Kitchen Lumber Company v. Moses

46 S.W.2d 791, 242 Ky. 505, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 791 (Kitchen Lumber Company v. Moses) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kitchen Lumber Company v. Moses, 46 S.W.2d 791, 242 Ky. 505, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 301 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

*506 Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner —

Denying appeals in part, granting in part, and reversing in part.

•The appellant, Kitchen Lumber Company, owned a large body of timber in Whitley and adjoining counties, and, in order to get it out, secured rights of way for' a logging railroad over the property of a number of citizens. In the Whitley quarterly court, Jake Moses and five others filed separate suits, alike in form, asking judgments for a year’s rental or consideration, and praying for a reformation of their several contracts or conveyances. The money judgment sought in three cases was $50 each, in two of them, $75 each, and in one of them $100. In some of the cases small claims were asserted for damages to fences and other property not comprehended by the easements, but those claims have been eliminated. The cases were transferred to the circuit court, and were there tried together before a jury. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court withdrew them from the consideration of the jury, and adjudged the parties were entitled to the reformation of their several contracts and the money judgments asked for. Upon one record appeals have been prayed in this court from each of the six judgments.

Before considering the motions to dismiss the appeals for want of jurisdiction, we turn our attention to the merits of the three cases in which we conclude the court has jurisdiction.

The several contracts or grants were upon similar printed forms with blanks filled in by a typewriter, except in two instances the interlineations which gave rise to this litigation were made by a pen in the presence of the grantors. The parties had previously given options for the grants. We skeletonize one of the contracts thus:

“In consideration of the sum of $75, receipt of which is acknowledged, paid and to be paid as follows: At the rate of $75 per year for actual time used. We, Jake Moses, Angeline Moses, his wife, have this day bargained and sold, and by these presents do transfer, grant and convey unto Kitchen Lumber Company ... a right of way for a narrow gauge railroad on, over, through and across our lands . . . for the purpose of . . . transporting timber and timber products, and . . . sup *507 plies in the course of said Kitchen Lumber Company’s timber operations, for a term of four years from the date hereof,” etc.

It was pleaded and endeavored to be proved that the italicized portion was inserted through mistake on the part of the grantor and misrepresentation or fraud on the part of the grantee, and should therefore be eliminated. If so stricken out, the contract bound the lumber company, in one particular case to pay $75 a year for four years, or a total consideration of $300. Otherwise, it was obliged to pay the grantor the proportional rental for only such time as the right of way was occupied. As recited in the document, $75 was paid when the contract was signed and acknowledged. The other cases differ only in respect to the amount. It appears that the railroad was not laid until after the expiration of the first year and the land had been occupied only a few months when the suits were filed; the plaintiffs claiming advance rent for the second year. It is said in the brief that the railroad was removed before the four years expired; but the time of occupancy is not shown in the record; nor does it seem material.

The evidence tending to prove plaintiffs’ cases was as follows:

Jake Moses testified that, when the contract was submitted to him by Quick, the agent of the company, he read it and objected to signing it because of the words “for actual time used,” since he had agreed to lease the land for $75 a year “for what time they might hold the contract.” He says Quick stated that the term did not mean what he thought it did, and further said, “That only means to release the Kitchen Lumber Company paying for this full year — this full four years of time in case they get through and get out of here. ’ ’ He asked Quick when the next payment would be due, and was told that he would get another $75 “12 months from the date.” He concluded his evidence with the statement that he relied upon Quick’s representations, and that the company’s present interpretation of the contract does not comply with his understanding or agreement. His son, Eddie Moses, corroborates him as to the promise that he would receive another $75 payment one year from that date. In answer to a suggestive question of plaintiffs’ counsel, he testified that Quick explained the term “for *508 actual time” used to mean “that the company could be relieved from liability or from payment in the future in the event they completed the job up there before the four years ended.” And further, on cross-examination, “anyway he said for ‘actual time used’ was used to keep from hplding them responsible for the full four years.” Plaintiff’s daughter, who was also present when the contract was signed, testified to the same effect.

As to W. C. or Cassie Centers’ contract, he testified that he did not read it, but that Quick read it to him, and, upon inquiry as to when the next payment would be made, Quick stated that it would be one year from that date. If anything was said about the phrase “for actual time used,” he did not hear it, and he would not have signed a contract had he known it was in there or that it meant for any part of a year.

There was a contract with I. M. Moses, who died before the trial. Mrs. Moses testified that “they” told her husband that “on the 20th day of December you get another pay day.” Miller, general manager of the company, she stated, was present, and explained that the company would pay for the time the track stood there; that they could hold the land as long as four years, if the track stayed on the ground that long, and were to pay as long as the track did remain. She understood the contract to mean that, if the railroad had not been constructed, the company would have owed nothing. Nor,man Moses, a son, and Eddie Moses, who were also present, testified to the same effect. The contract was read over to Mr. Moses, and he signed it without any explanation of its terms being made. They understood it was to pay for the time the company was on the land, but that the company was on there at the time of the trial and had not paid for the second year.

George Meadors, a deputy county court clerk, accompanied the agent of the lumber company, and took the acknowledgments of these grantors. Introduced by the plaintiffs, lie testified that Quick told each of the parties that he would be entitled to another payment at the expiration of one year, and that the company would pay each year as long as it used the land. Quick explained to everyone of them that the company was not bound for the full four years.

It will be seen that the plaintiffs failed to make out a case. They proved that the agent of the company repre *509 sented to them that the contract meant just what it is now claiming it means, with the exception that he had told them that they would receive another annual rental one year from that date. However, we may note the evidence introduced on this point by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 791, 242 Ky. 505, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitchen-lumber-company-v-moses-kyctapphigh-1932.