Shilling v. McCraw

184 S.W.2d 97, 298 Ky. 783, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 999
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 97 (Shilling v. McCraw) 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
Shilling v. McCraw, 184 S.W.2d 97, 298 Ky. 783, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 999 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

On July 9, 1934, the appellant, and defendant below, Pearl Shilling, was president of the Ashland Drug Company in Ashland, Kentucky, the stock in which was owned by him and members of his family. The corporation was, at least nominally, engaged in the drug business, but the chief article of trade in which it dealt was the selling of liquor. At the same time the appellee, and plaintiff below, J. E. McCraw, was engaged in selling automobiles and trucks, under the trade-name of McCraw Motor Company, located in the same city.

On the day indicated appellant purchased a motor truck from appellee at the agreed price of $723.67, $123.67 being then and there paid by appellant, and the remaining $600 was paid by appellant delivering to appellee two unmounted stones which he represented to be genuine diamonds, and, according to the petition, he expressly warranted that they were such. Two years thereafter and in 1936, the appellee borrowed $400 from the Third National Bank of Ashland for which he executed his note and pledged as collateral security therefor the two stones he obtained from appellant. He later paid that note to the bank, following which he obtained a loan from Ralph Warren, who was connected with a *785 bank in Huntington, W. Va., and to secure that loan he pledged the same stones to Warren.

Appellee had a brother, Carl C. MeCraw, residing in Charlotte, North Carolina, and who was an officer in a bank in that city. Appellee was informed by his North Carolina brother that he was of the opinion that he could sell the stones, if they were genuine diamonds, for the sum of $700. Appellee so informed Warren, who had them in his possession and deposited in the vault of the bank of which he was an officer. Plaintiff obtained the permission of Warren to send the stones to his brother in Charlotte, N. C., for the purpose of testing and selling them at the price indicated. The proof clearly shows that Warren, in sending the stones to appellee’s brother, carefully enclosed and sealed them in a sealed package and sent them by registered mail. The proof also shows that when appellee’s brother received the package there were no indications of its being tampered with. The same care and the same method of transportation was adopted when the brother returned the diamonds to Warren at Huntington, W. Va. In the meantime the North Carolina brother and the prospective purchaser had the stones tested by an experienced jeweler of long standing and whose qualifications to make such a test are not questioned. He found the stones to be white sapphires made from brilliant glass and having no market value exceeding $6. That test was made in August, 1937, and when appellee received notice thereof he reported the result to appellant, who still insisted that the stones he sold or traded to appellee were genuine, and repeated practically what he told appellee at the time the stones were first delivered to him.

.Various discussions were had between the parties following the report of appellee’s brother concerning the genuineness of the unmounted stones, in which defendant continued to insist that they were genuine although there is evidence in the case that he had been otherwise informed by a competent jeweler. But, be that as it may, appellee filed this action in the Boyd Circuit Court on October 27, 1941, to recover the $600 the valuation placed upon the stones, with interest, alleging in his petition the deceit practiced on him by appellant, and also the warranty he made to appellee at the time the stones were delivered to him.

*786 Appellant’s defense was a denial of the material averments of the petition as amended, and in other paragraphs he pleaded laches, and the statute of limitations. Previously filed demurrers by defendant to plaintiff’s petition were overruled, and the reply denied the material averments of defendant’s answer. The case was tried by a jury, to which both parties consented, and it returned a verdict for appellee in the sum of $594, being the amount of $600 that appellee paid for the stones in trade less their actual value of $6. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled and from that order, and the judgment rendered thereon, he prosecutes this appeal.

In his motion for a hew trial appellant complains of: (1) Error of the court in the admission of evidence on behalf of plaintiff; (2) rejection of evidence offered by him; (3) that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; (4) that the verdict is excessive, and (5) that instructions Nos. I and II, given to the jury, were erroneous. We have carefully considered each of them in the light of the record and find them all without merit. One defense, not heretofore mentioned, was that at the time of the involved transaction appellant was acting not for himself but for his corporation, the Ashland Drug Company. But the record contains abundant evidence to establish the fact that appellant was not then acting for his corporation, but that the sale of the truck and all negotiations prior to its purchase were made with him by appellee individually and not for and on behalf of his corporation, although the bill of sale, made after the contract was completed, was issued to the corporation and which was done because appellant specifically requested it. However, if appellant did purchase the truck from appellee for and on behalf of his corporation for which he was acting as agent, he would not then become exonerated from personal liability to appellee for his practiced deceit and warranty complained of in the petition if he concealed his agency from appellee at the time, and intentionally or fraudulently misrepresented the quality of the stones, which the evidence clearly shows that he did. See Trimble v. Ward, 97 Ky. 748, 31 S. W. 864, and following cases listed in Sheppard’s Notes.

Although appellant’s motion for a new trial relies on five alleged errors of the court, his counsel in brief *787 filed in this court argues but four of them, (a) insufficient evidence to support the verdict, (b) that appellant at the time of the purchase of the truck was acting solely for his corporation and not individually, (c) that the rule of caveat emptor applies to this case, and (d) the right of action was barred by the statute of limitations.

Argument (a) is based entirely upon the fact that somewhere and at some time before appellee discovered that the stones were counterfeit and not what they were represented to be by appellant, some thief may have substituted the counterfeit stones for the genuine ones traded to appellee; but which contention is founded on no proof whatever, but only upon counsel’s surmised possibility. On the contrary,. everyone who handled the stones testified without contradiction that when they were in their respective possession they were kept under lock and key and the only opportunity for any substitution by some supposed thief was at the two times of their transfer through the mail to appelleee’s brother in Charlotte, N. C., and the return of them to Warren with whom they were then deposited as collateral security. However, as we have pointed out, even counsel’s surmise is not sustained, since the highest degree of care was exercised in transporting the stones to the North Carolina brother and his return of them to. Warren, the rightful custodian.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 97, 298 Ky. 783, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shilling-v-mccraw-kyctapphigh-1944.