Lackey v. Price

128 S.E. 268, 142 Va. 789, 1925 Va. LEXIS 380
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 28, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 S.E. 268 (Lackey v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lackey v. Price, 128 S.E. 268, 142 Va. 789, 1925 Va. LEXIS 380 (Va. 1925).

Opinion

McLemore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the trial court the defendants here were the plaintiffs there, and they will be similarly referred to in this opinion.

In the spring of 1920 John A. Price, H. H. Lackey, T. W. Baxter, J. S. Wilson, J. W. Lenhart and W. A. Bess, calling themselves a building committee from Bess chapel, entered into an agreement with H. H. Lackey, who was at the time operating a saw mill, and himself one of the said building committee (though not a member of the church) for the purchase of 23,000 feet of lumber at $40.00 per thousand to be used in the construction of a church or chapel at some point not yet definitely decided upon,

As to how much of this lumber was actually sawed by the defendant there is a decided conflict in the testimony. There is also considerable uncertainty as to whether the defendant was to deliver the lumber on his yard at the mill, or at the place where the chapel was to be constructed.

At the time the verbal agreement was made with reference to furnishing the lumber, defendant testified the understanding to be that this committee or some one for them must advance $400.00 on the purchase price, which they agreed to do, and that he would wait on them for the remainder of the bill, estimated to be something over $450.00. Plaintiffs’ contention on this point [792]*792is that the $400.00 was an accommodation advance, based upon defendant complying with his contract to cut and_deliver the lumber and was in no sense a payment. WHM

This $400.00 was raised by the execution of a note signed by T. W. Baxter, O. E. Lenhart, 1ST. J. Lenhart and J. W. Lenhart, and endorsed by H. H. Lackey, John A. Price, G. T. Wilson and J. S. Wilson, all members of this church save defendant. T. W. Baxter seems to have chiefly conducted negotiations with the Peoples Bank and Trust Company whereby the note was negotiated and the money thus obtained turned over to the defendant.

For reasons not very clearly established this church was not built, and the defendant contends its construction was abandoned by the committee, and that it, speaking through the same party (its chairman), who contracted with him to cut the lumber in the first instance, notified him the church could not be built, and that both T. W. Baxter and W. A. Bess told him to “go ahead and sell the lumber, that it was impossible to build the church, and on this instruction from the chairman of the building committee and Baxter, the witness sold the lumber.”

Defendant sold the lumber cut for the church in the open market for $24.00 per thousand and now contends that the payment to him of $400.00 was on account of the purchase price of the lumber, which they after-wards declined to accept, and that the action in the circuit court against him as a result of the failure of the makers and endorsers of the $400.00 note negotiated in the bank should not have been maintained, as his loss in selling the lumber for $24.00 was more than the $400.00 advanced to him in the beginning.

The note in the bank was finally paid by all the [793]*793makers and endorsers in equal proportions, and the plaintiffs brought this action of assumpsit against the defendant for $400.00. In this declaration there were the common counts, and a special count in which was set out the contract on the defendant’s part to cut the lumber, and also that they advanced him the sum of $400.00 to enable him to cut the lumber and comply with his contract which he failed to do.

The special pleas in addition to the general issue were filed, but the special pleas were subsequently withdrawn and the case went to the jury on the general issue alone.

It is contended by the plaintiffs’ counsel that defendant could not prove any damages sustained by reason of the failure of the plaintiffs to accept the lumber at $40.00 per thousand feet, as no evidence could be introduced to sustain this damage under the plea of general issue. With this contention we cannot agree, for while he cannot recover over damages as such from the plaintiffs under the plea of non assumpsit, he may, if he can, show that nothing is due the plaintiffs.

The defendant’s contention was that he did not owe plaintiffs anything. That the note was signed by him as an accommodation to plaintiffs to enable them to raise the cash payment on the lumber. . That plaintiffs, or some of them, signed the note and others endorsed it. That the money thus raised was turned over to him as part payment for the lumber, which he had cut or was ready to cut as soon as the $400.00 was paid to him, as specified in the agreement, and therefore he owed them nothing, they having breached the contract and not he. The grounds of defense elearly. indicate this to be the theory upon which the case was tried.

There was no. attempt to set up a claim against plai n tiffs, but only to show that defendant owed them not . h ing. This can be done under the general issue.

[794]*794“Anything that shows there is no existing debt due. ■The statute of limitation, bankruptcy and tender, are ■believed to be the only defense that may not be proved under this plea.” Burks PI. & Pr. (2nd ed.), page 142.

Upon a trial of the case the jury found for the plaintiffs the sum of $360.32 (arrived at by deducting from the $4.00.00 the amount paid to the bank by the defendant as one of the endorsers).

There were numerous exceptions taken during the ■trial, both to the evidence excluded and to the instructions given and refused. These are embodied in eight ■assignments of error, and will be considered in their ’order.

1st assignment: “1. The court erred in refusing to permit the defendant to prove the amount he obtained from the sale of the lumber, and to show the loss and damage sustained by him by reason of the difference between the market value thus obtained and the contract price of the lumber to which .he was entitled under the bargain between himself and the plaintiffs.”

2nd assignment: “2. The court erred in refusing to permit your petitioner’s wife to testify that she had heard a member of the committee say it was impossible to build the church, that they would have to pay for sawing the lumber anyway, that your petitioner should .go ahead and sell the lumber elsewhere, and that the church could not be built as originally planned.

3rd assignment: “3. The court erred in refusing to ■permit Mrs. W. A. Bess (whose deceased husband was chairman of the building committee, and who is a sister •of T. W. Baxter, another deceased member of the committee), to testify that she heard her husband and her brother say that it was impossible to build the church, and that they had instructed your petitioner to sell the .lumber elsewhere.”

[795]*795As these three assignments are closely related and depend upon each other, they will he considered together.

Defendant attempted to prove by his wife and by Mrs. Bess, widow of W. A. Bess, deceased (who has died since the negotiations originated), apparently accepted, on all sides as chairman of the building committee, certain statements made by decedent and by T. W. Baxter, also deceased, that they had said it was impossible to build the church, and that they and their associates in the enterprise had so advised the defendant, and had instructed him to sell the church lumber for the best price obtainable.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.E. 268, 142 Va. 789, 1925 Va. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lackey-v-price-va-1925.