appellant has brought up, under certificate of the clerk, instructions found on file with the other papers in the case, but, as before stated, there was no call in the bill of exceptions for these instructions, and they cannot be considered as a part of the bill of exceptions. Newton v. Russian, 74 Ark. 88. All of the assignments of error with respect to the instructions must therefore fail.

It is earnestly contended, however, that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict, .and this question is properly presented, for the evidence is fully set forth in the bill of exceptions, and in the motion for a new trial the question of the insufficiency of the evidence is properly raised.

Appellant contended, and so testified, that, while she joined in the execution of the note to be delivered to Gathright, she did not authorize the erasure of Gath-right’s name and the substitution of appellees’ as payees in the note, that she did not have any knowledge of the substitution until after the maturity of the note, and that she did not ratify it. She testified that she did not enter into any obligation with appellees in any other form to pay for supplies furnished to her tenants.

It is undisputed that appellant did not authorize the substitution of appellees as payees in the note, and that she did not know of the change at the time, and intrusting to Hensley the custody of the note, with authority to deliver it to Gathright, the payee, did not carry with it apparent authority to change the name of the payee. The change was apparent on its face, and it is undisputed that appellees knew of the substitution. There is a little conflict in the testimony as to the circumstances under which the substitution was made, but it is undisputed that the change was made in a conference between Hensley and witness 'Covington, who was then a member of the firm. According to Hensley’s testimony, he proposed to Covington that the note be returned to appellant and that a new note be obtained from her, payable to appellees, but Covington said that it'would be hnnec-essary to do that, that, it would be just as easy to erase Gathriglit’s name and substitute appellees’ as the payees, and that this was done. Covington testified that Hensley authorized hin-n to make the substitution. We think, however, that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the finding that appellant, with knowledge of all the facts, had ratified the substitution of appellees as payees of the note. Appellees furnished to the Hensleys supplies to the extent of the note, and about the time the note matured, or at least a few days afterwards, appellees wrote to appellant notifying her of the maturity of the note, and calling on her for payment. The letter is not brought into the record, but appellant was examined with reference to it, and it is fairly inferable from her testimony that she was apprised of its contents, to the effect that ap-pellees were holders of the note that she had signed, and that, with this knowledge, she ratified the act of substitution.

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251 S.W. 865, 159 Ark. 109, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-new-rocky-grocery-co-ark-1923.