Somerset Stave & Lumber Co. v. Brown

190 S.W. 680, 173 Ky. 194, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 422
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 12, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 680 (Somerset Stave & Lumber Co. v. Brown) 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
Somerset Stave & Lumber Co. v. Brown, 190 S.W. 680, 173 Ky. 194, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 422 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

[195]*195Opinion of the Court by

Judge Miller

Reversing.

By a written contract dated September 21, 1912, tbe appellee, H. C. Brown, agreed to manufacture into sawed whiskey and oil staves for the appellant, the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company, a certain boundary of white oak timber in Bell county, Ky., about nine miles from Miracle. The contract further provided that the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company was to furnish Brown a stave saw rig complete, at Miracle, for the purpose of sawing the staves, Brown to furnish his own power and set up and operate the mill at his own expense.

The contract further provided that the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company should advance Brown sufficient money to enable him to set up and operate the mill and deliver the stayes to the railroad at Miracle, and was to pay Brown $57.50 per thousand for the prime whiskey staves of certain specified sizes. All the second class and oil staves manufactured from said timber were to be sold at the best advantage to both parties, and the amount realized from such sales to be credited to Brown’s account.

The Somerset Stave & Lumber Company furnished the stave rig complete, at Miracle, as contemplated by the contract. Shortly after the contract was made, J. S. Cooper and C. L. Tarter, the stockholders of the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company organized a partnership business under the trade name of the Crescent Stave Complany, which bought the stock and property, of the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company, including its rights under the contract with Brown.

On March 24, 1914, the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company, the Crescent Stave Company, and J. S. Cooper and C. L. Tarter filed their petition, alleging that they had furnished to Brown, and upon his order and request, pursuant to said contract, cash amounting to $3,092.24, and had received from the sale of 82,509 staves furnished to them by Brown the sum of $2,464.77, leaving a balance of $627.47 due the plaintiffs.

By his answer and counter-claim, Brown admitted he had received in cash, $3,049.00; and, by way of counter-claim, he claimed: (1) that he had delivered 105,-505 whiskey staves of the value of $3,153.16; (2) that he had delivered 1,159 No. 1 (extra) staves at $49.50 per thousand, aggregating $57.37; (3) that he had delivered 2,192 (extra) oil staves at $17.00 per thousand, aggre[196]*196gating $37.26; (4) that he had worked four days for the plaintiffs at $3.00 per day, aggregating $12.00; and, (5) that he had furnished plaintiffs with holts of the cash value of $5.00; making a total claimed credit of $3,264.79, and leaving a balance of $215.79 due him on his counter-claim.

Upon the motion of the defendant, the action was transferred to the equity docket. Fourteen depositions were taken, containing 29 exhibits, made up principally of accounts of sales of lumber and bills paid by one or other of the parties.

It will thus be seen that the plaintiffs sued for a balance of $627.47, while the defendant counter-claimed for a balance due him of $215.79.

When the case came on for hearing, the * court-entered a judgment reciting that as neither the plaintiffs nor the defendant had shown themselves entitled to the relief sought, it dismissed the petition and the counter-claim, and gave Brown judgment for his costs. From that judgment the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal. The judgment is prima facie erroneous since it decided neither the case presented by the petition nor the case shown by the counter-claim.

1. By an amended answer, Brown alleg’ed that Cooper and Tarter had performed the acts stated in the petition as partners under the name and style of the Crescent Stave Company, without having filed in the office of the county court clerk of Bell county, or any other county, a certificate or writing setting forth the name under which said business was conducted or transacted, accompanied by the true or real names of the ■partners, Cooper and Tarter, as is required by section 199b of the Kentucky Statutes; and he relied upon that failure as a bar to their right to maintain this action in the name of the Crescent Stave Company.

The reply to the amended answer traversed the material allegations of that pleading, and admitted that about February 19, 1913, Cooper and Tarter bought all the stock of the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company, and alleg’ed that they had carried out the contract in the name of said corporation.

The reply further alleged that the partnership firm known as the Crescent Stave Company, had been organized by Cooper and Tarter on February 19, 1913, for the purpose of carrying on business in Pulaski, Perry, [197]*197Harlan and other counties, with its principal place of business at Harlan, in Harlan county, Ky., and that on said day they had made out the certificate required by section 199b of the Kentucky Statutes and had executed and delivered the same to the county clerk of Harlan county, who had duly filed it in his office on that day. And, the reply further alleged that the contract was carried out by the plaintiffs, in every respect, in the name of the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company, which was in active existence at all times from the date of said contract until after the transactions with the defendant, Brown, were closed in 1913.

The rejoinder traversed the reply.

Appellee relies upon Hunter v. Big’- Four Auto Co., 162 Ky. 778, as authority for his position that the Crescent Stave Company cannot maintain this suit. The statute has, however, no application to this case. The contract was made on September 21, 1912, and this action was brought jointly in the name of the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company, the Crescent Stave Company, and J. S. Cooper and C. L. Tarter, as plaintiffs.

The proof shows that the Somerset Stave & Lumber Company remained in existence throughout the period covered by the execution of this contract, and that the contract was made and executed by it. The fact that the ownership of its stock changed did not affect its corporate existence or its rights under the contract. The plea was properly disregarded.

2. Upon the merits, the appellant states its account against Brown, as follows:

To cash furnished..............................................................................$3,092.24
Credited by proceeds of 7 car loads, aggregating 82,509 staves........................................................................ 2,464.77
Balance claimed by appellant.................................... $627.47
Brown, however, states the account, as follows:
To cash received....................................................................................$3,049.00
(1) By 109,505 staves, as per contract ........................................................................$3,153.16
(2) By 1,159 other No. 1 staves............ 57.37
(3) By 2,192 other oil staves..................... 37.26
(4) By 4 days labor ($3.00)...................... 12.00
(5) By bolts furnished.................................... 5.00 '

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 680, 173 Ky. 194, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/somerset-stave-lumber-co-v-brown-kyctapp-1917.