Hignite v. Nantz

71 S.W.2d 442, 254 Ky. 214, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 11, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 71 S.W.2d 442 (Hignite v. Nantz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hignite v. Nantz, 71 S.W.2d 442, 254 Ky. 214, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 62 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

In May, 1932, the appellant, J. L. Hignite, filed suit in the Jackson circuit court against J. M. Hignite and J. C. Nantz as partners, operating under the business name of Hignite & Nantz, upon the following note:

“McKee, Ky. Dec. 29-1923.
“Three months after date we or either of us promise to pay to J. L. Hignite or order the sum of Fourteen Hundrey Seventy One Dollars and eighty five cents [$1,471.85] for value received of him in Gren. Mdse, with Int. 8% from date until paid.
*Hignite.& Nantz.”

The plaintiff by his petition alleged that the note was executed to him by J. M. Hignite for the partnership for goods and merchandise sold to Hignite & Nantz while conducting their partnership business in the summer of 1921.

The defendant J. M. Hignite, sued as one of the partners of the firm, did not answer or make defense, though the codefendant, J. C. Nantz, did resist the suit, filing a separate answer, whereby he denied that the merchandise, for which it was alleged the note sued on *216 was executed, was sold to J. M. Hignite and J. O. Nantz as a partnership, or at all, or sold it while it was operating as such, or that he was then, or had ever been,, a member or partner of the alleged partnership.

Plaintiff filed an amended petition, alleging that the defendants, J. M. Hignite and J. C. Nantz, had formed a partnership for the purchase and sale of merchandise on about May 25, 1921, and had continued as such throughout the years 1921, 1922, and 1923, and that he had sold it the goods for which the note sued on,was given while it continued in business as a partnership through such period.

To this pleading a separate amended answer was filed by Nantz, wherein he alleged that the note sued on and alleged to have been executed by his codefendant, J. M. Hignite, on December 29, 1923, was executed by Hignite more than two years after the alleged partnership of Hignite & Nantz, if any there ever was, had been dissolved and more than two years after the business had ceased, and that the plaintiff, J. L. Hignite, secured the note from his father, J. M. Hignite, with full knowledge of this fact, and that it was not a valid or binding note against the defendant J. C. Nantz.

An agreed order, controverting the affirmative allegations of this pleading, was filed, completing the issues, when the case came on for trial before a jury, which, after hearing proof and receiving- the instructions of the court, returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, upon which judgment was accordingly entered.

The court having refused plaintiff a new trial, he prosecutes this appeal, seeking a reversal of the judgment, wherein, among other assignments of error, he mainly argues and insists as grounds for its reversal that the court erred both in its instructions given the jury and in the admission of incompetent character evidence.

The facts as disclosed by the record are substantially as follows:

The defendant J. M. Hignite anc[ his son, the appellant, J. L. Hignite, were in 1921 associated and engaged in the mercantile business at McKee, Jackson county, Ky., when J. M. Hignite desired to establish a branch business at a lumber camp near McKee, and to such end spoke to the codefendant, J. C. Nantz, his kinsman and *217 uncle, about joining with him in establishing the proposed mercantile business there as a partnership undertaking.

J. M. Hignite testified that Nantz had favorably acted upon his suggestion and entered into the proposed partnership with him, and that, pursuant to such agreement, a small store was built for them near the lumber camp and a contract made with his son, J. L. Hignite, to buy and deliver to them the desired goods and merchandise required in their operation of the new partnership business, while also buying for the like business owned and operated by himself and father at McKee.

It is admitted that it was by the defendants agreed that Johnny Cottriel, the adopted son of the defendant Nantz, would be employed upon a sales commission basis to run this new business, whatever its character, whether a partnership or not.

Nantz testified that while J. M. Hignite proposed to him that they enter into a partnership agreement for the establishment of this branch store, he declined to go into the venture and never at any time had acquired any interest in the said business, as a partner or otherwise', though he stated that Johnny Cottriel, or Nantz, as he was called, had been employed by Hignite upon his .recommendation to manage the branch store, and that he did so for the brief period of some two or three months during the summer of 1921, when, as it is admitted, the venture proving unprofitable, it was closed down and the merchandise then on hand in the store removed and carried back by J. L. Hignite to his McKee store.

Shortly after this dissolution of the partnership, if any there was, or the termination of the camp store business, whatever its character, the plaintiff wrote .Nantz at his home in Madison county, submitting him a bill for the alleged partnership’s indebtedness to him for merchandise sold it, amounting to some several hundred dollars, which he claimed Nantz owed him as representing one-half the balance due him upon account for goods and merchandise sold and delivered by him to the firm of Hignite & Nantz, while operating its business in 1921 at the lumber camp.

Nantz denied liability upon the alleged firm’s indebtedness, either as a partner or otherwise, and, claim *218 ing that he-was being “framed” by his kinsmen, the Hignites, refused payment.

It appears that thereafter appellant’s father, J. M, Hignite, according to his testimony, made one or two trips to Richmond to confer with Nantz about their paying his son’s account, and told him that his son, the appellant, had grown impatient with their delay in paying him and was threatening to bring suit against them for the recovery of the amount owing him for the merchandise sold them, unless its payment or some settlement was at once arranged for.

The father further testified that his codefendant Nantz, when informed that he was threatened with suit, replied that he did not then have the ready money with which to pay the account, but requested and instructed him to see if the suit against them might not be averted by giving appellant a note for the amount claimed owing him, and directed him, if it could be so arranged, to execute him their note therefor; thaf, pursuant to such instruction, he did soon thereafter, although it was then some two years after the alleged partnership business had closed down and been dissolved, execute to the appellant the partnership note of Hignite & Nantz, here sued on, in satisfaction of its account owing plaintiff.

The defendant Nantz denies that any such confer- ¡ ence took place or that such or any authority was given the defendant Hignite to execute for the alleged partnership this note or that he knew anything whatever about •its execution by Hignite to his son, the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W.2d 442, 254 Ky. 214, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hignite-v-nantz-kyctapphigh-1934.