Taylor v. Farmer

81 Ky. 458, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 Ky. 458 (Taylor v. Farmer) 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
Taylor v. Farmer, 81 Ky. 458, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 87 (Ky. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

CHIEE JUSTICE HARGIS

delivered the opiexon or the court.

Farmer bought one hundred barrels of whisky from Taylor, who executed to him a warehouse receipt therefor, and to whom he paid $2,985, the purchase price of the whisky. Before Farmer bought the whisky Taylor had issued a warehouse receipt for seventy-nine barrels of the same whisky to Gregory & Stagg. In a controversy begun soon after the discovery by Farmer of the existence of the warehouse receipt which Taylor had issued to Gregory & Stagg, they succeeded in establishing their claim to the seventy-nine-barrels as superior to that of Farmer.

He then brought this suit against Taylor, alleging the facts recited, and that Taylor had fraudulently concealed from him the sale of the seventy-nine barrels and the issuance of the warehouse receipt therefor to Gregory & Stagg, and failed to inform him of the encumbered condition of the whisky; that Taylor was informed of the legal controversy between Gregory & Stagg and the plaintiff, and testified that he had no authority from Gregory & Stagg to issue the warehouse receipt to the plaintiff. Upon these facts the-plaintiff demanded judgment for damages sufficient to repay him the sum he had paid for the whisky, with interest, and his expenses, except attorneys’ fees, in prosecuting his suit against Gregory & Stagg. To the petition Taylor demurred, and the court having overruled it, he answered, pleading. [460]*460that he had become an involuntary bankrupt, and had made a composition with his creditors by their vote, in number and manner required by the bankrupt law; that the plaintiff had proved his claim, and had been tendered his share of the composition, to be paid in cash, being six cents on the dollar, and notes for the deferred installments at 120 and 240 days, each being for seven' cents on the dollar, with Gregory & Stagg, who had been approved as sureties. He then proceeds to deny all fraudulent motive, but does not deny in the disjunctive the allegation that he had suppressed from Farmer the facts that he had both sold the seventy-nine barrels to Gregory & Stagg and issued to them a warehouse receipt therefor. He denied that he had fraudulently concealed from plaintiff notice of ‘ ‘the fact that he, defendant, had previously sold said whisky and issued a warehouse receipt for the same to Gregory & Stagg, or that ■he concealed or suppressed said fact at all," and denied that he had admitted he had no authority from Gregory & Stagg to sell the whisky, but says he admitted that he had no authority from them to sell, except such as was given him by a written memorandum then before him, and which this court has decided was an authority to sell. (See 78 Ky., 624.) He does not allege that he informed Farmer of the existence of the memorandum, or the warehouse receipt to Gregory & Stagg, when he sold him the whisky.

In explanation, however, of his motive, he avers that he considered that the memorandum gave him authority to sell, and that he only hypothecated the whisky to Gregory & Stagg for advances, and believed he would be able to pay them off and make perfect the title of Farmer. The court unnecessarily compelled Taylor to paragraph his answer, and then sustained Farmer’s demurrers to each paragraph. [461]*461If, therefore, the answer as a whole presents a defense, the demurrers should have been overruled. That is the question, and the only question, necessary to be determined. The answer fails to show any legal composition that would defeat the action, because the debt is alleged to have been created by fraud, and as the facts constituting the fraud are not legally denied, the plaintiff’s allegations must be taken as true; and the bankrupt law (sec. 5117) declares the dividends on such debts shall only be a payment on account of them, but no such debts ‘ ‘shall be discharged by proceedings in bankruptcy.”

The dividend mentioned in that section embraces those sums which may be declared, from time to time, as the pro rata shares of the creditors, whether those shares are the result of composition, or any other mode of ascertaining them, according to the terms of the bankrupt law. And even if Farmer had accepted the share forced or voted upon him by a majority or two-thirds of the creditors, it was only a dividend so far as he was concerned, unless he had joined in the composition and agreed to Taylor’s discharge from his debt.

Besides this view of the case, Taylor failed to allege that this composition was for the purpose of discharging him from debts which could not be discharged by proceedings in bankruptcy, and it clearly appears from his averments that it was simply a mode of ascertaining, in the cheapest and b.est way, the dividends his estate would pay, so that he might be discharged in bankruptcy from such debts of which it declares he may be relieved, and no other. Nor does he aver that the surety tendered on the composition notes were either good or solvent. They may have been approved, yet, within the knowledge of Taylor,- perfectly [462]*462worthless; therefore such an allegation is not an averment of solvency, which was as essential to a proper tender of the notes as genuine money was to the tender of the cash part of the alleged composition. So that he failed to allege sufficiently a counter claim or payment, or credit, to the extent of the composition, which should have been complied with in reference to all the creditors, but it is not even alleged that he paid any of them. No discharge can lawfully follow a composition unless the terms of it are strictly complied with and the amount distributed or secured.

For aught that appears in the answer, none of the creditors may have been paid or secured, and the composition may have been the result of a fraudulent vote of friendly creditors, who were to receive more than the composition as a consideration for forcing the unwilling minority to take less than the estate was able to pay. The answer should have closed the door upon such inferences by stating the facts, which would have shown a bona fide and legally effected and existent composition.

It may be possible that Taylor’s motives were pure from his explanation of the memorandum, and his supposed ability to pay the advances of Gregory & Stagg, but such an explanation in law is no denial of the charge that he suppressed essential facts, which, had he disclosed to Farmer, would have put the latter upon his guard and enabled him to protect himself. The charge is that Taylor, when he sold to Farmer, fraudulently suppressed the facts that he sold the whisky to Gregory & Stagg, and that he also issued a warehouse receipt to them for it. He denies that he did both fraudulently, and denies that he sold the whisky to them, but he does not deny that he withheld from Farmer the fact of the sale, or the fact of the issuance of the ware[463]*463house receipt to Gregory & Stagg. He only denies that he ■did so fraudulently.

His conjunctive denial of the fraudulent suppression of the sale and the existence of the receipt, is no denial in law of either, for he may have done one, but not both, and as' he leaves it in doubt and uncertainty which he means to deny, he must bear the consequences, for there is no aider in law to such pleading.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Ky. 458, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-farmer-kyctapp-1883.