J. L. Mott Iron Works v. Kaiser Co.

103 S.E. 783, 131 S.C. 394, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 28, 1920
Docket10413
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 S.E. 783 (J. L. Mott Iron Works v. Kaiser Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. L. Mott Iron Works v. Kaiser Co., 103 S.E. 783, 131 S.C. 394, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 239 (S.C. 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment against the defendants for $2739.42, and they have appealed.

The cause of action against Kaiser is upon an account for goods sold; and against the Bank upon a paper writing made to guarantee payment of that account, and of the following purport:

“Aiken,S-C., 12:12 P. M,
“December 2d, 1916.
“J. E. Mott Iron Works, New York:
“We guarantee payment amount twenty-three hundred sixty-three dollars fifty cents account Kaiser Company shipment under contract for hospital at Aiken.
“First National Bank of Aiken.”

The writing was made *by Durban, the cashier of the Bank, admittedly without the express authority of the Board of Directors to do so, and issuably with the authority of the Bank’s president to do so.

*398 The execution of the paper writing arose out of the following recited circumstances most of them admittedly true: there was building in Aiken a hospital; McGhee had the contract to build; on the 16th August, 1916, McGhee made a contract with Kaiser to install a heating and plumbing system in the building for $7,800.00; Kaiser had made arrangements with the Bank to borrow money to do this work at the Hospital; the aforementioned contract of 16th August, 1916, was on the day of its execution transferred by Kaiser to the Bank; and concurrently McGhee agreed to that transfer, and further agreed that the payments which should be due by McGhee to Kaiser on the performance of the contract, should be made directly to the Bank instead of to Kaiser. On the 16th August, the Bank made a loan to Kaiser to assist Kaiser to perform the contract, and five other loans were made, all in August, September and October, and aggregating $4,700.00; Kaiser contracted to buy from the plaintiffs from October to January both inclusive, goods with which to do its job, and of the value of $2365.50; Durban knew that the goods SO' supplied were necessary to the accomplishment of the job, and the loan was made to Kaiser to help him perform the job; the plaintiff declined, evidenced by its telegram to McGhee, to ship to Kaiser the goods contracted for unless the payment for them should first" be guaranteed; upon presentation of that telegram by Kaiser to the Bank the instant guarantee was executed; the B.ank consented that as much as $5,468.00 due by McGhee to Kaiser on the job, should be diverted from the Bank, contrary to the aforementioned agreement between the Bank, Kaiser and McGhee, and be paid directly to Kaiser.

These are the essential facts of the case, and out of them arises any liability of the Bank on its guarantee.

That is the major issue to be decided; all the other issues are of a minor character and most of them are between the plaintiff and Kaiser; none of them go to the justice of the cause so as to determine it.

*399 'It will be enlightening, however, to first dispose of such of the minor issues as need attention. The appellant’s counsel has wisely and helpfully grouped in the brief the 21 exceptions under ten heads, and we consider these heads.

There is no merit in the view that the aforementioned contract of 16th August, betwixt McGhee and Kaiser and the things done under and pursuant to it did not bind the Kaiser Company, the defendant corporation, only created on 22d August. The copartnership was made up of Kaiser and Weatherford; the corporation was owned by the same men and Oliveros; and the last named testified that the corporation had no contract with McGhee other than that of 16th August, and he knew of that contract.

Manifestly therefore the corporation adopted the contract which the copartnership had entered into.

The Kaiser Company also conducted its correspondence in part on the letter heads of Kaiser and Company and that tended to show a succession of interest.

The Kaiser Company plead in defense of the plaintiff’s action and offered testimony to prove it, that the plaintiff had greatly delayed the Kaiser Company in the. performance of its contract by delaying shipments of material.

The plaintiff replied to that in evidence that five shipments of material to the Kaiser Company had laid in the R. R. office at Aiken for many days, and that on three of them the Kaiser Company had even paid demurrage charges for as long as eighteen days.

The exception is, not that the testimony was irrelevant, for it was relevant; but that the evidence of the facts lay in pencil notations made by one Smith, Station Agent of the R. R. Co., on the books of the Company and on the receipts which the Kaiser Company signed to the Company for the goods.

The notations were 'testified to by Williams (Smith being out of the State), who was not the Station Agent of the R. *400 R. Co., but who had been working in the freight office for two years and who knew Smith’s handwriting.

The testimony of Williams was competent.

The fact to be proved rested in a record, made in the due course of business, and the record was proof of the fact.

True the record was hearsay, but the instance is one in which hearsay is accepted.

True too that the record had to be vouched for out of the mouth of a witness; it is not denied that Smith who made the record was competent tO' swear to it. But so could Williams also, for all that Smith could say was that the entry was genuine, and Williams also said so much.

See 2 Wigmore, Sec. 15-25.

2 Jones, Sec. 320.

Another exception goes to the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness McGowan.

McGhee a witness for the defendant had testified that the work of Kaiser Company had been greatly and hurtfully delayed by the failure of the plaintiff to send certain slip-joints and ells; and that witness referred that matter to the architect.

McGowan in reply testified that the slip-joints and ells were not a part of the order; nevertheless that when McGhee wired the plaintiff to send those articles he directed the factory by wire to make a special order for them; but that before the same could be executed the witness got a phone message from the Architect’s office saying that McGhee had secured the parts elsewhere and to^ stay any further effort to supply the parts.

The point of the exception is, that the phone message was a mere declaration.

But McGhee testified that he had referred the alleged' shortage to the architect; therefore the phone message of the architect to McGowan was prompted by McGhee, and it was McGhee (in the person of the architect) speaking over the phone to McCullough.

*401 McGhee cannot demand that his own voice shall be sworn to. The testimony was competent.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 783, 131 S.C. 394, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-l-mott-iron-works-v-kaiser-co-sc-1920.