John S. Brittain Dry-goods Co. v. Merkel
John S. Brittain Dry-goods Co. v. Merkel
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action in replevin by the plaintiff in error to recover certain articles of merchandise. The answer was a general denial. It appears by the uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiff in error shipped the goods to Julius Merkel upon his order; and that for the purpose of procuring the goods he made false statements, which he must have known to be false, and immediately upon receipt of the goods mortgaged them to friends of his for the purpose of securing preexisting debts, one of which had been paid.
From the evidence of the plaintiff, which is undis
The errors assigned are, first, in excluding a copy of a telegram sent by plaintiff to defendant Merkel that it had elected to rescind the sale. We do not deem it essential to determine whether the telegram was properly excluded or not. If it was erroneously excluded, under the rules of evidence it was immaterial.
The second assignment of error is in excluding the original telegram from Merkel in reply thereto, and to this the same conclusion is applicable.
The third assignment of error is that the court erred in holding that the sale was not induced by the fraudulent representations and statements of the defendant Merkel. As heretofore indicated, the only conclusion that can be reasonably deduced from the facts proven is that Merkel did procure the goods from the plaintiff by fraudulent misrepresentations and with a preconceived intention not to pay for them.
The fourth assignment of error is that the court erred in holding that the defendants, mortgagees, were Iona fide purchasers within the meaning of the law, and were protected as such, notwithstanding Merkel had obtained actual possession with the fraudulent intent above indicated. This was error. (Schuline v. Hainer, 48 Kan. 249, 29 Pac. 171.)
' The fifth assignment of error is in overruling plain
Again, it is contended that the judgment should not be disturbed because the evidence clearly and conclusively shows that the goods were sold and shipped before the representations were made. It is sufficient answer to this that the representations were made at the time the goods were shipped, though a part of them had been billed before the statement; the fraudulent intent not to pay for the goods existed. A fraud was contemplated in the beginning, and it is immaterial that the plaintiff was not aware of it at the time it billed out the first lot of goods.
It is again contended that the evidence fails to show that the representations made by defendant Merkel were untrue. If the defendants had any claim whatever against Merkel, as they contend to support their chattel-mortgage liens, the statements were necessarily untrue.
It is again contended that the prerequisites necessary to effect a rescission were not complied with before the commencement of the action, because no notice of rescission had been given. The beginning of a replevin suit was sufficient election and notice thereof. Again, it is said that the necessary prerequisite of putting defendant Merkel in statu quo had not been complied with. He had not paid for the goods in whole or in part, nor had he given any security
It is urged in the fifth place that the goods were not sufficiently identified by evidence to authorize judgment for their recovery. The goods were found by the sheriff, identified, taken under the writ, redelivered to the defendants upon the execution of a bond, as required by the statute, and were identified by the employees of the plaintiff at their examination at the trial with sufficient certainty to authorize a recovery.
The judgment is reversed, and the case remanded-with directions to sustain the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.