Talbot v. Wilkins

31 Ark. 411
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 31 Ark. 411 (Talbot v. Wilkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talbot v. Wilkins, 31 Ark. 411 (Ark. 1876).

Opinion

Harrison, J.:

The appellees, Wilkins and Bell, together with Holcombe, one of the appellants, were sureties of Cobb in a note to Tillar, for $2,500, payable 1st day of February, 1873.

After the note fell due, Tillar brought suit on it against the sureties and recovered judgment; which judgment they, on the 14th of March, 1874, satisfied, by each paying one-third:

"Wilkins and Bell brought this suit against Holcombe, and Talbot, the other appellant, to recover the amount $2,025.66, they had paid, alleging in their complaint, besides the foregoing facts, that Talbot and Holcombe, before the note fell due, purchased of Cobb a stock of goods, and as a part of the consideration therefor agreed and promised to pay off and discharge the note.

The defendants, in their answer, denied that the payment of the note was any part of the consideration in the purchase of the goods and that they ever agreed or undertook to pay it. They, as a further defense, averred : That after their purchase of the goods, proceedings in bankruptcy were commenced in the District Court of the United States, for the Eastern District of Arkansas, against Cobb, and he was declared a bankrupt, and that in the said proceedings the sale to them was set aside, as fraudulent, and the goods in their hands seized by the marshal and turned over to the assignee, and that they were adjudged to pay, and did pay the assignee $4,961.90, which they had previously received on the sale of the goods; that they had paid $3,000 besides in costs and expenses in defending their claim to the goods, and they had derived no benefit whatever from the purchase.

On the trial, Austin, a witness for the plaintiffs, testified: That he was Cobb’s clerk, and present when the defendants, in the latter part of November, 1872, purchased his stock of goods. Cobb was to reserve from the stock $3,000 worth at the invoice price, to pay the note he owed Tillar, and in which Wilkins, Bell and Holcombe were his sureties ; and the defendants were to take the remainder at forty-five cents on the dollar, on those prices, which, it was estimated, would make the cost to them about $4,000."

The trade was made at night; the witness went next morning to see E. L. Taylor, to get him to receive the goods reserved out of the stock, for the payment of the Tillar note. He refused to-take them, and witness so reported to Cobb and Talbot. Talbot and Holcombe then agreed to take those goods also, and to pay the Tillar note themselves.

An invoice of the stock was taken, in which the witness, assisted, and it amounted to $12,000 or $13,000. The entire stock was turned over to them, and they sold the whole of them.

Their sales up to the time when the goods were seized by the-marshal, amounted to about $4,900. Talbot bonded them, and then sold the remainder, and he bought up the claims of Cobb’s, creditors.

On cross-examination, he stated that the agreement was reduced to writing, and signed by the parties in the store, on the night the trade was made.

He was then asked by the defendant’s counsel, if he did not. say, when testifying before the commissioner in the bankrupt proceedings against Cobb, in the room adjoining the court room,, that the Tillar note was not mentioned, and its payment formed no part of the consideration, or of the contract; to which he answered that he did not remember testifying in that room, and had no recollection of so testifying. That it was his understanding, from the conversation of the parties at the time, the Tillar' note was to be paid.

Bell, one of the plaintiffs, testified for them, that he, Wilkins, and Holcombe, in the spring of 1872, became sureties for Cobb,, in the note mentioned in the pleadings. That Cobb, about the latter part of November, 1872, expecting, as he said, to be embarrassed, and wishing to secure his sureties, proposed to turn. over to E. L. Taylor, for Tillar, $3,000 worth of goods. Taylor, when applied to, declined to receive the goods. Witness then, upon consultation with Wilkins and Holcombe, concluded to receive them himself, and Cobb consented to turn them over to him. Holcombe, upon request of witness, promised to go to the store that evening and have the goods turned over. On the next morning, or the morning after that, he saw Holcombe, and asked him if he had got the goods. He said he had done better than that; that he and Talbot had purchased Cobb’s entire stock, and made a good thing of it. Witness asked him if, in the purchase, the sureties in the Tillar note were protected or secured. He replied that they were, and witness need give iiimself no further concern about the matter — the note would be paid. A few days after, witness saw him again, when he spoke about the threatened proceedings in bankruptcy against Cobb, and said that in order to protect themselves, it would be probably necessary for him and Talbot to destroy certain papers. What the papers were, witness did not know, but said to him it made no difference to him, so they j>aid the Tillar note and saved him and the other sureties, harmless; and he replied, “that will be done;” and, “do not be uneasy about that.”

The sureties were afterwards sued on the note, and judgment recovered against them. Witness and Wilkins paid off the judgment — $2,025.83, no part of which had been repaid them by the defendants. The judgment was paid about the 6th of March, 1874.

The plaintiffs then read the deposition of Cobb. He deposed that about the last of November, 1872, he sold his stock of goods, in Pine Bluff, worth, according to the invoices, $12,000, to the defendants, for which they were to pay him, except for $2,500 reserved therefrom to pay a note he owed Tillar, in which the plaintiffs and defendant Holcombe were his sureties, 45 per cent, of the value, which was the best price he could at the time get. He made no warranty of title; the very low price at which the goods were sold was in consideration of the risk defendants incurred in the purchase. In the sale, the payment of the Tillar note was provided for, and he himself had never paid it, or any part of it, but his sureties had paid it. At the time he sold to the defendants, they gave him their note for $3,882, upon which Talbot had paid him $1,350, and he had given him his individual note for the remainder,.and nothing had since been paid. The goods were sold by the defendants, or by Talbot, who bought out Holcombe.

The defendants, after the plaintiffs had closed their testimony, moved to exclude all evidence as to the terms of the sale, on the ground that it appeared that the agreement in relation thereto had been reduced to writing. Their motion was overruled, and they reserved an exception.

The defendants testified in their own behalf. Holcombe testified : That he and Talbot made a trade with Cobb in November, 1872, for his stock of goods, or rather, they made two or three trades. The first was, that they should take the stock after Cobb had reserved goods to the amount of $3,000, to be turned over to E. L. Taylor to pay the Tillar note, and pay him 45 per cent, on the cost; the goods to be invoiced, and the payment to be made in' cash or on short time. The next day Austin was sent to Taylor, to get him to take the goods and pay the note to Tillar. Austin returned and reported that Taylor declined to take the goods.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ark. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbot-v-wilkins-ark-1876.