268 S.W.2d 650 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1954
Appellant, Whit H. Brooks, on April 8, 1948, was a resident of the State of Michigan and the owner of an Oldsmobile sedan which was registered in that state. The car was in the State of Kentucky and appellant, Gaines Williamson, was the agent for its sale. Appellee, E. V. Williams, entered into a contract for the purchase o’f the car for the sum of $2,600. He paid $1,300 in cash and executed to Whit H. Brooks a promissory note in the principal sum of $1,300 which recited that it would be secured by a chattel mortgage on the automobile. This note was later assigned by Brooks to Williamson.
Thereafter, appellants filed suit on the note and prayed judgment for its entire amount with interest. Appellee filed answer and counterclaim in which, in substance, it was alleged, that at the time the note was. executed it had been agreed by the parties that appellee would be given a bill of sale'.so that he could acquire legal title and register such bill ■ of sale as is required-by law. It was further averred that thereafter appellee had demanded a
Appellants contend that they were entitled to a peremptory instruction because the title to the automobile had passed to appellee. We find that the evidence introduced does not support this contention because no bill of sale satisfying the requirements of the Kentucky law was executed. It is true that the record contains title instruments on forms acceptable to the Michigan authorities and the reverse side of these instruments contains formal words and spacing for the assignment or conveyance of the vehicle. However, these spaces were left unfilled and no attempt was made to transfer the automobile in this manner. It is true that some evidence appears in the record to the effect that a separate paper was used for this purpose but we believe that the jury had no alternative other than to find that title had not been transferred either according to the law of Michigan or the law of Kentucky.
In Harlow v. Dick, Ky., 245 S.W.2d 616, 618, under a similar condition o'f facts where a purchaser of an automobile had never received a bill of sale as described in KRS 186.200 or a receipt evidencing license registration as provided in KRS 186.190(3), we held that the consideration for the contract had failed, saying:
“Under the statutes, the purchaser never got what he was entitled to. Without a bill of sale conforming to the requirements of 186.200, Harlow could not obtain a license for the car, Bobbitt v. Cundiff, 296 Ky. 802, 177 S.W.2d 596, and without the registration receipt he could not obtain a license or legally operate the car upon any highway. If the purchaser did all that he reasonably could to obtain these papers and was denied them, as he testified, in our opinion he proved a failure of consideration and was entitled to rescind the contract or recover damages for its breach.”
Appellants insist that the instructions were erroneous and in this we believe they are correct. Appellee offered eight instructions which were accepted and given by the court. These instructions present several issues which were not presented by the pleadings and proof and we believe beclouded the simple issue between the parties. As we view the case, the question seems to be whether appellants are entitled to recover on the note as alleged in the petition or if, because the contract of sale was breached, appellee is entitled to recover on his counterclaim. The propriety and substance of instructions must always be determined by the facts in the particular case and if some question raised by the pleadings is completely resolved by the evidence that was introduced, there is no need to submit that question to the jury. For instance, a fault in the instructions was that it was necessary for the jury to find in effect that the note was procured from the defendant by fraud and misrepresentation as to the ownership of the automobile and the promise to execute in the future a bill of sale to said automobile by which the appellee was induced to purchase it. It is a general rule that fraud must relate to a present or pre-existing fact and cannot ordinarily be predicated on representations or statements that involve mere matters of futurity or things to be done or performed in the future. Am.Jur., Fraud and Deceit, Section 35. If, by the terms of a contract, a person promises to perform an act in the future and fails so to do, the failure is a breach of contract, not a fraudulent or deceitful act, as we understand the term in law.
For the reasons given the judgment is reversed and the case remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.