McCrary v. Latham

13 So. 2d 881, 244 Ala. 409, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 226
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 5, 1943
Docket7 Div. 736.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 So. 2d 881 (McCrary v. Latham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCrary v. Latham, 13 So. 2d 881, 244 Ala. 409, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 226 (Ala. 1943).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Justice.

The suit is styled I. H. McCrary, an individual, formerly doing business under the firm name and style of Lineville Mercantile Company, versus J. A. Latham. At the time of the transactions here involved, the Lineville Mercantile Company was a partnership, composed of I. H. McCrary and J. PI. Ingram, Jr. Plaintiff sues on the common counts as for merchandise, goods and chattels sold; open account, stated account, and for money had and received, and the amount claimed is $115.

The bill of exceptions recites, “It was admitted by the defendant in open court that, subject to defendant’s pleas of set-off and recoupment, the defendant owed plaintiff the sum of one hundred and fifteen dollars, with interest from February 20, 1937, as set out in plaintiff’s complaint.” The admitted indebtedness of $115 was on account due by defendant to the Lineville Mercantile Company, and no point is made as to the right of the plaintiff, as an individual, to maintain an action on it.

Defendant interposed the following pleas:

- “4th. The defendant as a defense to the action of the plaintiff saith that at the time said action was commenced the plaintiff was indebted to him in the sum of $502.-40, wherein the defendant on the 10th day' of March, 1936, purchased from the plaintiff twenty tons or 200 bags of nitrate of soda at $33.00 a ton and paid for it by executing to the plaintiff his note in the sum of $500.00, said note being a negotiable paper and was transferred to the Lineville National Bank of Lineville, Alabama before maturity, and which this defendant has been forced to pay in full, and paying the balance on said date, and that the plaintiff was to deliver to the defendant said nitrate of soda on his orders during the spring of 1936; that thereafter and during the month of April, 1936, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant forty-three bags of this nitrate of soda leaving a balance of 152 bags undelivered to defendant; that notwithstanding the fact that the defendant had issued orders and demanded the delivery of the nitrate of soda, the plaintiff has refused to deliver same, which the defendant hereby offers to set off against the demands of the plaintiff, and he claims judgment for the excess.
“5th. For further plea and answer to the complaint, the defendant says that the plaintiff at the time said action was commenced was indebted to him in the sum of $502.40, due by a promissory note which he executed to the plaintiff for the purchase price of nitrate of soda to be delivered to him in the future, said note being executed on the 10th day of March 1936 and payable to this plaintiff; and the defendant avers that this note was a negotiable instrument and that it was given for the purchase price of nitrate of soda which he never received, and that the plaintiff transferred said note to the Lineville National Bank, of Lineville, Alabama, a corporation, before maturity and received the proceeds of said note, and notwithstanding the fact that the defendant had never received said nitrate of soda the bank aforesaid was an innocent purchaser for value without notice and thal this defendant has paid said note in full and has same in his possession, which he hereby offers to set off against the demands of the plaintiff, and he claims judgment for the excess.”

The trial court gave the general charge for the defendant under plea five, and the jury returned a verdict for defendant for the sum of $521.91.

The controversy hinges on the question as to whether J. H. Ingram, Jr., admittedly a partner of the firm operating under the style and name of the Lineville Mercantile Company, was acting for the firm and took defendant’s note in part payment for fertilizer sold by the partnership to defendant, or borrowed defendant’s note in his individual capacity for the purpose of raising money for himself individually.

At the time the note was executed and delivered Ingram was the manager of the Lineville Mercantile Company, and his authority to sell fertilizer for the partnership is not questioned.

The defendant testified as follows:

“I live six miles northeast of Lineville and lived there in the spring of 1936; I *411 know J. H. Ingram, Jr., and knew him at that time; I knew I. H. McCrary at that time; Mr. McCrary and J. H. Ingram, Jr., were in business in Lineville in the spring of 1936, and operated under the name of Lineville Mercantile Company, and were handling fertilizer and nitrate of soda. I gave a note of contract to buy nitrate of soda from them at that time. Mr. Ingram came out to my farm and sold me twenty tons of nitrate of soda, two hundred sacks at $33.00 per ton, and I executed a note for $500.00 and paid him $160.00 in cash, and in that way I bought twenty tons of nitrate of soda from him. I got forty-eight sacks and that is all the nitrate of soda I ever got delivered; we have an order here for 150 sacks, he was to give me an order for the other fifty when he got some more soda and I failed to get it. I failed to get the fertilizer. The day the note was executed he gave me an order for 150 sacks of the soda and in a few days he gave me this other order. I actually got, I believe, forty-three sacks or forty-eight sacks; I got forty-three sacks, and then I got five sacks, making a total of forty-eight sacks; really I got ten 100 pound sacks, which would have been the same as five 200 pound sacks, so I really got forty-three 200 pound sacks and ten 100 pound sacks, which makes a total of forty-eight 200 pound sacks, and that is all I ever got. When he gave me the order for 150 sacks of 200 pounds, they had a car of fertilizer in the warehouse and he was going to get other cars of fertilizer the next week, and I did not need all the fertilizer at that time, and he was going to give me an order at a deferred date when the soda was shipped. I called for the remainder of the fertilizer called for by these orders but did not get it. I called for the other 150 sacks, the balance of the two hundred sacks I bought, but did not get it. The note I gave Mr. Ingram was payable to the Lineville Mercantile Company. Nothing was said by Mr. Ingram to me about me putting up some money, or any part of this money for him to pay his part of the contribution on the partnership. I was not familiar with the transaction between the partners to that firm and I was not a member of that firm; I was not familiar with the transactions between the individuals of the firm; the note I executed I found at the Lineville National Bank, and paid it and the interest on it. I do not know where this first original note is, that is, the original note I gave for the fertilizer ; I have searched for it in the places where I usually keep papers of that sort and have not been able to find it. The original note provided for eight percent, interest from date; I paid off that note with interest at eight percent, from date.”

J. H. Ingram, Sr., a witness for defendant, testified:

“Throughout 1936 I was engaged in the banking business in Lineville; the Lineville National Bank was the bank in which I did business; my son, J. H. Ingram, Jr., was manager of the Lineville Mercantile Company at Lineville, Alabama; I understood that as such he was selling fertilizer from March 16, 1936. I discounted a note given by J. A. Latham, the defendant in this case, and the proceeds of said note were credited to the Lineville Mercantile Company.

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Related

McCrary v. Latham
19 So. 2d 79 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
13 So. 2d 881, 244 Ala. 409, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrary-v-latham-ala-1943.