Watkins v. Sims

88 So. 764, 81 Fla. 730
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 14, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 88 So. 764 (Watkins v. Sims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Sims, 88 So. 764, 81 Fla. 730 (Fla. 1921).

Opinion

Browne, C. J.

J. W. Sims sued G. O. Watkins individually on a promissory note executed by Watkins and W. W. Herndon for $700.00.

The note was one of three given by Watkins and Herndon to J. W. Sims for part of the capital stock of the South Apopka Nursery Company bought by Watkins and Herndon; the other two notes were paid'..

[732]*732There were four amended pleas alleging, payment, counter-claim, set-off and recoupment, resulting-from the purchase by J. W. Sims from Watkins of all the lime tree buds in. the nursery to the value of $747.00.

It appears from the record that there had been a previous trial of this cause, and the verdict set aside and a new trial granted, after which the defendant filed the four amended' pleas, and an additional plea setting out that after the plaintiff Sims sold -the “nursery stock, stakes, goods and chattels” for'which the note sued on was part payment, that Sims removed from the premises 5,000 stakes used in the nursery business, which were worth five cents a piece,- and that the defendant was entitled to have the sum of $250.00, in addition to the claim set out in the former pleas, credited on the note. Interest was claimed on amounts due from both transactions from date of filing pleas.

The first assignment of error was based upon the court sustaining the objection by the plaintiff to a question .to the defendant as to what business existed between him and Herndon. We fail to see the pertinency of this question, but if it had any, the error was subsequently cured by the defendant testifying to their previously existing business engagements.

The second assignment is based upon the court sustaining an objection to this question propounded to the defendant: “Has this note ever been paid ?” After sustaining the objection, the court said: “I will permit that-question to be answered this way: ‘Do you claim to have paid -the note?’ ” which the witness answered in the affirnjat-ive, and he was then told to “explain to the jury how it was paid.” These questions'which the court permitted [733]*733to be asked and answered, brought out all that could have been adduced by the questions propounded by counsel for plaintiff, and we cannot see how the defendant was harmed by the refusal to permit the question to be asked in a slightly different form.

The third assignment is: “The court erred in stopping the defendant when testifying, then and there saying to the witness, ‘Don’t tell what some one else said; that is merely hearsay.’ ”

This assignment relates to this transaction: the defendant when testifying in his own behalf said: “Walter . Sims was down there at that time — came drinking and my foreman was drinking too with him, and a dispute came up about the lime buds. Walter Sims (the plaintiff) had previously bought a few lime buds at 50 cents apiece and he wanted all the lime buds, and in his drunken way claimed he was going to have them. Mr. Herndon told him he should not have them. The court: Don’t tell anything hearsay. Witness: Well they got in a dispute. Walter Sims gets in his car and goes after his father and brought him down to settle possession of the lime buds and his father and I went into the house and talked it over and he said: ‘I have had those buds budded' at right smart expense.’ The court: Don’t tell what somebody else said; that is merely hearsay and is not proper testimony unless he is a party to the suit. Tell what was done, but not the conversation.”

The witness was not allowed to testify to what agreement was entered into between himself and the plaintiff’s father,’ except that when they came out, B. M. Sims said to his son, “Well, we bought the lime buds at 20 cents apiece.”

[734]*734We think the circumstances surrounding this transaction show that J. W. Sims brought his father to the scene of the dispute as his representative to negotiate with Watkins about the sale of the lime buds, and that Watkins should have been permitted to testify to all that occurred between them, that led up to and explained the statement to his son, “Well, we bought the lime buds at 20 cents apiece.”

The testimony of the plaintiff with regard to this transaction is corroborated by that of the witness Isaac John Cason, as follows: “I remember that Mr. Walter Sims came over to the nursery and what occurred there in regard to the purchase of lime buds. Mr. Sims came down to the nursery and he and Mr. Herndon were talking over the buds. It seems Mr. Sims wanted the lime buds. They had discussed over it, and Mr. Herndon would not let Mr. Sims have the buds and Mr. Sims was somewhat intoxicated and they had high words over it, and Mr. Sims left the premises and returned with his father, Captain B. M. Sims. Mr. B. M. Sims and Mr. Watkins, Mr. G. O. Watkins, went into the camp house and had a talk concerning these buds; they talked for awhile and after awhile they came out and Mr. B. M. Sims announced that he had bought the entire lime buds at 20 cents apiece. Who did he say that to?' He was talking to his son Walter.”

The rule applicable to the question under consideration is thus stated in 21 E. C. L. 820’: “Whatever evidence has a tendency to prove an agency is admissible, even though it be not full and satisfactory; and it is the province of the jury to pass upon it. Direct evidence is not indispensable — indeed, frequently is not available— but instead circumstances may be relied on, such as the [735]*735relation of the parties to each other and their conduct with reference to the subject matter of the contract. And, notwithstanding the alleged principal and agent are the only witnesses called, and they both categorically deny the existence of the relation, the jury have the right to weigh and consider the whole of the evidence and the fair and reasonable inferences that might be drawn therefrom, and they may be entirely justified in disregarding the ‘yes or no’ answers and in reaching the conclusion that the evidence as a whole is sufficient to prove the relation of agency to exist. * * * It is within the province of the court to determine whether under an ascertained state of facts an agency did' exist; but it is the better practice to submit the question to the triers of fact.”

Here was a. dispute between the plaintiff and defendant’s foreman in the presence of the defendant, about the purchase of the lime buds. The plaintiff was more or less intoxicated, and actuated probably by a feeling that perhaps in his condition he might not be able to make a satisfactory trade himself, went away and brought back his father, whom it appears from the testimony had bought some lime buds from the defendant at 20 cents apiece. The father and the defendant then went into the house together and after being in there some time they came out and the father announced: “Well, we have bought the lime buds at 20 cents apiece.”

We think that all the conversation that occurred between B. M. Sims and the defendant should have gone to the jury, so that they could have weighed and considered the whole of the evidence, and the fair and reasonable inference that might be drawn therefrom, so as to reach a conclusion as to whether the evidence as a whole was [736]*736sufficient to prove that the relation of agency existed between J. W. Sims and B. M. Sims, his father.

The testimony of Cason corroborates that of the defendant Watkins, and shows a ratification by the plaintiff of the agreement that Watkins says was entered into between him and Bi M.

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Bluebook (online)
88 So. 764, 81 Fla. 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-sims-fla-1921.