150 Ky. 634 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Tlie appellant bank filed in the lower court its action seeking to recover from the appellees, The Crittenden Record-Press, and S. M. Jenkins, as its sole owner, on two notes for $150 each, drawn by the appellees in favor of the American Manufacturing Company, and by dt endorsed and sold to the bank in due course within the intent of the negotiable instruments law. Among other defenses interposed, there is only one which is necessary to be noticed; i. e., that these notes were “peddler’s” notes and void because not so endorsed, as provided under section 4223, Kentucky Statutes; The trial court ruled the burden to be upon the defendant; and at the conclusion of all the testimony, directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. From judgment thereon this appeal is prosecuted.
In Lawson v. First National Bank of Fulton, 102 S. W., 324, we held that the enactment of the negotiable instruments statute did not serve to protect a holder in due course of a note void under section 4223 of the statutes. That question, therefore, need not be considered.
The subject of the barter was a method of putting on and conducting a contest for an automobile, sixteen dinner sets, and other articles. The articles were embraced in the sale. Appellant urges that the evidence
'The manner of the sale here was not that of itinerant vending as that act is commonly known. Though appellee Jenkins testifies that he bought the things sold outright from the traveling agent of the American Manufacturing Company, his testimony as to the real nature of the transaction must be controlled by the written contract of purchase filed by him with and as part of his answer. The contract disclosed that the title to no property was passed by it. It was an order solicited by an agent which expressly provided that it was not to be binding until and when it was accepted by his principal. The agent had with him nothing save the idea, the plan, of conducting the contest. The copyrighted book of instructions, the automobile, the advertising matter, and every tangible thing sold, including, indeed, the idea or plan sold, were embraced within the order transmitted to the American Manufacturing Company for its approval. The sale was not a peddler’s sale. 'Wedgewood, in his Dictionary on Etymology, says that “A ped in Norfolk is a pannier or wicker basket; a pedder or peddler, a packman, one who carries on his back goods for sale.” The term “peddler” or “itinerant” person includes any one who goes from place to place to peddle or retail goods, wares, or other things. West v. City of Mt. Sterling, 65 S. W. 120. In Commonwealth v. Ober, 12 Cush., 493, it is said that the leading primary idea of a hawker and peddler is that of an itinerant or traveling trader who carries goods about in order to sell them and who actually sells them to purchasers, in contradistinction to a trader who has goods for sale and sells them in a fixed place of busi
The foregoing considerations so far dispose of the case as that it becomes unnecessary to consider the interesting questions of interstate commerce discussed -by counsel.
It results that the trial court erred in giving a peremptory instruction in favor of the appellees; but rather upon the facts shown, it should have held that the notes were not void within section 4223 of the statutes; whereupon it would have resulted, insofar as the record discloses, that the notes, being within the négo
The judgment of the trial court is reversed for proceedings consistent herewith.