Pemberton v. Price & Teeple Piano Co.

139 S.W. 742, 144 Ky. 518, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 645
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 742 (Pemberton v. Price & Teeple Piano Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pemberton v. Price & Teeple Piano Co., 139 S.W. 742, 144 Ky. 518, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 645 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Miller

— Affirming;

Appellee, Price & Teeple Piano Co., of Chicago, instituted this claim and delivery suit against Kate Pemberton on January 26th, 1910, for the recovery of a) piano valued at $250.00. It succeeded, and from a judgment awarding it possession' of the piano, the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

W. P. Hopkins and W. E. Lafoon, doing business as¡ partners under the name of the “Madisonville Musie| Company” (hereinafter called the Music Company for brevity) bad been, for several years before the filing of the petition, in the- business of selling pianos and musical instruments of the Price & Teeple Piano Co., nnderi a written contract which retained the ownership of the goods in the Piano Company, and gave the Music Company a sel line; agent’s commission only. All pianos, organs and other property furnished to the Music Company were held on consignment until sold and such sale was approved and accepted hy the Piano Company; All notes, contracts and leases taken in the sale of goods, were to be a lien upon the instruments- siold, and made] payable to the Piano Company, and subject to its approval and acceptance. The Music Company handled! [520]*520and sold other pianos and musical instruments', and had similar contracts with other piano companies. It became the tenant of appellant, Kate Pemberton, and as such tenant took possession of and moved the piano which is the subject of this action, into hen store-house. It became indebted to her in the sum of $160.00 for the rent of said store-house, which was] evidenced by the Music Company’s note, wherein ai lien was retained on said piano to secure the payment of the note. The Music Company turned over said piano to the appellant in satisfaction of said rent note within three months after said rent had become due. The] Piano Company did not expressly know of or consent to the delivery of the piano to the defendant, except in so far as the Music Company had the right to act for it under the written contract. The Music Company, forf months prior to the time it became the tenant of appellant, had been selling pianos and instruments of the Piano Company; and said Piano Company had no other agent in Madisonville, if, indeed, the Music Company] is to be considered the agent of the Piano Company. The appellant did not know of the written contract between the Piano Company and the Music Company, and. took the piano in good faith.

The case having been tried by the judge without) the intervention of a jury, a judgment was entered] granting the Piano Company the possession of the piano upon the ground that the Music Company could not use its principal's property to pay its own debt and that the appellant in accepting the property in payment of such diebt, acquired no title thereto.

The circuit judge rested his decision upon the authority of Baldwin v. Tucker, 112 Ky., 282, and in doing so we think he ruled correctly. In that case this court enforced a contract substantially like the one at bar, after a full consideration of the questions involved. The opinion thoroughly discusses the question, and it is not necessary to repeat the discussion here. The gist of it is contained in the following language, found on page 286.

“Sparks seems to halve been made the agent, with limited powers to transact all the business in the matter of selling musical instruments ini the city of Harrodsburg and such other territory as might be agreed upon between the parties. Without deciding, we will as[521]*521sume, that he was the general agent for appellants to sell pianos in Harrodsburg. According to the terms of thel contract, he had no authority except to solicit orders fon. pianos. Where an agent is intrusted with goods to sell for his principal, he has no right to sell or deliver) them in payment of his own debt. The creditor whoi receives goods under such an arrangement, notwittn standing he may be acting in good faith and in ignorance that the goods did not belong to the agent, acquires nol title thereto against the principal.”

And on the same page the opinion quotes the following from section 354 of Machem on Agency in support of its conclusion:

“An agent intrusted with goods to sell for his principal has no right to sell or deliver them in payment of his own debt, or to pledge them as security for his own debt, and persons dealing with such an agent are bound to take notice of this limitation of his authority. A creditor therefore, who receives the goods under such ani agreement, as well as his vendee, though acting in good faith, and in ignorance that the goods did not belong toi the agent, acquires no title thereto against the principal. ”

In the case at bar the agent, the Madisonville Music! Company, undertook to pay its own debt of $160.00 by delivering to appellant a piano belonging to the appellee, the list or wholesale price of which wasi $250.00. Appellant stoutly contends that because this rental was; owing by the agent for a house in which the pianos of appellee were stored, that the debt became the debt of the principal as one necessarily incurred in order to carry out the agency. This is the familiar contention usually made in all cases of this character; and not only substantially assumes the question in issue, but was disposed of adversely to appellant’s contention in Baldwin v. Tucker, supra.

2. It is insisted, however, that appellee ratified the transaction between the Music Company and the appellant. The facts of ratification relied upon appear in the evidence o'nly, and a,rie as follows: Appellee resided ip Chicago; and prior to September 10th, 1909, its attorneys had prepared a suit against the Music Company and its sureties upon a balance owing by it, which included the price of the piano recovered in'this case. Ap[522]*522pellee did not know, at that time, what had become of this particular piano. On September’ lOtlh its- attorneys learned tihali) this piano was in the possession of appellant, but they did not know the character of appellant’s possession; and on that date they wrote appellee inquiring as to the facts of the transaction. Appellee knew nothing of the facts or character of appellant’s possession of the piano. Appellee’s attorneys did not learn until September 24th the true state of facts as to appellant’s possession of the piano, and on that date they notified appellant that appellee claimed the piano as its property, and would sue for it unless possession was surrendered immediately. In the meantime (the suit! to recover the balance due had been held up for several days, pending a proposed settlement by the sureties, but was finally filed on September 15th, 1909. Subsequently, this action for the possession of the piano was instituted against the appellant on January 26th, 1910. The first suit against the Music Company and its sureties was prosecuted to judgment on February 7th, 1910, while this suit against the appellant for the possession of the piano was prosecuted to judgment on October 18th, 1910.

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 742, 144 Ky. 518, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pemberton-v-price-teeple-piano-co-kyctapp-1911.