Shepard v. Lynch

26 Kan. 377
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 Kan. 377 (Shepard v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepard v. Lynch, 26 Kan. 377 (kan 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Horton, C. J.:

This action was founded upon a promissory note held by plaintiffs in error against the defendant in error, calling for $167.82. The plaintiffs, after giving certain credits on the note, claimed a judgment for the balance, which- they alleged to be $83.30, with interest from date thereof at 12 per cent, per annum. The defendant, in his answer and set-off, alleged that he had, before the commencement of the action, fully paid the note, and that the plaintiffs were indebted to him in the sum of $95.65, for hay, corn, and labor. Upon the trial, the following special findings of fact were returned by the jury:

“Question 1. When the bargain was made for the sale of the hay, at the time of the execution of the bill of sale mentioned in the evidence, had the number of tons of hay contained in the stack in controversy been mutually ascertained? Answer. No.

“ Q. 2. If to the preceding question you answer nay, how was the amount of hay in the stack to be ascertained — by measurement or weight? A. By measurement.

• “ Q. 3. From the evidence, will an ascertained quantity of hay in the stack by measure contain the same number of tons of hay cut at one season of the year as the same quantity by measure of hay cut another season? A. No.

“ Q. 4. From the evidence, will an ascertained quantity of hay by measure just put in a stack contain as many pounds of hay by weight as the same quantity by measure, in the same stack, after it has settled? A. No.

“Q. 5. From the evidence, is there any fixed and standard rule for ascertaining the quantity of hay by measurement in a stack ? A. Custom has fixed a rule.

“Q. 6. Should you answer the last question affirmatively, [379]*379what is- that fixed and standard rule? A. Three hundred and forty-three cubic feet.

“Q,. 7. At the time mentioned in question No. 1, or afterward, and before the commencement of this action, did the plaintiffs and defendant mutually fix upon any rule for the measurement of the hay in said stack? A. No.

“Q,. 8. Did the plaintiffs, or any one authorized by them, ever measure the hay in controversy? A. Yes.

“Q,. 9. If you answer the last question in the affirmative, at what time did they measure said stack? A. We don’t know the date.

“Q,. 10. If you answer question No. 9 affirmatively, give the length of the stack, its width and height, as measured by them? A. We are unable to state the width, length, and height.

“Q. 11. If you answer question No. 8 affirmatively, what number of tons did they ascertain to be in the stack? A. We do not know.

“Q,. 12. Did the defendant ever measure the hay in controversy? A. Yes.

“ Q. 13. If yea be the answer, when did he measure the hay? A. In December, 1875.

“Q. 14. If you answer the twelfth question affirmatively, what was the length of the stack, its width and height, as ascertained by him? A. 113J feet length, 14 feet width, 81-feet height.

“Q,. 15. If you answer the twelfth question affirmatively, what amount of hay, in tons, did the defendant ascertain to be in the stack? A. By his computation there were over thirty-nine tons.

“Q,. 16. Did the the plaintiffs and defendant, at any time before the commencement of this action, mutually agree upon the number of tons of hay there was in the stack? A. No.”

The general verdict of the jury was in favor of the defendant for $12.21. Judgment was entered thereon, and plaintiffs bring the ease here. They contend that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence, and that the. court committed error in refusing to charge the jury as requested by them. These objections involve substantially the same question. This is, that there was no completed sale of the hay to plaintiffs by defendant, but only a mere executory contract of sale. This is based upon the theory that as the quantity or measurement [380]*380of the hay had never been agreed upon, it was in no condition to be accepted by the plaintiffs. They also assert that the parties, never did agree upon the identity of the hay claimed to be sold. Both of these objections must be overruled. The plaintiffs testified that the bill of sale was merely taken as a chattel mortgage, and that no purchase of the hay had ever been made. This leaves the question of sale upon the evidence of the defendant. The*jury were the judges of the credibility of his evidence, and if they accepted his testimony as truthful, a completed sale was fully made out. He testified that he sold on October 27, 1875, to plaintiffs a rick of hay at $2 per ton; that Waldo said that Shepard was away, but when he came home he would come over or send some one to measure it. At the time, he executed to plaintiffs a bill of sale, and described therein the property as follows: “One rick, thirty-five tons prairie hay, stacked on the east side of my corral, on my farm in Burlingame township, Osage county, Kansas.” And the agent of Shepard & Waldo then gave the following receipt:

“ Burlingame, Kansas, October 27, 1875.

“Received from T. W. Lynch one rick of hay, thirty-five tons more or less, at $2 per ton, to be credited on his note.

“Si-iepard & Waldo, per Taylor.”

Defendant also testified, that if there was more hay in the rick than thirty-five tons, he was to have a larger indorsement on the note; if less, a smaller one. The indorsement on the note was to be altered or amended, according to the actual number of tons of hay in the rick. As the hay was in a separate rick in the corral, and easily ascertainable, its identity was sufficiently described in the bill of sale, and sufficiently manifest to all the parties at the time of the agreement. We do not think the smaller rick, containing only eighteen to twenty tons, could have been' mistaken for the larger one. The only controversy possible in the case, is over the question of measurement. While it is a general rule, that if by the terms of sale there remains anything to be done by the vendor to render the goods deliverable, the sale is not complete; [381]*381and while it also is generally true, that if anything remains to be done between the parties to put the articles in a deliverable state, the contract is not complete and the property does not pass, yet these rules do not have application here, because it does not appear that the seller was to measure the hay, or that anything remained to be done by him in connection therewith. If the hay was to have been weighed out of a mow by the seller, or if the plaintiffs were not to accept the rick of hay until the seller had weighed and ascertained the number of tons therein, a different case would be presented. Here, however, the bill of sale was handed to the plaintiffs, and such a constructive delivery by the seller was 1. Sale of hay, ~ , , . . n pic™com’ sufficient to pass the right ot property. The bill of sale described the property, the price per ton was agreed to, and all that the plaintiffs had to do after receiving such bill of sale was to determine the number of tons of hay in the rick, by measurement. This, was not an act to be performed by the seller. If there were thirty-five tons by measurement, defendant was entitled to a credit on his note of $70; if thirty-nine tons, he was then entitled to a credit of $78.

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Related

State v. Smith
217 P. 307 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1923)
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Bluebook (online)
26 Kan. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-lynch-kan-1881.