Johnson v. Tackitt

191 S.W. 117, 173 Ky. 406, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 468
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 117 (Johnson v. Tackitt) 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
Johnson v. Tackitt, 191 S.W. 117, 173 Ky. 406, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 468 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Reversing.

On March 7th, 1912, "W. B. Johnson and Sol Taekitt entered into the following written contract:

“Hartley, Kentucky, 3/7, 1912.
“I, W. B. Johnson, has this ................................................ sold to Sol Taekitt, one job of drifting all the logs of Cole & Crane that is now in Long Fork or that may be put into said creek by Jany. 1, 1913. All logs to be put where the back water will float logs easily above forks in pond. Said logs to be delivered below mouth or out into channel of Main Shelby Creek for (25c) cents per log. Said logs to be delivered by August 1st, 1913. Said payments to be made as logs is delivered as above on estimates agreed on. Sol Taekitt is to have the use of splash dams during said time to splash said timber. W. B. Johnson reserves the right to use splash dams when Sol Taekitt is not operating said dams on Long Fork.
“(Signed) W. B. Johnson,
Sol Tackitt/'

On April 5th, 1912, so much of this contract as refers to the splash dam was modified by the following written contract:

“Hartley, Kentucky, April 5, 1912.
“This agreement made and entered into by and between W. B. Johnson, party of the first part, and Sol Taekitt and G. W. Taekitt, party of the second part;
“Witnesseth, that said W. B. Johnson releases and relinquishes all claims, rights, interests And title he or Cole & Crane has in and to the splash dam at said G. W. Taekitt’s from this date for the said Taekitt to [408]*408repair said dam and to make a county road by said dam in good workman order. Said Sol Tackitt and.G. W. Tackitt discharges the said W. B. Johnson and Cole & Crane from all damages, claims, demands, actions, causes of action by reason of said splash dam. Should the said Sol Tackitt refuse to deliver Cole & Crane logs, set out in contract between himself and W. B. Johnson, of date March 7, 1912, then in said event the said W. B. Johnson may proceed and operate said dam for splashing said logs only.
“W. B. Johnson,
Sol Tackitt,
G. W. Tackitt."
“Attest: Grant Tackitt."

Tackitt worked under these contracts until in January, 1913, when he quit, having drifted out and delivered about 3,195 logs, and not having drifted out or delivered about 1,800 logs that were in Long Fork and its tributaries. After Tackitt quit the job, Johnson employed hands and drifted out the logs Tackitt had left, using the splash dam referred to in the contracts in so doing.

On March 28th, 1913, Tackitt .brought this action against Johnson, alleging a breach of the contract by Johnson which prevented him from completing the contract, and seeking to recover the sum of $500.00 for logs which he had delivered and for which he had not been paid, the further sum of $440.00, for profits which he alleged he could have made under the contract, for delivering logs which, he alleged, Johnson wrongfully withheld and failed to put into Long Fork according to the contract, and the further sum of $200.00, for the wrongful taking and converting to his own use, by Johnson, of the splash dam referred to in the ■contracts.

Johnson, by his answer, traversed all of the allegations of the petition, except the execution of the contract, and, by counter-claim, alleged a breach of ■ the contract by Tackitt, and sought to recover of him the sum of $1,500.00 damages therefor. Before the trial, Johnson died, and the action was revived in the name of his administratrix. Upon a trial by jury, a verdict was rendered in favor of Tackitt, for the sum .of $1,000.00, and to reverse the judgment rendered thereon this appeal is prosecuted.

[409]*409Appellant seeks a reversal because of alleged errors of the trial court in admitting incompetent evidence, in overruling her motion for a peremptory instruction, in the instructions given, and upon the ground that 'the verdict is against the evidence.

Before taking up these alleged errors, it will be necessary, first, to consider some preliminary questions with reference to the contract of March 7th, 1912. It is insisted, by appellee, that the contract is indefinite and ambiguous, as to the logs covered by it, which are described therein, as “all the logs of Cole & Crane that is now in Long Fork or that may be put into said creek by January 1st, 1913.” Appellee contends that, by the parties, this clause was meant to include, not only Long Fork of Shelby Creek, but several of its tributaries, and that by the latter part of this provision, “or that may be put into said creek by January 1st, 1913,” Johnson was obligated to put into said creek and its tributaries, between 6,500 and 7,000 logs. Appellant insists that none of the logs in the tributaries of Long Fork were included in the contract; that no definite number of logs were to be put in the creek, and that the contract is not ambiguous or indefinite.

The principle is settled that when a written contract is ambiguous in its terms, parol evidence may be introduced to show what the parties had in contemplation by the language used: 10 R. C. L. 1065; Jenkins v. Bass, 88 Ky. 397; but that neither parol evidence nor preliminary negotiations can be allowed to contradict or vary the terms of the contract. 6 R. C. L. 839.

As to Avhether this contract applied only to the logs on Long Fork, or to those in its tributaries as well, the contract is ambiguous and indefinite, for it may be construed either way, and parol evidence was competent to explain it; but to attempt to show by parol evidence that, by this provision of the contract, the parties had a definite number of logs in contemplation, and that, by the contract, Johnson had obligated himself to place in the creek a definite number of logs, would be to permit one party, by parol evidence and evidence of preliminary negotiations, to introduce into it a warranty, where none whatever exists, which is contrary to the rule. It is plain that the parties did not mean any certain number of logs, but that the contract, by its express terms, limits its application to the logs then in [410]*410the creek and an indefinite number of logs that might be put therein by January 1st, 1913. Clearly this was not a warranty, upon Johnson’s part, to put any certain number of logs in the creek by that time, and such a warranty cannot be placed in the contract by parol evidence, and all evidence introduced to that effect was clearly incompetent.

Another provision of the contract, requiring consideration, is that with reference to the payments to be made as the work progressed.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 117, 173 Ky. 406, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-tackitt-kyctapp-1917.