Harnischfeger Sales Corp. v. Ramey

82 S.W.2d 1, 190 Ark. 913, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 13, 1935
Docket4-3862
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 S.W.2d 1 (Harnischfeger Sales Corp. v. Ramey) 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
Harnischfeger Sales Corp. v. Ramey, 82 S.W.2d 1, 190 Ark. 913, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 154 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This cause was tried in the court below oii an agreed statement of facts, from which we copy the following controlling recitals.

On January 24, 3929, Alex Ramey made a contract with the Harnischfeger Sales Corporation, hereinafter referred to as appellant, wherein he agreed to purchase one Model 600 P. & H. M. A. N. Diesel Dragline Machine with Boom, 1,500 Watt Ivohler Light Unit, and Dragline Bucket complete with teeth, for a price of $18,812. The purchase price was to be paid as follows: $3,000 evidenced by note due April 25, 1929, and $15;812 evidenced by seventeen notes of $875 each, and one note of $937, the first note falling due March 15, 1929, and the remainder one each month thereafter.

The contract ivas one of conditional sale, title being retained by the vendor until purchase money paid in full, and the vendee agreed not to remove the machinery from the county where it was originally installed without the vendor’s consent. The contract provides that, in the event of default in payment, the vendor might declare the balance of the indebtedness due and payable and repossess the machinery. The machinery was delivered lo Ramey shortly after the sale near Chatfield, Arkansas, but some time thereafter was removed to Louisiana with the vendor’s consent.

In the early part of 1931 Ramey, who vras then in Louisiana, bought a second machine from appellant, this being a Model 700 Dragline. In that purchase there was an outright sale, and the vendor took a chattel mortgage on the machine to secure the unpaid balance of purchase money. The mortgage was executed at Monroe, Louisiana, and showed an unpaid balance of $17,575.

Ramey continued to use both the first machine (which will hereinafter be referred to as the Model 600 machine) and the second machine also (which will be referred to as the Model 700 machine) until the fall of 1933, at which time he was involved in financial difficulties, and was considerably in arrears in the payments on both machines. In October, 1933, Ramey, having about completed his work in Louisiana, was negotiating with Lewis-Chambers Construction Company, Inc., hereinafter referred to as the Lewis-Chambers Company, to contract for levee -work in the Laconia. Circle Section of Desha County, Arkansas, the Lewis-Chambers Company having at that time a contract with the United States. .Government for a.large amount of work at that point,/ -.- ■ ■ ....

•.To the end that Ramey might.secure the consent, of appellant to the removal of .the machines’ from Louisiana, as well as the assurance that he would be’allowed-to-retain the machines for the work in Arkansas;-he began negotiations with appellant. After some preliminary negotiations, appellant’s agent on October 24, 1933, sent a telegram to Ramey as follows: ;

“Model 600 balance $1,700 plus-interest from January this year, Model 700 balance $10,200, plus interest from March 15, 1931.,. Understand you plan pay $1,000 now, $1,000.November,.$1,000. December, $1,000 January. When we have received $3,000 will release Model 600. While this will lessen our security glad to accommodate you, as we appreciate your high regard for your obligations.”

On October 2-6, 1933, Ramey wired appellant’s agent as follows:

“Finish rental job today. Have job for next year, if can deal with Lewis-Chambers. They will furnish $3,000, one this month, one next month and one December 10th. Necessary that you send remaining notes and papers on 600 to Whitney National Bank, New Orleans, for collection. They have agreed to this.- Weather permitting we can pay $1,000 a month as we work after this. Wire if all right explaining* these details.”

On October 28, 1-933, appellant wired Ramey as follows : '

“Will send contract and notes Model 600 with certificate of release to Whitney National together with three one thousand dollar drafts on Lewis-Chambers, payable one at sight, second, November 10th, last December 10th, papers to be surrendered on payment of last draft. ' Wire if satisfactory.”

After this telegraphic correspondence Ramey was permitted to move the machinery to Laconia, Arkansas, find a few days later, approximately November 5th, Ramey entered into a contract with the Lewis-Chambers Company to construct a portion of a levee at Laconia.

The October payment referred to in the telegrams was not made until November 20, 1933.

The Lewis-Chambers Company had no dealings with appellant, and had no knowledge of any negotiations between Ramey and appellant, nor did they know of the existence of the indebtedness due appellant by Ramey until after Ramey had made the contract with them, and had moved on the job at Laconia. A few days after the work began and about November 8, 1933, Ramey advised the Lewis-Cliambers Company that he was involved, and that he had no funds to work with, and that certain of his creditors wanted payment, and he exhibited the telegram of October 24, 1933, copied above. This was the first knowledge that the Lewis-Chambers Company had of Ramey’s plan of payment. Thereupon the Lewis-Chambers Compaxiy agreed to advance to Ramey the sum of $12,673.53 to pay on past-due equipment notes and approximately $6,000 on open accounts (the amounts represented by Ramey as being’ necessary to satisfy his creditors), and to advaxxce funds to carry on operations within the discretion of the Lewis-Chambers Company. Among the equipment indebtedness which the Lewis-Chambers Company agreed to pay was $1,000 to appellant. No agreement was made as to the other $2,000 referred to in the telegrams. Appellant had no knowledge of axxy other or different agreement between Ramey aixd the Lewis-Chambers Company other than as set fortlx in Ramey’s telegrams herein referred to and copied above. These advances and all further advances were to be secured by a bill of sale or mortgage on all of Ramey’s equipment, including both the 600 and the 700 Model machines, and this agreemeixt was reduced to writing, which listed the items agreed to be paid. The agreement, which was a bill of sale in form, but a mortgage in fact, was executed and delivered to the Lewis-Chambers Company, dated November 20, 1933, covering both machines, and upoix its execution the Lewis-Chambers Company immediately paid the bills as agreed.

On the same date the Lewis-Chambers Company forwarded to appellant their check for $1,000 as per agreement with Ramey, accompanied by the following letter:

"We enclose herewith our cheek in the sum of $1,000 as partial payment on the account of Alex Ramey as per your telegram of October 24. ”

There were no instructions as to the application of this payment from either the Lewis-Chambers Company or Ramey, axxd appellant, of its own accord, applied it to reduce the balaxice due on the 600 Model machine, and on November 24,1933, appellant acknowledged receipt of the check, and also wrote Ramey advising him that the thousand dollars had been applied on the balance due on the 600 Model rnachine. After this payment was made there remained a balance due on the 600 Model machine of $789.90.

At the time appellant Avrote Ramey, it also wrote the Lewis-Chambers Company the folloAving letter:

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82 S.W.2d 1, 190 Ark. 913, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harnischfeger-sales-corp-v-ramey-ark-1935.