Lexington Cab Co. v. Terrell

137 S.W.2d 721, 282 Ky. 70, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 23, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 721 (Lexington Cab Co. v. Terrell) 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
Lexington Cab Co. v. Terrell, 137 S.W.2d 721, 282 Ky. 70, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 121 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing.

On July 26, 1935, the appellee and plaintiff below, *72 John Addison Terrell, purchased a Pontiac 1935 model automobile, the deferred payments on which aggregated $782.72, which was the net purchasing price after deducting an allowance for an old automobile taken in by the seller. That balance was divided into sixteen monthly payments of $48.92 each, and the written contract evidencing the sale and all agreements in connection therewith retained title in the automobile until all of the deferred payments were made. But few of them were made and plaintiff, the purchaser, defaulted, which resulted in refinancing the transaction with another concern, known as the Lexington Finance Corporation. The contract with the latter company, by which the purchase was refinanced, was in the nature of a mortgage given to it on the automobile to secure the reduced monthly payments extending over a longer period of time agreed to between the parties under that contract. However, it purported to retain title in the purchaser as though that contract was an original sales contract made by that company as the seller.

Plaintiff defaulted in making payments to the latter company and upon complaint by it because of plaintiff’s defalcations he orally agreed and did deliver the possession of the automobile to it, a chief officer of which was a Mr. Ed Houlihan. The latter, and the plaintiff, do not agree in their testimony as to the terms upon which the possession of the automobile was delivered to Houlihan as representative of the Lexington Finance Corporation — plaintiff contending that in doing so he merely constituted the Finance Corporation his trustee or agent to sell the automobile and after satisfying its mortgage debt then to pay the balance, if any, to him; whilst Houlihan stated that plaintiff turned the automobile absolutely over to him in satisfaction of the finance corporation’s total indebtedness, amounting to something like $635, with possibly some accumulated interest.

At any rate, Houlihan, upon receiving possession of the automobile, placed it in a garage in the city of Lexington known as “City Hall G-arage,” which was owned and operated, as shown by the testimony, by a Mr. Marion C. Custard, the daily operator and apparent manager of which was the defendant and appellant, Walter Hiteshugh. At the time of delivering the automobile to the garage Houlihan instructed Hiteshugh to *73 let no one take it out except bimself, or someone designated by bis principal, tbe Lexington Finance Corporation.

About two years prior to the transaction out of wbicb this litigation grew tbe defendant and appellant, Lexington Cab Company, rented an entire building in tbe city of Lexington, consisting of a basement and two or more stories in height, to which it moved and thereafter conducted its business of operating busses upon tbe streets of Lexington as a carrier of passengers to different parts of tbe city. At that time one of the ground floor rooms of that building so leased by tbe Cab Company was occupied by a concern known as “City Hall Garage, ’ ’ but by whom it was then so conducted is not shown by tbe record. However, tbe Cab Company, after it moved into and took charge of that building on October 30, 1935, subleased a part of it to “Marion C. Custard, doing business under tbe firm name of ‘City Hall Garage.’ ” — tbe part so subleased being tbe basement and tbe first floor, with tbe reserved right of tbe Cab Company “to use tbe first floor of said building free of charge, for tbe storage of any and all Packard equipment owned by tbe first party and to store and park, free of charge, an overflow of taxicabs owned or operated by first party.” It was proven by defendants— and we think uncontradicted by any substantial testimony — that Custard continued to operate tbe garage thereafter up to and including tbe time of tbe transaction here involved, and which embraced tbe date that Houlihan delivered tbe automobile to tbe garage.

On April 4, 1936 — slightly less than two months from tbe time the garage received tbe automobile from Houlihan — plaintiff and bis attorney, Henry T. Duncan, Jr., appeared at tbe garage and inspected tbe automobile without saying anything to Hitesbugb, who was then present. They then left, returning, however, within an hour thereafter. Upon their return trip plaintiff got in tbe automobile and started out of tbe garage, bimself driving it and picking up Duncan, who was somewhere about tbe front entrance, when Hitesbugb discovered what was being done and be rushed to tbe automobile and protested against carrying it away without the consent_ or direction of Houlihan, or tbe Finance Corporation,’ and suggested that Houlihan be called over tbe *74 phone, when both plaintiff and his attorney declined to-communicate with him or to await any communication, with him by Hiteshugh, but immediately drove away— later depositing the automobile in a different garage in. the city and in the name of Duncan, the attorney.

The defendant and appellant, Leroy Smith, was. secretary and treasurer of the Cab Company and as-such had an office, either in some part of the room occupied by the garage, or on some other floor of the entire building rented by the Cab Company. Custard was absent and could not be located by Hiteshugh; whereupon he consulted defendant Leroy Smith, who was and is-a brother-in-law of Custard, telling him what had happened, and Smith advised him to consult with an attorney, since Hiteshugh had correctly told him that he-knew neither of the parties who carried away the automobile, nor did they inform him as to their intentions in the premises, except plaintiff claimed that Duncan stated to Hiteshugh when the car was taken away that his client was the owner of it; but it is not claimed that the name of the client was given, nor did the attorney-give his name to Hiteshugh. The latter denied that either the attorney or his client stated on that occasion that the latter was the owner of the automobile, nor did Hiteshugh know at that time the extent of the interest, if any, that the Finance Corporation had in and to the-automobile. The only thing he ever knew was that the-Finance Corporation, through its agent and representative, Houlihan, delivered the car to the garage for storage.

Following the suggestion of the defendant, Leroy Smith, Hiteshugh consulted the Hon. Harry Miller, who-was attorney for the Cab Company, and told him in substance the facts we have related, but, perhaps, with greater detail. Miller said: “I know nothing else to debut get out a John Doe warrant.” Hiteshugh then went to a justice of the peace in Lexington by the name of Boone and made affidavit based upon the facts stated, when the justice issued a warrant against John Doe-charging him with grand larceny. Later in the afternoon the name of the plaintiff, as the driver of the car when it was taken away from the garage, was learned and his name inserted in the warrant in lieu of the fictitious one of John Doe. In the meantime — and some *75 where near 4 o ’clock in the afternoon of that day — two policemen went to the home of plaintiff to arrest him under the warrant, but he was absent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.2d 721, 282 Ky. 70, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lexington-cab-co-v-terrell-kyctapphigh-1940.