Mammoth Garage v. Taylor

295 S.W. 429, 220 Ky. 499, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 551
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 10, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 429 (Mammoth Garage v. Taylor) 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
Mammoth Garage v. Taylor, 295 S.W. 429, 220 Ky. 499, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 551 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the 'Court by

Turner, Commissioner—

In February and March, 1924, appellant, Webb, doing business as the Mammoth Garage, sold and delivered to appellee two automobiles, one in each of those months.

A cash payment was made upon each of them at the time, and a chattel mortgage executed setting forth the terms of sale, the time and amount of payment of the deferred installments, together with the undertaking by the purchaser to keep the two motor vehicles insured against, fire and theft for not less than the total of the unpaid installments, and with a provision precipitating the due date of all installments if any one of them was not paid at the time fixed. In each instance the estimated cost of insurance was embraced in the purchase price.

In the fall of 1924 this ordinary action was filed seeking to enforce a lien for the unpaid purchase price, being a balance in one case of $233.50, and in the other of $273.12.

An answer, and counterclaim was filed, admitting the amount of the unpaid purchase price in each instance, and alleging as to one of the motorcars that it was practically destroyed by fire of unknown origin while in defendant’s possession, and “that he thereupon carried said automobile to plaintiff’s.place of business and left same there with the plaintiff, and requested the plaintiff to collect and distribute the fire insurance thereon. ’ ’ He then alleges that it was provided in the contract that defendant should keep the motor vehicle insured against fire for enough to pay the balance of the purchase price, and that at the time of the making of the contract he paid plaintiff enough money for that purpose, and plaintiff agreed to pay for said fire insurance, and agreed that the insurance would be maintained and kept up by plaintiff, *501 and asked that the plaintiff be required to disclose whether he had effected such insurance and whether he had collected same.

As to the other automobile, it is alleged that defendant had wrongfully and without right procured and had served upon defendant an order of attachment, wherein he sought to specifically enforce a lien thereon, and that accordingly said motorcar was taken from defendant, and defendant deprived of the use thereof, and placed in the garage of one Hoskins, and he prays the cause be transferred to the equity docket, for a disclosure as to the insurance, and that he recover of the defendant damages for the wrongful taking of the second car.

A demurrer to the answer and counterclaim was filed, which, so far as this record shows, was never acted upon; but on January 21, 1925, an order was entered reciting, “The answer and counterclaim having been stricken, the defendant is given time to amend.”

About that time J. G. Hoskins filed his petition to be made a party asserting a claim and lien against one of the cars for repairs, etc., placed thereon and asking that the same be sold. At the time the answer and counterclaim was filed, defendant also entered a motion to discharge the attachment.

Plaintiff filed an amended petition, alleging that the motorcar damaged by fire was delivered to him by the defendant, and that he was holding possession of the same by virtue of the terms of the chattel mortgage, and that same is not worth more than the amount of his lien thereon, and that the other car was being held by James Hoskins for a debt against the same for repairs, and that that car is worth less than the amount of the liens held against it.

A judgment of sale was entered as to each of the cars, but the record does not disclose that it was ever executed.

During the trial, defendant filed an amended, answer, asserting only that plaintiff, while doing business as the Mammoth Garage, was a partnership composed of R. S. Webb and Ralph Parmer, and that such partnership, while doing business under that trade-name, had not complied with the statute, and had not filed in the office of the clerk of the county court their statement or certificate stating the name of the partnership or the full names of *502 the partners, and that, because of their failure so to do, they had no right to maintain this action.

On the trial, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for the amounts of the uncontroverted liens on each of the motorcars, and then found on the counterclaim a verdict for defendant in the sum of $500.00, and, a judgment having been entered on this verdict, the plaintiff has appealed. The court also in its judgment discharged the plaintiff’s attachment.

In the original petition, grounds for a specific attachment under section -249, 'Civil Code, were stated, and the indorsement on the petition shows the issual of an attachment. Then in an amendment the plaintiff stated grounds for a general attachment, and the indorsement on that pleading shows an attachment was issued. Neither of those attachments is in the transcript before us, and there is nothing to show under which, if either of them, the; motorcars were levied upon.

Treating the grounds of attachment in both pleadings as controverted under the .terms of an agreed order entered at the trial, which is by no means specific, it may be said that the evidence does not sustain the grounds for specific attachment under the provisions of section 249; but the evidence does sustain the grounds for a general attachment which was issued on the amendment. W'e assume from the terms of the judgment that all attachments on the property were discharged, and obviously this was error so far as the general attachment is concerned. The evidence of defendant himself discloses that he is a housekeeper with a family, and that he has no real estate, and that his assets consist of notes aggregating only $700.00 in addition to the two machines. The ground of general attachment asserted was that defendant had no property in this state subject to execution, and obviously the defendant’s own evidence tended to establish that ground, and it should not therefore have been discharged.

The mortgage which, constitutes the contract between the parties does not by its terms impose the duty upon the plaintiff to keep the mortgaged cars insured or to insure them at all, although it does disclose on its face •that the estimated cost of insurance was embraced in the purchase price. That instrument provides- on its face that its provisions constitute the entire contract between *503 the parties, and, while defendant alleges in his pleading that the plaintiff agreed and undertook to effectuate and keep in force insurance upon the two motorcars, it does not allege that such agreement or undertaking by the plaintiff was by fraud or mistake left out of the written contract. That pleading, therefore, did not authorize the giving of the second instruction under which defendant recovered a verdict for $500.00 under the allegation of his counterclaim.

The action was based upon a written contract which presumably contained, as it recites, the whole agreement between the parties as to the subject-matter, and the defendant’s counterclaim rests upon an allegation with reference to the same transaction as to an alleged undertaking by the plaintiff which is not embraced within the terms of the written contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 429, 220 Ky. 499, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mammoth-garage-v-taylor-kyctapphigh-1927.