Glass v. Cincinnati Tobacco Warehouse Co.
Glass v. Cincinnati Tobacco Warehouse Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
On October 6, 1904, J. W. Glass and Pattie Glass, residents of Carter county, Kentucky, borrowed from the Cincinnati Warehouse Company $500, and executed a ■chattel mortgage upon a crop of tobacco supposed to contain about ten thousand pounds to secure same. J. W. Glass had theretofore been purchasing tobacco in the country and prizing it and shipping it to the Cincinnati Warehouse Company upon a contract, by the terms of which, after the payment to the warehouse company of certain fees, insurance and expenses, he received all the profit or made good any loss that arose out of the several purchases made by him. Out of his first year’s venture he had made money. About the time this loan was made, he arranged with the Warehouse Company to buy tobacco during the following „ season upon the same terras. Under this arrangement he bought, and the Company •advanced him money to pay for, more than a hundred “thousand pounds of tobacco in the country, and he- shipped to the warehouse eighty-two hogsheads of tobacco, weighing something over eighty-eight thousand pounds.
The proof shows conclusively that appellee furnished the money to J. W. Glass to pay for 103,445 pounds of tobacco, and that he shipped to appellee 82 hogsheads of tobacco,weighing 88,320,and that appellee, on this tobacco sold, received $1,906.91 less than it paid out for appellant J. W. Glass in its purchase, and this $1,906.91, together
The great difficulty with appellant’s case is that he is trying to speak from memory about transactions that took place four or five years prior thereto, and was unable to give anything like an accurate statement as to what he had done. All of the tobacco which he bought in the country and shipped was shipped in his name, and the Warehouse Company never received any notice from him or his wife that her tobacco had been shipped, or that she was laying any claim to any of it, or was demanding or looking to the Company for pay for any part thereof. In this particular the conduct of appellant and his wife rather supports the contention of appellee to the effect that the note has not been paid. All of the other tobacco which appellant bought in the country he paid for by drafts drawn on appellee. We see no reason why he should have made an exception in favor of his wife. When he bought her tobacco, if he did so, he should have paid her as he did anyone else, and if, as he claims, the $500 debt was her debt, he should have deducted this Amount and drawn a draft on appellee for the amount of her tobacco less the amount of her note. Instead of doing this, however, he made no mention of the fact that he was shipping her tobacco to appellee, and, in the light of the positive testimony of the president of appellee company to the contrary, we must hold that the record fails to show that the tobacco covered by the mortgage was shipped to appellee at all.
But if we were mistaken in this, and the tobacco claimed by appellant Pattié Glass did in fact constitute a part of the consignment by J. W. Glass to appellee, she would be in no better position, for neither she nor her husband at any time notified the appellee that her tobacco was included in such consignment. Her husband had the handling of her tobacco, and if he used it to extend his credit rather than extinguish her debt, he, and not appellee,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.