Memhard v. Alfred Gabrielsen Co.

5 S.W.2d 1070, 224 Ky. 238, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 569
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 1070 (Memhard v. Alfred Gabrielsen Co.) 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
Memhard v. Alfred Gabrielsen Co., 5 S.W.2d 1070, 224 Ky. 238, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 569 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge McCandless

Affirming.

Alfred Gabrielsen Company, a corporation of San Francisco, Cal., and F. H. Memhard and L. D. Memhard, a partnership of Louisville, Ky., doing business under the style of F. H. Memhard & Co., are brokers, and were known to each other to be such at all times mentioned herein. For brevity, these parties will hereinafter be referred to as appellee and appellants, respectively. In December, 1920, appellee filed this action against the defendants for the net balance due on the purchase price of a car of canned tomatoes. It is alleged in the petition that the defendants ordered those goods for one of their customers and guaranteed payment of the purchase price; that the tomatoes were shipped and delivery refused by the purchaser in Louisville, and they were sold on the market, and the net proceeds from the sale credited upon the purchase price. The purchaser of the goods, the Moneyworth Grocery Company, was also made a defendant, but made no defense, and has taken no appeal from the judgment against it. The appellants filed answer traversing the affirmative allegations of the petition and affirmatively pleading that it was a part of the contract for plaintiff to express a sample case in advance of shipment, and that it failed to do this. They also pleaded misrepresentation to them on the part of the purchaser inducing them to become guarantors. At the time of trial, something over a year later, appellants withdrew the affirmative defenses in their answer and offered to file an amended answer pleading no consideration for the guaranty; that L. D. Memhard is a married *240 woman, the wife of F. H. Memhard; that the guaranty was made without her knowledge or consent and without any conveyance of her property as security, and is therefore in violation of the statutes as to her.

All questions of law and fact were submitted to the court, who refused to permit this answer to be filed, though it appears from his written findings of fact that he considered the defenses raised therein, and rendered .judgment for plaintiff for $533. Defendants appeal.

Observing the question of consideration, it appears that all the negotiations for the purchase were' conducted by correspondence. It began with a telegram from defendant reading:

“Nov. 26,1919.
“Alfred Gabrielsen Co., San Francisco, Cal. Confirm one thousand cases two and one half standard tomatoes with .puree one twenty seven one half coast express case for samples.
“F. H. Memhard & Co.”

To which appellee answered:

“F. H. Memhard & Co., Louisville, Ky. Confirm one. car standard, tomatoes two and half with puree for trimmings one twenty seven and half. Necessary to ship twelve hundred and fifty cases to complete car as packed in fiber. We wiil express case but not sold subject approval sample as from good reliable packer. Wire buyers name shipping-instructions quick.
“Alfred Gabrielsen Company.”

Appellants responded by telegram reading:

“Nov. 30, 1919.
“Alfred Gabrielsen Co., San Francisco, Cal. Answering accept car standard tomatoes two one half with puree from trimmings one twenty seven one half ship to Moneyworth Grocery care of Louisville Public Warehouse Brook and Main Louisville Kentucky sight draft presentation.
F. H. Memhard & Company. ’ ’

Appellee rejoined:

“Dec. 1, 1919.-
“F. H. Memhard & Co., Louisville, Ky. Your night letter confirming tomatoes Moneyworth Gro *241 eery Company these people not rated packers declines ship unless you guarantee draft will be taken up on presentation. Answer.
“Alfred Gabrielsen Company.”

And appellants responded by wire:

“Dec. 4, 1919.
“Alfred Gabrielsen Co., San Francisco, Cal. Answering will guarantee acceptance of draft.
“F. H. Memhard & Co.”

Appellee responded by letter:

“Dfec. 6. 1919.
“F. H. Memhard & Co., Louisville, Ky.— Dear Sirs: Referring to our exchange of wires, we are in receipt of yours of the fourth advising that you guarantee acceptance of draft. We have instructed that this car be shipped as soon as possible. We are inclosing you herewith our sales memo No. 419, covering sale of car of tomatoes to the Money-worth Grocery Company and beg to thank you for your cooperation in this deal, and trust that same may be a forerunner to a profitable business for the future.
“Very truly yours,
“Alfred Gabrielsen Co.”

Appellants’ contention is that the contract was closed by the third telegram, and that no consideration was given for the subsequent agreement of guaranty. But to this we cannot assent. The first telegram was an inquiry asking if plaintiff would furnish 1,000 cases 2%-pound cans of tomatoes at $1.27% per dozen coast price and a case for sample. The answer was that plaintiff would furnish a car of 1,250 cases at the price and express a case, but that shipment was not to be a sale by sample. It also asked information as to the name of the purchaser and shipping instructions. Admittedly this telegram was a counter offer, and did not close the trade, nor can it be said that it was putting a final offer for acceptance “Yes” or “No.” It made no reference to terms, and inquired for the buyer’s name and shipping-instructions, matters still to be considered. Nor were these matters concluded by appellants’ reply accepting such proposal and offering terms and stating the name of the buyer. It is true that a large part of the business of the country is conducted by consigning merchandise *242 on sight draft with hill of lading attached. But, even though under certain circumstances such terms may he implied in contracts of this character, it is clearly evident that appellee did not intend to credit an unknown buyer and upon learning its name declined to extend such credit to it or to ship at all unless appellants guaranteed payment of the bill. True, if the negotiations had been completed before the buyer’s name had been disclosed, the brokers would have been liable for the purchase price as agents for an undisclosed principal, but not so after the name of the principal was disclosed; hence the fourth telegram, declining to ship unless guaranteed by the broker, a proposition that appellants at once accepted, thus showing the construction both parties placed upon it. We think it quite clear that the negotiations were not complete up to this point, and that the contract did not become complete or enforceable until appellants’ acceptance of the guaranty in their final telegram. It follows that the guaranty was not without consideration.

It is next urged that defendants, as guarantors, were released by indulgence granted the Moneyworth Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.2d 1070, 224 Ky. 238, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memhard-v-alfred-gabrielsen-co-kyctapphigh-1928.