Todd v. Barbee

111 S.W.2d 1041, 271 Ky. 381, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 14, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 1041 (Todd v. Barbee) 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
Todd v. Barbee, 111 S.W.2d 1041, 271 Ky. 381, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 239 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Baird

— Reversing.

Laura C. D. Todd by an ordinary action instituted in the Jefferson circuit court sought to recover of W. Alex Barbee the sum of $1,250 with interest from the date of the filing of the action, based upon a written rental contract. A trial was had before a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of the defendant, Barbee. A judgment was rendered upon that verdict dismissing the action. She appeals.

The issues presented to the jury were in effect grounded upon the plea of payment. The evidence presented to the jury was by the parties themselves, except one other witness for appellee, whose testimony was not relevant to the issue of payment.

At the conclusion of the testimony counsel for 'Mrs. Todd entered a motion for a peremptory instruction, which was overruled. He excepted and claimed that the ruling was an error. To intelligently consider that *383 alleged error, it is necessary to detail in substance the facts: Laura C. D. Todd is the mother-in-law of the defendant, W. Alex Barbee. He, together with his wife, Helen B. Barbee, executed to Mrs. Todd the following contract:

“ March 4, 1930, Alex and I agree to pay you (Laura C. D. Todd), $50 per month as owner of 216 Pennsylvania Avenue, until you transfer the property to us as is your understood intention.
“ Helen B. Barbee
“W. A. Barbee”

It is a simple agreement on the part of Barbee and his wife to pay Mrs. Todd $50 per month rental for her property while they occupied it. Under the contract, Barbee and his wife took possession of the property and occupied it until February 1, 1933. They paid the rental of $50 per month promptly and without controversy until January 1, 1931. From that date, until February 1, 1933, Mrs. Todd contends that she has been paid nothing”, and that there is a balance due her of $1,250, or the rental for 25 months at $50 per month.

On the trial Barbee admitted that he had not paid any part of the $1,250 directly himself, but contended that from a compensation or pension check received by him from the government each month of $50, he paid Mrs. Todd by turning the check over to his wife under an agreement with Mrs. Todd that a payment to his wife would be satisfactory to her. This alleged agreement Mrs. Todd denies. It is insisted that as the contract required the rental to be paid directly to Mrs. Todd, a payment to Barbee’s wife would not be a payment to her. Further, that it was incumbent upon Barbee to establish by competent evidence an agency relationship between his wife and Mrs. Todd. Barbee undertook to accomplish that by testifying that Mrs. Todd told him to pay the money or give the check to his wife and she would see that she got it. Mrs. Todd denied that agreement. She further denied that she ever at any time authorized her daughter to act as her agent in collecting the rental from Barbee or any part of it. We find no evidence that any third person saw him pay the money to his wife or heard him direct his wife to pay it to' her mother. The only evidence is to the effect that Barbee, himself, states that he paid the money to his, wife, and by reason of that fact, and that Mrs. Todd *384 agreed to such arrangement, which she denies, the rental was in that way paid. He does not state that his wife ever paid it to Mrs. Todd at any time. Mrs. Todd denies receiving it So the question arises, if, in fact, Barbee’s wife received the $50 under such an arrangement and failed to pay it to Mrs. Todd, would that satisfy Barbee’s obligation under his written’ contract; and would it not necessarily follow that if she paid it to Mrs. Todd, it would be under and by the direction of her husband, which would be a communication between husband and wife during the existence of the marriage relation? Such evidence on the part of Barbee would be incompetent under section 606, Civil Code of Practice. Subsection -1 of that section in part reads as follows:

“Neither a husband nor his wife shall testify while the marriage exists or afterwards concerning any communication between them during marriage. Nor shall either of them testify against the other.”

By that section, supra, the husband cannot testify concerning any communication that he may have had with his wife during their marriage. The marital relation at that time is conceded. Counsel for appellee insists that no communication in words was had with the wife by appellee; and that “communication,” as used in that section of the Code, does not include acts of the wife or husband under the facts here; for that .reason, that section would not apply.

In the case of Commonwealth v. Sapp, 90 Ky. 580, 14 S. W. 834, 835, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 484, 29 Am. St. Rep. 405, we said:

“The word ‘communication,9 .therefore, as used in our statute, should be given a liberal construction. It should not be confined to a mere statement by the husband to the wife or vice versa, but should be construed to embrace all knowledge upon the part of the one or the other obtained by reason of the marriage relation, and which, but for the confidence growing out of it, would not have been known to the party.’’

Again, in the ease of Allcock v. Allcock, 174 Ky. 665, 192 S. W. 853, in discussing the meaning of the word “communication,” as contained in that section of the Code, we approved what was said in the Sapp Case, supra. The same meaning was again approved in *385 the ease of Johnson’s Adm’r v. Pigg, 242 Ky. 631, 47 S. W. (2d) 63. That ruling has been assiduously followed. Therefore, it follows that the evidence of Bar-bee was incompetent; at least, wherein he stated, that he turned the $50 over to his wife in payment of the rent to Mrs. Todd. While no communication was had between Barbee and his wife, in words, yet the act of paying the money to her in satisfaction of the rent, or to be paid by her to Mrs. Todd, was a communication under the subsection of the Code, and, of course, rendered the evidence incompetent.

It must be conceded that if Mrs. Todd received pay for the rent under consideration during the time she was compelled to receive it from Barbee’s wife, under the contract, which is the basis of the action, the rent was authorized to be paid only to Mrs. Todd. She claims no one paid her any part of it. The payment of the rent by Barbee to his wife would not be a payment to Mrs. Todd. There is no evidence adduced that Mrs. Todd ever received a cent from the wife or from Bar-bee, himself. Barbee could not constitute his wife his agent and pay it to her, and in that way satisfy his indebtedness; nor could he cQnstitute his wife the agent of Mrs. Todd to receive the rent for her. Mrs. Todd denies the agency direct. However, had she admitted the agency, then it would have been necessary for Barbee to have shown by competent evidence that he paid the rent to his wife as her agent, and that such a payment satisfied Ms obligation under the contract. No evidence of that character was offered. The question of agency hangs entirely upon the evidence of Barbee. It would be impossible to make the wife Ms agent or a go-between without communicating with her; at tMs time the marital relation existed.

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111 S.W.2d 1041, 271 Ky. 381, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-barbee-kyctapphigh-1937.