Evans v. Barbourville Brick Co.
Evans v. Barbourville Brick Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Appellee and plaintiff below, Banbourville Brick Company, a corporation, engaged in the- manufacture of brick in Barbourvilile, Kentucky, sued the appellant and defendant below, W. K. Evans, to recover the balance of an account alleged to be due plaintiff from defendant for brick furnished the latter amounting to $912.50. The answer was a denial and a counterclaim set up in the second paragraph, which latter was denied, and upon trial before a jury it returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the full amount sued for, upon which judgment was rendered, and defendant’s motion fo;r a new trial having been overruled, he prosecutes this appeal. Only three grounds are relied on in the motion for a new trial, which are, (1), error of the court in admitting and rejecting evidence; (2), verdict is not sustained by sufficient-evidence and is flagrantly against it, and (3), error of the court in giving to the jury'instruction number 3, no other instruction being complained of.
Answering ground (1), there wa's no material evidence offered or admitted, to which oibjeetion or exceptions were made, pointed out to us, that was the least sufficient to sustain that ground. Some few, and what we conceive to be immaterial, objections relating to the introduction of evidence occurred at and during the trial, but such evidence was directed to defendant’s alleged counterclaim, wiiich the jury did not allow for any amount and which we think it was fully authorized in so doing, as will hereinafter appear. So that, even if the
The disposition of ground (2), requires a brief statement of the facts, which, as admitted and abundantly proven, are: That defendant purchased of plaintiff by oral contract 150,000 bricks with which to constru'ct a business house in Middlesboro. Plaintiff’s testimony was that the brick was to be paid for by the car load as shipped; while defendant claims that nothing was said upon that subject at the time the contract was made. However, on the invoice of each carload as it was shipped, a prompt remittance was requested, and that request was complied with in the shipment of the -first two cars, amounting to about 26,000 bricks. After that plaintiff continued to make shipments with similar requests on the invoices of each car until it shipped about 66,000 more bricks, none of which did defendant pay for. Plaintiff then drew its draft upon him and sent it to a bank in Middlesboro, and it was returned “no attention paid.’ Plaintiff thereupon placed its account in the hands of an attorney, who made frequent requests over the telephone that the account be paid; but, before the account was placed in the hands of an attorney, plaintiff had notified defendant that it would do so if payment was not made within the next ten days, and it not having-been done the account was given to the attorney. As a result of the attorney’s request for payment, defendant sent plaintiff his check but afterwards countermanded its payment, and plaintiff has never received payment of any part of the entire amount of brick shipped except far the first two oars, amounting, as we have said, to about 26,000 bricks. No excuse was given by defendant why he did not pay for the remaining bricks as the shipments were made, although the invoices, as we have seen, contained a request for Mm to do so, but he justified his countermanding the payment of his check upon the ground that he had heard that plaintiff did not intend to ship him any more brick,- although there were
We have carefully examined instruction number 3 complained of in ground (3), and can detect no fault in it. It concisely and aptly submitted plaintiff’s theory of the case to the effect that if defendant, as a part of the contract or purchase, agreed to pay for the bricks when called upon or to honor sight drafts when drawn on' him for shipments already made, and that he failed and refused to do so “then plaintiff had the right to refuse to ship the remainder of the brick purchased under said contract,” etc., which, as we have seen, conforms to a well established principle in the law of contracts and there was no error in such submission.
Being unable to find any error prejudicial to defendant’s substantial rights, the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.