Whitmore v. Scoggin

227 S.W. 610, 147 Ark. 236, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 173
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 610 (Whitmore v. Scoggin) 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
Whitmore v. Scoggin, 227 S.W. 610, 147 Ark. 236, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 173 (Ark. 1921).

Opinion

Wood, J.

The appellee brpught this action against the appellant to recover damages for an alleged violation of the following contract:

“This agreement made between William E. Scoggin and Wm. Whitmore, the party of the first part agrees to let the said Wm. Whitmore have his car for $675 and to take $2,500 worth of life insurance at the rate price $80.21 and in case Wm. Whitmore calls for the car before I get a policy the said $675 paid to William Scoggin in cash will be demand. (Signed) W. E. Scoggin.
“Wm. Whitmore.”

The appellee alleged that the appellant contracted to purchase from the appellee a certain car at the price named in the contract above set forth; that appellee had always been willing to perform his part of the contract by delivering the car to appellant, but that appellant refused to accept and pay for the car, although the same was duly tendered him, to the appellee’s damage in the sum of $675, for which he asked judgment. The appellant, in his answer, did not deny the execution of the contract set forth in the complaint, but he did deny that it was a contract to purchase the car at the price named, or any other price, and denied all the other allegations of the complaint. He alleged that he was a soliciting agent of the Lincoln Reserve Life Insurance Company at the time the alleged contract was executed; that the agreement contemplated that the appellee was to take out and pay for a policy of insurance in the above company in the sum of $2,500, the premium for which was $80.21, of which premium appellant was to receive 60 per cent, compensation as soliciting agent; that this commission was the sole inducement on the part of the appellant in agreeing to purchase the car; that appellant had done all he could do in the furtherance of the issuance of the policy, but that the company had refused to issue the same. The appellant also set up the plea of res judicata, in which he alleged substantially that in the year 1919 the appellee filed a bill in equity to compel the appellant and the insurance company to deliver to the appellee a policy in the sum of $1,500, which the insurance company had previously issued, the company having refused to issue a policy for $2,500 as mentioned in the contract set forth in the complaint in the present suit. He alleged in the complaint in equity that he had no remedy at law for the enforcement of his rights against the appellant and the insurance company, and he prayed that the appellant and the insurance company be ordered to deliver the policy and that the court declare a lien on the car mentioned in the contract for the sum of $675, and that the car be sold to satisfy whatever judgment the appellee might recover in that action. He set out also the answer that was filed by the appellant in the chancery cause, in which appellant denied that he had purchased the car as alleged, but admitted that he entered into the writing set forth in the bill and set up that the appellee had agreed to take out a policy in the insurance company in the sum of $2,500, of which the premium was $80.21; that the company refused to issue the policy for that sum, but did issue a policy in the sum of $1,500 of which the premium was $53 only; that the policy was forwarded to the appellant for delivery, but could not be delivered because the appellee had been exposed to an infectious disease; that the policy issued was canceled, the same not having been delivered in sixty days under the rules of the company; and that it was therefore physically impossible for the appellant to deliver to the appellee the policy of insurance mentioned in the contract.

The appellee, in his own behalf, testified to the contract, and over the objection of appellant introduced the same as evidence, and also over the objection of appellant stated, that at the time the contract was executed he signed an application for insurance for $2,500 named in the contract; that appellant wrote the application and carried the appellee to the doctor for examination; that the insurance company issued a policy in the sum of $1,500 on the»application, which appellant showed the appellee, but appellant did not deliver the same to the appellee, although appellee was willing to take the policy and told the appellant that the car was at his service; that appellant refused to take the car, stating that he had ninety days to decide what he wanted to do about the policy. The appellant had no other understanding with the appellee about the car or the insurance except what was. in the written contract. Appellant refused to take the car, and appellee drove the same under his shed at home and had not used it since. Appellee had been ready arid -willing to take the policy and deliver to appellant the car at any time.

Over the objection of appellant, testimony was introduced on behalf of appellee to the effect that at the time the appellee offered appellant .the car in controversy it was worth the sum of $400'. The appellant testified that the appellee never took out a policy in the company which appellant represented. The appellee applied for insurance in the sum of $2,500, but that the company only issued him a policy for $1,500,which policy was not delivered to the appellee because the influenza was raging in the locality where appellee lived at that time. Appellant tried to get the company to issue a policy in the sum of $2,500', but it would not do so. The appellant offered to prove that he would have received a financial benefit from every policy which he solicited and delivered. He also offered to show that the rules of the company forbade the delivery of the policy in the present case and offered to read the rule of the company, all of which testimony the court would .not permit to go to the jury, to which ruling the appellant duly excepted. Appellant further testified that he did his best to have a policy for $2,500 issued to the appellee, but that the company would not issue it because the appellee was an impaired risk. Appellant would have received a commission of 50 per cent, of the premium on this insurance. The court refused to permit the appellant to show that he would have received other financial benefits from this business, and also refused to permit appellant to testify that he would not have executed the contract but for the benefit he expected to derive from1 the insurance. To which rulings the appellant duly excepted.

The court overruled appellant’s plea of res judicata, to which ruling appellant duly excepted. The court instructed the jury in substance that the contract, which is the foundation of the action, was a contract on the part of the appellee to sell, and on the part of the appellant to purchase, the car in question at the price of $675; and that, although the contract hound appellee to take $2,500 worth of life insurance in the company represented by the appellant, nevertheless, if the failure to acquire this insurance was not through any fault of the appellee, but was brought about by the insurance company or the appellant, the appellant would be liable to the appellee for any damages that the latter sustained by reason of the failure or refusal of appellant to take the car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 610, 147 Ark. 236, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitmore-v-scoggin-ark-1921.