Johnson v. Johnson

92 S.E. 795, 80 W. Va. 497, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 59
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 795 (Johnson v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Johnson, 92 S.E. 795, 80 W. Va. 497, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 59 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

Williams, Judge:

A. E. Johnson died, testate, in December 1915, and his executors brought this suit in equity against his heirs and creditors for the purpose of obtaining the direction of the court [498]*498in the matter of settling up his estate, and for the sale of sufficient property, both real and personal, to pay testator’s debts, specifically setting forth in the bill numerous controverted matters arising between the creditors, and between certain other creditors named and the executors, growing out of the business transactions of testator in Ms lifetime.

Only one question is presented by this appeal, taken by C. E. Skaggs and L. C. Lemons, partners trading as Skaggs & Lemons, from a decree pronounced in favor of the'executors against them on the 21st of December, 1916, holding that a certain transaction between appellants and the testator was a sale, by the former to the latter, of certain cattle, with the option to repurchase them at a stipulated price the following autumn, instead of a contract of bailment as appellants contended.

Appellants delivered to testator thirty-two head of cattle, and took from him the following receipt therefor:

"Fort Spring, W. Va., Oct. 14th, 1915.
"Received of Skaggs and Lemons (32) Thirty-two cattle weighing 27,020 pounds, at 7 cts. per pound, to be turned back during (during) latter part of summer and fall of 1916, at 7.60 per pound. (Signed) A. E. Johnson.”

At the same time he'executed to them the following note:

"$1891.40 Alderson, W. Va., Oct. 14, 1915.
"Twelve months after date I promise to pay to the order of Skaggs & Lemons, without offset, Eighty Hundred Ninety-one and 40/100 Dollars, negotiable and payable at The First National Bank of Alderson, of Alderson, W. Va., value received. (Signed) A. E. Johnson.”

Appellants indorsed the note to the First National Bank of Alderson, and took it up after this suit was brought. The case was referred to a commissioner to take and state an account of certain matters and report to court, among them the matter here in controversy, respecting which the commissioner filed a special report in which he held the contract to be a sale and option to repurchase, and not a bailment, and appellants excepted. The court overruled the exception and de[499]*499creed the cattle to be the property of testator’s estate. The depositions of appellants and one other witness, taken on their behalf before the commissioner, were returned with .his report, and they are a part of the record now before ns. The testimony of appellants, so far as it relates to the personal transaction had with the testator can not be considered. As to that matter they are clearly incompetent to testify. But even if their testimony conld be considered, it does not prove their contention. It does not aid the court in the interpretation of the written evidence, contained in Johnson’s receipt and note. The testimony of the other witness, Mr. Pence, Johnson’s tenant on the farm where the cattle were delivered, to the effect that Mr. Johnson told him to keep the thirty-two cattle on a certain boundary, separate from other cattle, is consistent with either theory of the case, and sheds no light upon .the transaction. Nor does the certificate of the clerk of the county court, showing that thirty-two head of cattle were listed for taxation in the name of Skaggs & Lemons, for the year 1916, in the district in which the cattle were turned over to Johnson, or the sheriff’s receipt to them for the taxes paid thereon for that year, affect the character of the original transaction. The cattle were listed and the taxes levied on them paid after Johnson’s death. Appellants could not alter their situation respecting the property, or affect the interest of Johnson’s estate therein by their conduct subsequent to his death.

The intention of the parties governs in determining the true nature of the contract, and their intention can be ascertained only from the language of the contract. The circumstances surrounding the parties at the time it was made are altogether consistent with the theory of a sale. Numerous authorities are cited by counsel for appellants to support their contention that it was a bailment for the purpose of pasturage. But none of them go any further than to affirm the general rule that the intention of the parties determines the character of the contract, and none of them present a state of facts similar to those presented here. It is often a perplexing question to determine whether a certain transaction is a sale or a bailment, the true intention of the parties [500]*500being obscured by the wording of the contract and there being no contemporaneous circumstances indicating their purpose. ' In the present case, however, we are fully convinced the parties meant the contract as a sale by weight, with the right reserved to the sellers to repurchase at an increased price per pound. Otherwise, why did appellants take Johnson’s note on the day of the transaction, corresponding exactly with the value of the thirty-two cattle, at 7c per pound? If it was a bailment the note was without consideration. It was unconditional and was actually negotiated and the money paid for it. Counsel insist .that it was taken as collateral security. Security for what; for the return of their own property? Such precaution would indeed be quite unnecessary, and certainly a very unusual thing in a contract of bailment. The bailor’s title is all the security he needs to insure the return of his property, and in this instance Johnson’s compensation for the bailment, if such it was, being dependable on and measured by, not only the advance in price per pound, but also by the additional weight he might put upon the cattle, was certainly a matter of sufficient personal interest to him to secure the faithful performance of his contract. If it was a bailment, the note was a pure gratuity, yet it recites that it was for a valuable consideration, and its execution is consistent- only with the theory of a sale, for its only consideration was the property in the cattle. The receipt for the cattle, weighing 27,060 pounds, at 7c a pound, and the agreement, expressed in the same instrument, that they should “be turned back” at 7.60 cents per pounds, is perfectly consistent with the theory of a sale. The words quoted do not any more import a mere redelivery of the possession than they mean a transfer of both possession and title. The transaction has the same effect as if Johnson had paid the cash, instead of executing his note. The fact that appellants repurchased the note, after they had negotiated it, and after this suit was brought, can not change the nature of the transaction.

As throwing additional light upon the nature of the transaction, let us suppose some of the cattle had died while they were in Johnson’s possession, on whom would the loss have [501]*501.fallen? Unquestionably upon Johnson. Because, in no event, was he to receive more for keeping them than they would come to, at 7.60e per pound, to be ascertained at the time they were returned, less $1,891.40, their ascertained value, at 7c per pound, at the time he received them. And in the event all of them had died, although without fault on his part, he would have received nothing for their keep, and would have been obliged to pay his note.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 795, 80 W. Va. 497, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-johnson-wva-1917.