Nichols v. Meyer

115 A. 786, 139 Md. 450, 1921 Md. LEXIS 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 17, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 115 A. 786 (Nichols v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Meyer, 115 A. 786, 139 Md. 450, 1921 Md. LEXIS 180 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Baltimore City Court in favor of the' appellee in an action of trespass de bonis asportaiis brought by him against the appellants.

The facts which are material to the inquiry before us may be thus summarized:

William C. Meyer, on March 9th, 1911, opened a small cigar store at 1601 M. Gilmor Street, in the City of Baltimore, where he sold cigars, candy and school sttpplies, and in connection with that business operated a public pool table. This store which he rented was furnished with the equipment and supplies usually found in a place of its size and character. In November, 1918, having been drafted in the army, he employed his brother, Baymond Meyer, and a certain John Wall to run the place until his return. They continued to carry it on in his absence, until they were deprived of its possession under circumstances referred to below, although, because Baymond Meyer was a minor, the licenses for the place were in the name1 of Frank Meyer, an older brother. When William O. Meyer left, he owed Frank IST. Nichols, a tobacconist, a balance of $41.96 for tobacco, cigars and cigarettes. That balance was increased by purchases during his absence, until on February 12th, 1919, it amounted to $66.09. The testimony of the appellants is that these purchases were made by Mrs. Meyer, while that of the appellee is that they were' made by Wall and Baymond Meyer. At that time Thomas H. Hoy, a salesman for Nichols, went to Mrs. Annie Meyer, the mother of the appellee, with Lloyd L. Lambie, in reference to this indebtedness. Mrs. Meyer, who was then about 63 years of age, was a janitress in one of the city schools and was partially dependent upon the appellee for *454 her support. She was unable to read or write and, on the occasion of her interview with Hoy and Lambie, was just recovering “from a. spell of sickness.” The testimony as to what took place at that interview1 is conflicting. Mrs. Meyer said she told them she did not have any money, but she thought she would be able, with the appellee’s assistance, to pay the bill later, and that then “they stood there: for a while and said ‘we will take the place over.’ ” That they went out and came back and told her “they took over all that stuff for the bill.” That they gave her a paper to sign, and that, although she did not know what it was, she put her mark on it. Hoy’s version of what occurred can be best understood by quoting a part of his testimony, in which he said: “I walked into Mrs. Meyer’s house — she knew who I was and knew Lambie. I said, ‘Mrs. Meyer, I would like to know what you are going to do about the place?’ Well, she was all excited, and she said, ‘I don’t know. I would like to pay you that money, but I have not got one cent.’ I said, ‘I understand they are going to close the place up, and you certainly ought to have notified us. If you are going to sell it you ought1 to notify us who you are going to sell it to;’ and she said, ‘I don’t know anything about it; the way that place is being run I am not getting a cent of money, and it is setting me crazy,’ and she went on crying and said we have to sell the place. I said, ‘Mr. Lambie, here, he is willing to buy the place of you,’ and she said, ‘Mr. Hoy, you do anything you want, just so you pay that bill and clear my boy’s name, Willie,’ and started crying, ‘just so you clear his name; he was a good boy; do anything to clear his. name.’ I said, ‘of course, the place don’t belong to me, and I am only here to see what he will-do,’ and then he suggested — I asked him then how much he would give, and he said $50. I turned to Mrs. Meyer and said, ‘You realize the fact you owe the firm $66.09. How, if you sell the place I expect you to pay us the bill, and $50 is not going to pay the bill.’- She said, ‘Ho; that is true, but with the help' of God, I will pay you the balance of your *455 money .some day.’ I said, 'That is very nice of you to do that, and wo will see what we can do in this matter,’ and she said, 'Mr. Hoy, as I told you, do anything you want, anything you wish; you go ahead and do it.’ I said, 'Mrs. Meyer, I don’t want to do anything that is not agreeable to you.’ I said, 'Hero is the ease: This young man will take the place over and will give you $50, and will go further and give $5 for the use of the license. Mow, if you want to you can let him pay us that money and credit your account with the $55 and leave a balance of $11.09.’ She said, 'anything whatever you wish.’ There was no paper drawn up, no paper put in evidence of any kind that night; that wTas all that was said or done.” After that Lambie testified that he paid the $55 to Michols’ bookkeeper and took possession of the appellee’s place, with its fixtures and supplies, and continued to operate it until AVilliam C. Meyer was discharged from the army and returned to his home. Meyer, who then learned for the first time of what had been done; went to Michols’ place of business and inquired for him, and ha asked the person who came in response to that inquiry “why they took” his place, and was informed that “they used thei fixtures for payment of the bill and there was not enough in the store to pay the bill and I still owed them eleven dollars and some cents.” He also went to Lambie, but failing to receive what lie regarded as a satisfactory answer to his complaint, he brought this action. There is also testimony tending to show that Michols knew that Hoy took over the appellee^s property in part payment of his, Michols’, claim, and that he received the proceeds of the sale.

The record contains five exceptions, of which three relate to questions-of evidence; one to the court’s action in permitting a receipt offered in evidence to be taken into the jury room whilst the jury was deliberating over its verdict, and one to the court’s action on the prayers. These exceptions we will consider in the order in which we have named them.

*456 The first exception is in the following form: “Counsel for the defendant then asked the witness as follows: ‘Will you tell us, Mr. Meyer, as nearly as possible, what- equipment you had in that business?’ and the witness thereupon said, ‘I bought this pool table for $85 and went to the BrunswickBalke-Collender Company, in which they allowed me $50, and I bought a new one and paid them $350.’ And thereupon Mr. Broening, counsel for Mr. Lambie, one of the defendants, objected to the ruling of the court permitting the witness to speak of this pool table, and duly excepted to the said ruling. While it speaks of a “ruling” of the court, the record does not show that there was anything before the court upon which it could rule. There was no objection to the question nor was there any motion to strike out, or objection to the answer or any part of it. Since, therefore, there is no ruling before us to review, we cannot consider this exception. Cumberland Mfg. Co. v. Dewitt, 120 Md. 390. Nor can the fact that the appellee treats it in his brief as a valid exception affect our conclusion, since no agreement could supply a ruling of the court where none was made.

The appellee, having testified that after his return he had gone to Nichols’ place of business and inquired for him, and that when someone came out in response to that inquiry Meyer asked him “why they took” his place, was then asked “where was this” and replied: “In Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
115 A. 786, 139 Md. 450, 1921 Md. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-meyer-md-1921.