Hoard v. White

220 P. 296, 114 Kan. 531, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 10, 1923
DocketNo. 24,309
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 220 P. 296 (Hoard v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoard v. White, 220 P. 296, 114 Kan. 531, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 235 (kan 1923).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Marshall, J.;.

In this action, the plaintiff seeks to recover $230 which he alleged in his bill of particulars had been loaned to the defendant. Judgment was rendered in favor.of the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.

[532]*532The plaintiff signed a written order to the defendant for an automobile. That order contained the following language:

“If the balance of the full purchase price is not settled by me within fifteen days after notice that said motor car is ready for delivery, you may cancel this order and retain all payments made by me as liquidated damages. , . .
'“For the motor car and equipment as above specified, subject to your standard warranty and standard service policy as printed on the back of this order, I agree to pay the sum of...............................$1325.00
In payments as follows:
By cash deposit accompanying this order............................ 230.00
$1095.00
By one Overland Touring Motor Car, which I agree to deliver to you on or before Sept. 23, 1921, free and clear of all liens and encumbrances and in the same condition as at present, reasonable wear and tear excepted, to be sold for. deposit on Lt. Six Touring.
Balance to be paid to you upon delivery of car.”

On the trial, the plaintiff testified that he had loaned the defendant! $230; that after the defendant had borrowed the money, he asked for the order or contract and said he would give the plaintiff credit on it for $230; and that the defendant then obtained the contract and wrote the statement on it concerning the $230. The defendant testified that the $230 was paid as a deposit on the contract for the purchase of the automobile.

One issue between the parties concerned the Overland touring motor car. The language of the contract has been quoted. It is fairly clear. The plaintiff contended that for the Overland car, the defendant was to credit $450 on the purchase price of the new car. The defendant contended that the Overland car was to be received by him, that he was to make an effort to sell it for the plaintiff, and that when it was sold the proceeds were to be applied on the purchase price of .the new car.

1. Three complaints aré made of evidence introduced. One is that, after the plaintiff had testified to his version of the contract, that the Overland touring motor car was to be taken by the defendant at $450, he was made to disclose that he sold the car for $450 and retained the m,oney. Another complaint is that the defendant was permitted to testify concerning what his commission would have been if the sale of the car to the plaintiff had been completed. The third complaint is that the defendant was permitted to introduce evidence concerning the Overland touring car contradicting the written order. The evidence concerning the sale [533]*533of the Overland car for $450 and concerning the commission of the defendant was wholly immaterial. It did not matter, as far as the controversy in this action was concerned, whether the plaintiff sold the car himself and retained the money received or not, nor did it matter what the commission of the defendant would have been on the sale of the car to the plaintiff.

The third complaint concerns evidence of the defendant, who testified that the Overland car was placed in his hands to be sold by him for the plaintiff and that the proceeds of the sale were to be applied on the purchase price of the car sold by the defendant to the plaintiff. That evidence was in harmony with the written order. It was not contradictory to it. The evidence of the plaintiff was contradictory to the written order, but that matter need not be discussed. The plaintiff’s contentions concerning the introduction of evidence cannot be sustained.

2. Complaint is made of the refusal of the court to submit to the jury certain special questions which the plaintiff desired to have answered. Those questions were as follows:

“1. Do you find that just before signing the contract between the plaintiff and defendant with reference to the exchange and purchase of the Studebaker car, that the plaintiff asked what that clause in the contract with reference to a deposit of a second hand car, was intended to mean?
“2. If you answer the last interrogatory in the affirmative, then state if •the defendant stated, in substance, that he did not want the amount for which he was to take the car stated in the contract, because he did not want his house to know it and that -he understood that clause to mean that he accepted the old car as a deposit on the new car?
“3. Do you find that the plaintiff turned over the second hand car to the defendant on said contract of purchase?
“4. Do you find that the defendant undertook to procure a loan to be negotiated for a prospective purchaser of said second hand car and had a bill of sale prepared from himself to such purchaser in case the purchaser procured a loan? '.
“5. If you answer the last interrogatory in the affirmative, state whether or not he was acting in his own behalf or in behalf of the plaintiff?”

These questions called for answers wholly evidentiary in their nature. If all had been answered as desired by the plaintiff, they would not have compelled judgment in his favor. Answers to them would not have found the facts on which judgment could have been rendered. They could have been used only for the purpose of argument to establish other facts on which judgment might have been rendered. The vital question, the one which necessarily controlled [534]*534the judgment, concerned the $230. None of the answers would have shown whether that amount of money was loaned or whether it was deposited on the purchase price of the car. Not one of the questions submitted by the plaintiff called for an answer on how the defendant received the Overland touring car from the plaintiff, whether it was received to be applied on the purchase price or whether it was received to be sold and the proceeds applied on the purchase price. The plaintiff’s evidence concerning the Overland touring car was incompetent because that evidence sought to vary the terms of the written _ order. Even if that evidence had been competent, the ultimate fact to be found by'the jury concerned the purpose for which the car was turned over to the defendant. None of the questions submitted by the plaintiff called for an answer concerning the nature of the transaction connected with the Overland touring car.

In Investment Co. v. Cunningham, 108 Kan. 703, 179 Pac. 212, this court said:

“On a request for special findings of fact, the court found the ultimate facts on which the rights of the parties depended and from which the correctness of the judgment could be obviously and readily ascertained. Held, that it was not reversible error to refuse to find the evidentiary facts requested by the parties.” (Syl. f 5.)

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Related

Fox v. Eaglin
295 P. 662 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1931)
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244 P. 844 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
220 P. 296, 114 Kan. 531, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoard-v-white-kan-1923.