Flat Lick Stave Co. v. Kinningham
Flat Lick Stave Co. v. Kinningham
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
This action was commenced by appellee, James Kinningham by filing a petition in the Knox circuit court to recover from appellant, Flat Lick Stave Company, one hundred and seventy-eight dollars, balance due him, as
The evidence showed conclusively that the plaintiff had taken timber belonging to the defendant, out of which he had manufactured some seven or eight thousand staves, which *he sold to one Jack Asher. He claimed that this timber was given him. by R. C. Baker & Brother, who had sawed the staves for defendant under contract with it. The evidence further showed without contradiction that the appellant purchased the timber from George Kinningham, the plaintiff’s father, and paid him six hundred dollars for it; that this timber was sawed for appellant hv R. C. Baker & Brother under contract, hut Baker & Brother had no sort of authority to give the timber of appellant. R. C. Baker denied that he gave any 'timber to the plaintiff; hut, conceding for the purpose of this case, that he did so, he had no authority and his gift conveyed no title to the plaintiff. The court should have instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the defendant on its set-off the value of the timber appropriated by the plaintiff to his own use, and should not have submitted the question whether the conversion was wrongful or not. There was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had concealed and stolen a lot of the staves, which he was hired to haul for the appellant. This he denied, but he did not deny that he had manufactured from the timber given him, as he claims, by Baker & Brother, something over seven thousand staves, which he had sold to Jack Asher. To the extent of the value of these staves, the appellant was entitled to
For these reasons the judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.