Morris v. Gilliam
This text of 281 S.W. 1026 (Morris v. Gilliam) 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.
Opinion
*764 Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Prior to October 17,1921, tbe appellant and defendant below, 'W. O. Morris, operated a garage in the city of Bowling Green, Kentucky, and was also local agent for tbe sale of Hupmobile and Stutz automobiles. On tbat day be sold bis business, with all stock and fixtures on band, to appellee and plaintiff below, J. S. Gilliam. Tbe contract was in writing and tbe price agreed to be paid was tbe amount of tbe invoice of tbe stock, plus carriage, and a stipulated sum for two new Hupmobiles owned by plaintiff and wbicb were in bis garage, tbe total purchase price amounting to slightly more than $6,000.00. Tbe contract also included tbe sale of defendant’s local agency for tbe two above makes of automobiles, tbe most valued of wbicb was tbe agency for tbe Húpmobile, and wbicb plaintiff averred and testified was tbe chief inducement for tbe purchase. After tbe written contract bad been executed tbe parties went to tbe city of Louisville and bad tbe state distributor of local agencies for tbe two automobiles to transfer tbe Bowling Green agency to plaintiff, which was done in writing. In it there was a stipulation that it might be cancelled at any time by giving notice. Plaintiff put in charge of tbe business bis two sons and he immediately went to Florida, where be spent tbe winter and returned early in tbe spring of 1922. In tbe meantime, only two or three Hupmobiles bad been sold by plaintiff’s sons, who were operating tbe local agency at Bowling Green, and tbe state distributor for tbat machine, who was nothing more than tbe state agent for its sale, became dissatisfied and so notified plaintiff, and soon thereafter Mr. Boyd, president and manager of tbe state agency, went to Bowling Green and cancelled plaintiff’s agency contract for tbe sale of Hupmobiles at tbat place and in tbat territory, and placed it with another under tbe same character of contract, all of wbicb occurred about April 1, 1922. Tbat person proved to be unsatisfactory and Boyd approached plaintiff to accept tbe agency. After considerable persuasion be agreed to do so, and this equity action was thereafter filed against him by plaintiff seeking to reform tbe contract of sale to him of the garage and of tbe local agency, by inserting therein by parol proof a stipulation tbat defendant was “not to in any way interfere or engage in this business during the time tbat plaintiff was engaged therein,” wbicb it was averred was omitted from tbe contract “by *765 oversight and mistake.” It was further averred in the petition that defendant had violated the contract as made and as sought to be reformed, by reason of which plaintiff sustained damages in the sum of $4,000.00, for which he prayed judgment. The answer denied the material averments of the petition, and upon submission, after evidence taken, the court'did not expressly order a reformation of the contract, but did so in effect by rendering judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $2,100.00, and complaining of it defendant prosecutes this appeal.
It is the universal rule, consistently followed by this court, that in order to obtain a reformation of an executed written contract on the ground of mistake it must be a mutual one and not a mistake of one of the parties alone, and the pleading seeking the reformation must so allege, either expressly, or aver facts from which the mutuality of the mistake is necessarily inferable. Pickrell and Craig Co. v. Castleman Blakemore Co., 174 Ky. 1; Stark v. Suttle, 181 Ky. 646; Commercial Auto v. Brandies Machinery and Supply Co., 198 Ky. 155; and Denny v. Crabtree, 194 Ky. 185. There was no such express averment contained in any of plaintiff’s pleadings and it is doubtful if such mutuality of the alleged mistake was necessarily inferable from the allegations as made.
But, however that may be, the rule is equally universal that in order to reform such a contract the proof must be clear, convincing and satisfactory that the mutual mistake was in fact made before a court will reform the contract. That rule is stated as the correct one by all text writers upon the subject, as well as approved and applied by all courts, including this one. Cook v. Day, 168 Ky. 282; Johnson v. Gadberry, 174 Ky. 66; Central Life Insurance Co. v. Robinson, 181 Ky. 511; Nichols v, Nichols, 182 Ky. 21; Hauger v. International Trading Co., 184 Ky. 798; Foxwell v. Justice, 191 Ky. 754; Farar v. Eli, 195 Ky. 31; Slater v. Hatfield, 195 Ky. 281, and Karr v. Pearl, 212 Ky. 387. See also Caldwell’s Kentucky Law Dictionary, vol. 6, pages 235-9.
In the cases of Litteral v. Bevins, 185 Ky. 514; Lamastus v. Morgan’s Committee, 178 Ky. 805; Atha v. Webster, 181 Ky. 581, and Johnson v. Elkhorn Gas, Coal and Mining Co., 193 Ky. 585, the rule was announced that a mere preponderance of evidence is not enough to authorize the reformation of an executed written contract, and that before a court will do so the proof should be * ‘ clear and convincing, or such as to establish the fraud *766 or mistake beyond reasonable controversy.” In this case defendant denied any sncb mistake, as well as denied tbe agreement sought to be interpolated into the contract by the reformation sought by the petition, although plaintiff testified, to such facts. The other witnesses introduced by each side at least balanced each other, if, indeed, it did not preponderate in favor of defendant. So that, if for no other reason, the proof was insufficient, under the prevailing rule, supra, to authorize the judgment.
Independently, however, of that objection, it uncontradictedly appeared in the case that plaintiff knew that the Hupmobile agency which he purchased was subject to cancellation by the state distributor at any time. He also testified that it was the chief consideration for him entering into the contract. Furthermore, the alleged omitted part of the contract (and which the reformation sought to insert therein and without which plaintiff would have no cause of action whatever) was that defendant “would not engage in this business in this city and would not in any way interfere with, or himself take the agency of said Hupmobile automobile so long as this plaintiff desired to remain in said business,” i. e., as local agent for the sale of Hupmobiles. His desire to remain in that business was dependent entirely upon the will of the state distributor under whom he was employed, and when they or it withdrew consent by cancelling his agency, such cancellation necessarily terminated his right to continue “in said business.” It did so happen in this case, and when defendant accepted the agency on July 1, 1922, plaintiff was no longer engaged in that business and had not been since about April 1, prior thereto.- So that, there was no violation of defendant’s contract, even if it had been made as plaintiff contends and had been properly proven to have been omitted from the writing by mutual mistake.
It is said, however, that defendant procured such cancellation; but the evidence fails to establish that fact, since both he and Boyd not only testified to the contrary, but they each also stated that defendant reluctantly accepted the agency when tendered-to him, and that he was beseeehed to do so because he had made a success of it when he formerly operated it, and the state distributor procured him to do so for purely business reasons’.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
281 S.W. 1026, 213 Ky. 763, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-gilliam-kyctapphigh-1926.