Henry v. Reeser

154 S.W. 371, 153 Ky. 8, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 759
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 S.W. 371 (Henry v. Reeser) 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
Henry v. Reeser, 154 S.W. 371, 153 Ky. 8, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 759 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Turner

Reversing.

On November 10, 1909, James A. McClelland, a real estate agent of Louisville, representing appellant, "W. H. Henry, submitted to John Boyd Kennedy, another real estate agent in the same city, representing appellees, the following written proposition, to-wit:

“For your flat building, with all improvements thereon, lot 65x180 ft. to an alley, located on the east side of Fourth Street, beginning 115 ft. north of A Street, I will give Lots Nos. 13, 14, 22, 26, 27, and 28, and the south western 20 ft. of Lot No. 25, all of Block A, on Richmond Avenue, also Lots Nos. 1 and the west 25 ft. of Lot 15, and the east 10 ft. of Lot. 16, and the west 20 ft. of Lot 19, all of Lots 20 and 21, and all of lot 27, Block B, Richmond Avenue, in Jefferson County, Kentucky, and $4,400.00 cash, and assume a mortgage not to exceed the sum of $16,000.00, said mortgage payable on or before five years, with interest at six per cent, payable semiannually, and now held by the Kentucky Title Company, the interest on the mortgage to be paid up to date by the present owner of the flat building.
“I will give general warranty deed to all of the property on Richmond Avenue, and the same is to be free of all "encumbrances, except the taxes for the year 1910, which are to be paid by the purchaser. The Fourth Avenue property is to be free of all encumbrances, except the state and county taxes for the year 1910, and the above mentioned mortgage, which I assume and agree to pay.
[10]*10“The owner of the flat building is to surrender me title policy, free of charge.
“The roof on the flat building is.to be guaranteed to , me for ten years direct by the parties who put the roof on, and a written guarantee to that effect is to be made. The screens to every outside door and window of flat-building are to be furnished by present owner at his cost, The flat building is to be completed, inside and out, in every particular, the flower bed now designed in the rear is to be completed, all of the electric appliances, and all supplies now on hand are to remain in the building, and to- be my property.
The conditions herein named are to become effective before any deed is signed or passed.
“Yours truly,
W. H. Henry,
“By James.A. McClelland, Agent.”

, Appellees declined to accept the proposition, but submitted the following counter-proposition on the same paper :■

“The best I can do is $7,000 cash instead of $4,400 cash. W. M. Reeser.”

■ This counter-proposition was not accepted by appellant, but his agent, McClelland, wrote on the same paper the following additional counter-proposition:

“Louisville, Ky., Nov. 16, 1909.
“I will give you the sum of $3,400 cash and a second lien note of $2,000 on my property as described in the within proposition, and assume the mortgage of $16,000 now on the apartment house.
W. H. Henry,
‘ ‘ By James A. McClelland, Agent. ’ ’

Underneath that on the same paper appellee, W. M. Reeser, undertook to accept the whole proposition as amended in the following writing signed by him, to-wit:

“I accept the above proposition $2,000 above mentioned to be a lien on the Fourth Street flat building due in one year from date, with six per cent interest.”

Although Reeser undertook to put the last writing in the form of an acceptance, it shows on its face that it was not, in fact, an acceptance, but merely a conditional acceptance, or rather, in fact, a counter-proposition.

[11]*11It is perfectly manifest that up to this point the minds of the parties had not met, and there was no agreement between them. While the matter was in this attitude, on 'the 22nd of November appellant and Eeeser accompanied by their respective agents met at the apartment house.

The evidence discloses that there was some discussion between the parties at that time as to when the $2,000 "note should mature, and there is some difference between the parties as to exactly what did occur, and as to whether or not the parties did finally agree orally; but, at any rate, McClelland, the agent of appellant, upon his return to his office where the paper containing the original written proposition and counter-propositions was, made the following memorandum thereon:

“November 22, 1909.
“The parties, Mr. W. H. Henry and W. M. Eeeser, agreed that the second lien note for $2,000 on the flat ' building should be made payable on or before two years •instead of one year.
“11, 22, 09. McC.”

None of the parties were present when this last memorandum was made by McClelland.

Appellant having failed or refused to comply with the •terms of these writings, appellee instituted this action for damages against him, and upon the trial was awarded a verdict of $1,000, and appellant’s motion and grounds for a new trial having been overruled, he appeals. At the close of the evidence for the plaintiff, the defendant entered a motion for a peremptory instruction, which motion was overruled.

What was the effect of the memorandum of November 22nd? It is clear that up to the time of the meeting of the parties at the apartment house on that day, their minds had not met, and it is equally clear that when appellant went to the apartment house on that day, he did not expect to meet Eeeser, or his agent Kennedy, and it may be, therefore, fairly inferred that he was at the time not expecting or intending to close the deal.

In all the writings previous to the 22nd of November, McClelland had always signed “W. H. Henry by James A. McClelland, Agent,” thus in the most formal way assuming his role as agent of Henry, and notifying all others connected with the deal that he was so acting; but when •he comes to make the memorandum of November 22nd, in[12]*12stead of acting in Ms formal capacity as agent for Henry, and evidently without any purpose so to do, and without holding out to anyone that he is so acting, he merely puts down in an informal way his recollection and interpretation of a conversation between Henry and Reeser, and instead of formally signing Henry’s name by himself as agent, he merely puts to the memorandum an abbreviation of his own name. There is nothing in that writing indicating that McClelland thought the deal was closed, or that he was so treating'it.

Considering all the facts and circumstances throughout the whole transaction, and all the negotiations, it is perfectly manifest that McClelland in making that memorandum was merely making one for his own convenience and to show for his own future purposes what had occurred between the parties and how far the negotiations between them had progressed, and was in no sense undertaking as the agent of Henry to close up any contract between him and Reeser.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.W. 371, 153 Ky. 8, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-v-reeser-kyctapp-1913.