Hiram Blow Stave Co.'s Trustee v. Paducah Cooperage Co.

166 S.W. 615, 158 Ky. 833, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 723
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 13, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 166 S.W. 615 (Hiram Blow Stave Co.'s Trustee v. Paducah Cooperage Co.) 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
Hiram Blow Stave Co.'s Trustee v. Paducah Cooperage Co., 166 S.W. 615, 158 Ky. 833, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 723 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

•Prior to November 29, 1911, the Hiram Blow Stave Company, a Tennessee corporation, was engaged for several years in the manufacture and sale of staves in that state, its chief office being in the city of Nashville. At the same time there was doing business in the same State a co-partnership, styled Hiram Blow & Company, V. J. Blow being a member of the firm and also a leading stockholder in and officer of the Hiram Blow Stave Company. The corporation and co-partnership occupied the same office and were both under the same management. The firm, Hiram Blow & Company, had large business dealings in Tennessee and other states in staves, stave timber and equipment. 'In the fall of 1911 both the corporation and co partnership became insolvent and were thrown into bankruptcy. The Hiram Blow Stave Company was adjudged a bankrupt in a Federal court of Tennessee on the 29th day of November, 1911, and the firm, Hiram Blow & Company, was adjudged a bankrupt in the same court on the 23rd of December, 1911. William L. Tally was elected trustee in bankruptcy of the Hiram Blow Stave Company, and IT. B. Carter, J. T. Howell and John Early trustees in bankruptcy of Pliram Blow & Company.

Prior to the bankruptcy of Hiram Blow & Company it had large dealings with the appellee, Paducah Cooperage Company, a Kentucky corporation engaged in the stave and timber business in the city of Paducah, and [835]*835at the time it went into bankruptcy held large claims against the latter. One of the obligations of the Paducah Cooperage Company to Hiram Blow & Company was a draft of $902.30, dated September 22, 1911, and due ninety days thereafter. On the sixth day of March, 1913, the appellant, William L. Tally, trustee in bankruptcy of the Hiram Blow Stave Company, brought suit upon this draft against the appellee, Paducah Cooperage Company, in the McCracken circuit court; alleging in the petition that the Hiram Blow Stave Company, at the time of filing its petition in bankruptcy and of being adjudged a bankrupt, was the owner and in possession of the draft under and by virtue of a sale and assignment thereof, made to it by Hiram Blow and Company, September 22, 1911, and that thereafter the draft, with other assets of the Hiram Blow Stave Company, went' into the hands of the appellant Tally, its trustee in bankruptcy. The prayer of the petition asked judgment against the Paducah Cooperage Company for the amount of the draft with interest from its date and the costs of the action.

The answer of the appellee, Paducah Cooperage Company, denied that the Hiram Blow Stave Company had ever been the owner or holder of the draft or that it had been assigned to it by Hiram Blow & Comapny; and also denied that the appellant, Tally, as trustee in bankruptcy of the Hiram Blow Stave Company, was entitled to recover of it the amount of the draft or any part thereof. It was further alleged in the answer that on January 26, 1912, the appellee, through its manager, W. F. Paxton, made with Hiram Blow & Company, through its trustees in bankruptcy, a full and complete settlement of all matters of account between appellee and Hiram Blow & Company, in which settlement appellee compromised with and paid to the trustees in bankruptcy of Hiram Blow & Company its entire indebtedness to them; that the draft of $902.30 in controversy was one of the items of indebtedness included in the settlement and then paid by appellee, which draft was then produced by and was in the possession of the trustees in bankruptcy of Hiram Blow & Company as an asset of the bankrupt estate, but through mistake or oversight it was left by appellee in the possession of the trustees in bankruptcy of Hiram Blow & Company. Further averments of the answer as to the subsequent possession of the draft by the appellant, Tally, trustee in bank[836]*836ruptcy of the Hiram Blow Stave Company, will better appear from the following excerpt copied therefrom-.

“Defendant further states that after this settlement was had between this defendant and the trustees of Hiram Blow & Company, in which settlement this draft was paid and satisfied, the said trustees of Hiram Blow & Company fraudulently and without consideration of any kind paid to them or paid to anybody by the Hiram Blow Stave Company, procured the endorsement by Hiram Blow & Company, by Charles A. McQuay, cashier, over to the Hiram Blow Stave Company, and the said Hiram Blow Stave Company, although now the pretended owner and holder of said draft, never paid to Hiram Blow & Company, or to anybody, anything for said draft, but received same and took same under this fraudulent assignment, and by reason thereof it has no interest in said draft and is not entitled to maintain this action by its trustee in bankruptcy. That at the time said draft was turned over to the Hiram Blow Stave Company and came into its possession, the Hiram Blow Stave Company knew that said draft had been settled in the adjustment of accounts between this defendant and Hiram Blow & Company, and knew that said draft had by mistake or oversight been left in the possession of Hiram Blow & Company.”

The affirmative matter of the answer was controverted by reply. Thereafter a jury trial resulted and a verdict was returned in behalf of appellee. But at the same term the circuit court granted appellant a new trial. At a subsequent term a second trial resulted in a verdict in behalf of appellee and the circuit court having overruled appellant’s second motion for a new trial, he has appealed.

The grounds urged for a reversal are: First, that the circuit court erred in permitting incompetent evidence to go to the jury over his objection; second, that the verdict- of the jury and the judgment of the court were contrary to law and not sustained by the evidence.

The evidence complained of is that of appellee’s manager, W. F. Paxton, with respect to the settlement made by him for appellee with the trustees in bankruptcy of Hiram Blow & Company; and particularly that part of his testimony as to the production at that time cf the draft and its payment by appellee. The contention as to the incompetency of this evidence rests upon the theory that the writing appearing on the back of the [837]*837draft over the signature of Hiram Blow & Company, of date September 22, 1911, constituted an assignment of it to the Hiram Blow Stave Company as' of that date, and there being nothing further appearing upon the draft showing its reassignment by the Hiram Blow Stave Company to Hiram Blow & Company before the former went into bankruptcy, it must-be treated as the property of the Hiram Blow Stave Company when it was adjudged a bankrupt and appellant, as its trustee, came into possession of its assets; therefore, that any evidence of an act done or statement made by a trustee or any representative of Hiram Blow & Company, at the time of the settlement between them ánd appellee, with respect to the ownership of the draft or its- inclusion in such settlement, should not have been allowed to prevent a recovery upon the draft by the assignee thereof. In support of this contention we are cited to numerous decisions holding, in effect, that, while admissions made by the holder of a negotiable instrument, before transfer thereof, are competent evidence against one to whom it is transferred after maturity, declarations made by a former holder of a negotiable instrument after it has been transferred by him are incompetent as against a subsequent holder.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 615, 158 Ky. 833, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiram-blow-stave-cos-trustee-v-paducah-cooperage-co-kyctapp-1914.