Winters v. January

16 Ky. 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 1, 1800
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ky. 13 (Winters v. January) 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
Winters v. January, 16 Ky. 13 (Ky. Ct. App. 1800).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court, by

Judge Wallace.

THIS was a suit in chancery in the court below, in which Peter January and Thomas January, as merchants and co-partners, were complainants, and Elisha Winters and John Smith defendants; and by that court a decree was entered up for the complainants against Winters for £1,107 19s. 11 3-4, as the balance of an account due from him to them, and the bill dismissed as to Smith without decreeing him his costs; but Smith not being a party to the appeal, the interference of this court is not demanded by him; so that it is only necessary to examine the propriety of the decree as to Winters.

From this decree it appears that, in one instance, a material fact is ascertained against Winters, and in another instance, the effect which his answer might otherwise have had is destroyed by the answer of Smith, without its being alleged or proved that they were either legally or fraudulently combined, so as to create an unity of interests between them: And it is an established rule in chancery, that in no other case the answer of a defendant can be taken as evidence against a co-defendant. Not to say, that it appears that Smith was a co-partner with the complainants in the principal matters in litigation, and consequently in that point of view, he was so far disqualified from being a witness in the cause against Winters, even if his deposition had been regularly taken. As far therefore as the decree in question is founded on Smith’s answer, it must be erroneous. It cannot be urged, with propriety, that this suit was brought to obtain from the defendants a discovery of transactions which rested solely in their knowledge; and therefore, that without the aid of Smith’s answer,the complainants could not obtain a remedy against the fraud of Winters. For if it be so, their case is nothing different from all others both in law and equity where there is a defect of evidence. And true it is, that the generality of suits in chancery are brought to obtain discoveries from the defendants; in all of which the decisions against each of the defendants, if obtained, must be founded on their respective confessions or admissions, or those of their partners, or on other legal evi[14]*14dence; and it is believed that no exception to this rule has ever been, or can with safety, be admitted. So that whatever may be the hardship to the complainants, their cause must be decided conformably to the principles which have been matured by the wisdom and experience of ages.

But it seems to this court that the decree under consideration is erroneous in several other respects, yet to be pointed out.

Two of the principal sources of contest between the parties, are concerning an adventure of hemp and of tobacco, which the appellees sent to New-Orleans in the spring of the year 1791; and it appears from the bill and exhibits in the cause, or it may be certainly inferred from them, that although those commodities were the property and at the risk of the appellees, yet they were to be transported to New-Orleans in the name and as the property of the appellant, who was a Spanish subject, that thereby they might be screened from the impost duties to which they would otherwise have been subjected, and have a probable chance to be sold for higher prices; and the better to accomplish those purposes, they were not only consigned to the appellant at New-Orleans; but the presumption is strong that the appellant was expected by the appellees to sail, and did sail, down the river with some of the commodities on board his own vessel, and in company with three vessels belonging to the appellees, which carried the rest of them. It also appears that the appellant was furnished with an invoice of the commodities, and that he gave the appellees a receipt for it, before his departure from this country; but until the delivery of the commodities to him as consignee at New-Orleans, they were to be, (as is customary in such cases,) under the care of the captains who commanded those vessels; two of whom were co-partners with the appellees in the commodities, and one of them their special agent, to superintend their transportation to, and their sales at New-Orleans; and if the tobacco in particular could not be sold there agreeably to his instruction, to ship it to Philadelphia; and moreover, that if he, as agent for the appellees, should have any produce or cash to ship to the last mentioned place, they were to be in the name and as the property of the appellant, thereby to screen it from the export duty to which they would [15]*15otherwise have been subjected at New-Orleans. And it ought to be observed, that no voucher or other proof is exhibited to shew that the hemp or tobacco was ever delivered to the appellant as the consignee of the appellees; and from the evident intention of the parties, it is probable they were not. It was only necessary that they should be reputed his property, and for him to have sold them agreeably to his contract with the appellees, if he could have done so, and directed their agent or captains, as his ostensible agents, to deliver them to the purchasers. It ought also to be observed, that the appellant asserts in his answer that he had performed his part of the articles of agreement or contract between him and the appellees, and there has been no proof exhibited to the contrary; so that he cannot be accountable for those commodities further than it is proved that they came into his hands as a purchaser or as an agent, and as they might have been received by any other person who was not a consignee.

In a suit in chancery brought against a consignee, if in his answer he states that he sold the articles at a specified price, “according to the instructions of the complainants, which he files with his answer,” but in fact files no such instructions, his answer will be evidence merely that he sold at such a price, but not that he was instructed to do so; and he will be answerable for the average price of such articles, at the market at which he sold, at the time of sale.

[15]*15The only proof of this kind which appears concerning the hemp, Smith’s answer being excluded, is the statement in the appellant’s answer, that he received the hemp mentioned in the invoice, and that he purchased it of John Smith, the agent for the appellees, for which he, the appellant, settled with him some time after it was free from the contract with the appellees. As the whole of this statement, considered as a confession, must be taken as it is given, and as Smith, after the hemp was free from that contract, was authorised both as the agent and co-partner of the appellees to sell it, and to receive payment for it, and as neither fraud, collusion nor mistake in the sale or settlement is proved, it seems to this court that no investigation as to the quantity, price or payment ought to have been made by the court below; more especially as several circumstances which appear in the cause, render it highly probable that such a sale and settlement was made by Smith.

As to the 3,990 weight of hemp which is charged more than was specified in the invoice, it is sufficient to observe that there is no proof that it came into the hands of the appellant; and therefore he ought not to have been decreed to pay for it.

Neither is there any proof that the appellant received any of the tobacco, except his own receipt, [16]*16which is as follows: “New-Orleans, 31st May 1791. Received from Mr. John Smith 27,968 pounds of tobacco, which is to be sold and the net produce paid to Thomas January or order, or shipped, consigning it to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ky. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winters-v-january-kyctapp-1800.