Knox v. Haralson

2 Tenn. Ch. R. 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 232 (Knox v. Haralson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knox v. Haralson, 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 232 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

— The complainant came to Nashville, in 1872, a stranger, with some $2,000 in money. In October of that year the defendant M. J. Haralson, learning, as he says, that the complainant had some money, and was anxious to engage in business in Nashville, informed him that he, Haralson, was the owner of a lumber-yard in Nashville, which was then controlled and occupied by his son, the defendant J. H. Haralson, and that if he, Knox, would furnish the money to buy stock for the yard, he might form a partnership with said J. H., have one-half the profits, and should he become dissatisfied, at the end of three or four months, with the partnership, he should have his money paid back to him, with interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum, and also be paid fair compensation for the labor performed by him. The complainant did advance $1,000, and enter into the arrangement proposed. Shortly after-wards, on the 10th of November, 1872, the defendant M. J. Haralson borrowed from the complainant another $1,000, for which he gave him his note at one day, with 10 per cent, interest, payable on ten days’ notice. The partnership between complainant and J. H. Haralson seems to [233]*2333iave been terminated in March or April, 1873, complainant remaining in possession of the yard, and continuing the lumber business. On the 25th of July, 1873, there was a settlement between complainant and M. J. Haralson of the first advance of $1,000 to buy stock, which was satisfactory to the parties, Haralson giving his note at one day, with 10 per cent, interest, for the balance of $350 found due to complainant. On this note a credit was given, on the 7th of October, 1873, for a horse, and, on the next day, an additional credit of $60 for lumber. On the 29th of September, 1873, defendant M. J. Haralson obtained from complainant an instrument in writing, certifying that he had contracted with said Haralson for 500 cords of slabs and stocks, at $4 per cord, half in cash on delivery and half to be credited on Haralson’s indebtedness, the lumber to be delivered in the complainant’s yard “within the next twelve months.” There seems to have been no obligation on Haralson’s part to deliver the lumber, and M. J. Haralson, in his deposition, says he concluded not to enforce the obligation of complainant. The contract, if it ever was one, has run out by its own terms, and is no longer of any validity.

Leaving this transaction out of view, the result was, in October, 1873, that M. J. Haralson was still indebted to the complainant, by note of the 10th of November, 1872, for $1,000, with 10 per cent, interest, and by a balance on the note of the 25th of July, 1873, of $140, with like interest. In this state of affairs the defendant J. H. Haralson comes to the front. On the 25th of October, 1873, he obtains from complainant a paper writing, certifying that he had that day contracted with said J. H. for 1,000 cords of wood, “ now standing in the woods near Goodlettsville, and the E. & K. R. R., at 75 cents per cord, as it now stands,” the same to be placed as a credit on M. J. Haralson’s notes. At that time J. H. Haralson owned no land or wood, so far as appears, near Goodlettsville. On the 27th of October, [234]*2341873, two days afterwards, be makes a trade with John L.. Hadley, and receives from him tbe following paper writing:

“October 27, 1873.
“As a consideration of 100 cords of merchantable cedar-timber, to be delivered on the banks of Cumberland river, twelve months (or within that period) from date, I have-transferred to J. H. Haralson my flock of thirty-seven goats, and bind’ myself in addition, when said timber is delivered, to convey to him a deed to ninety acres of land,, lying in the county of Sumner, state of Tennessee.
“ Jno. L. Hadley.”

Hadley’s deposition was taken in this cause on the 9th of February, 1874, and he therein states that no part of the-recited consideration had then been paid. He gave, he says, for the land a mare and a young jack, “neither of which was of much intrinsic worth.” He had paid for the jack $30. It is probable the flock of goats was the chief item in the trade, in the view of Haralson, for they are sufficiently described, whereas the description of the land is too-vague to ascertain the particular tract sold, and, as to it,, the contract is obviously void for uncertainty. Dobson v. Litton, 6 Coldw. 616.

Armed with this document, J. H. Haralson, who had never seen the land, makes an engagement with complainant to take him up to see the timber on the supposed tract near Groodlettsville, with his lather, M. J. Haralson, who had seen the land. By sheer accident, according to the Haral-sons, they met a man by the name of Neal, an old friend of the Haralsons, from Wilson county, then stopping at the house of the elder Haralson, and took him along. The timber on this place is, of course, greatly admired and largely commented on. As they return to Nashville they stop at a wayside grocery and buy a bottle of whisky and some cakes, and, thus enlivened, discuss the feasibility of making a fortune in the wood trade. Neal thinks the timber is cheap at 75 cents a cord, and that he can probably [235]*235undertake to deliver it at Nashville for $3.75 a cord. If' this can be done, complainant is induced to think he can make money by selling it. This was the 2d of November, 1873, and Sunday. That night, at the house of M. J. Haralson, J. H. Haralson, in the presence of Neal, as he-(Neal) tells us in his deposition, drew up all the necessary papers to consummate a trade with complainant upon the-basis above suggested. Early the next morning he and Neal go to complainant’s place of business, and, after taking a drink — doubtless to the frequent happy returns of such Sundays as the day before — J. H. Haralson produces his papers and undertakes to read them to complainant, and procures his signature to them; and on that or the-next day takes up his father’s notes, and obtains from complainant a note for $360 to boot, and on the same day gets $210 of the note paid to him in cedar lumber and other things. Such a transaction, it is obvious, deserves to-be closely scrutinized, to say the least, if there are any circumstances tending to arouse the suspicions of the court, growing out of the relations of the parties or their respective characters.

The proof is clear that complainant is a simple-minded,, uneducated, and confiding man. His signature conclusively shows that he can barely scratch his name, and there is nothing to throw doubt on his assertion that he reads writ-' ing with great difficulty, and is compelled to rely upon others to read it for him. Neal, whose sympathies are all with the defendants, and at whose house the elder Haralson was living when his deposition was taken, says that complainant did not read the papers which were signed by him, but they were read to him by J. H. Haralson — twice, says-the witness. The proof is clear that wood in the tree, at, the distance from Nashville and from the railroad as the-tract in question, was worth from 10 to 25 cents per cord,, according to quality and object of use, and that the land, timber, and all were worth, perhaps, $1 an acre, or thereabouts. The complainant was grossly imposed upon, and. [236]*236‘with such a concatenation of circumstances as to look very like design. Mere feebleness of intellect, not amounting to imbecility, is, of course, not sufficient to justify the court in annulling contracts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. Ch. R. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-v-haralson-tennctapp-1875.