Dannenberg v. Teeters
Decision Date | 05 May 1928 |
Docket Number | 27,837 |
Citation | 266 P. 744,126 Kan. 28 |
Parties | G. H. DANNENBERG, Appellee, v. C. R. TEETERS, as Sheriff, etc., Appellant |
Court | Kansas Supreme Court |
Decided January, 1928
Appeal from Sherman district court; CHARLES I. SPARKS, judge.
Judgment affirmed.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT.
AGENCY--What Constitutes--Delivery of Goods for Purpose of Sale. In an action in replevin to recover certain quantities of oil and grease subjected to attachment proceedings as the property of an absconding debtor of a third party who caused the attachment to issue, the evidence examined and held to show that the plaintiff in the replevin action was the owner of the property and that his business relationship with the absconding debtor was that of principal and agent, not that of vendor and vendee or of creditor and debtor, and judgment was properly entered in his behalf.
George D. Freeze, of Goodland, for the appellant.
G. L Calvert, of Goodland, W. S. Langmade and Wallace T. Wolfe, both of Oberlin, for the appellee.
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff in an action in replevin, and the correctness of that judgment depends on whether the relationship of plaintiff and one C. A. Plumb was that of principal and agent or of vendor and vendee.
For some time prior to 1926 Plumb operated a garage and filling station in Goodland. Plaintiff Dannenberg was the agent of the Nourse Oil Company, a concern which supplied Plumb with oils and greases for his trade. Plumb did not pay his bills promptly, and the Nourse Oil Company terminated business dealings with him. Dannenberg's commission on sales for the Nourse Oil Company was 20 per cent; and rather than lose the commission he had theretofore enjoyed from Plumb's business he decided to become responsible himself to the Nourse Oil Company and to have their supplies shipped to himself and Plumb at Goodland, to be delivered to Plumb upon an understanding that they were to belong to Dannenberg, and to be sold by Plumb at whatever advance in price he choose to exact over the cost which Dannenberg had to pay to the Nourse Oil Company. Except in this special course of dealing with Plumb, Dannenberg continued to be the regular agent of the Nourse Oil Company, and on all oils and greases supplied to Plumb under this special arrangement the Nourse Oil Company allowed Dannenberg a rebate equal to his regular 20 per cent commission. Plumb retailed the goods and informally accounted to Dannenberg for some months; but eventually he disappeared, leaving certain debts unpaid. One of his creditors, T. A. McCants, brought an action before a justice of the peace and caused an attachment to issue, under which the sheriff seized barrels and drums of oil and other lubricants which Dannenberg had supplied to Plumb under the arrangement above mentioned.
Dannenberg brought replevin to recover the attached property. Issues were joined and the evidence for both parties was presented to a jury. The controlling evidence was that given by plaintiff Dannenberg himself, and at its conclusion it was agreed by counsel that what he had testified to was true.
[COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT]: "It is all true and undisputed."
Thereupon an instructed verdict was entered in plaintiff's behalf, and defendant appeals, contending that the relation of creditor-vendor and debtor-vendee rather than that of principal and agent existed between Dannenberg and Plumb.
The most significant parts of Dannenberg's voluminous testimony read:
"Direct examination.
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