44 Ind. App. 335 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
This was an action brought by appellant against appellees for damages for conversion. At the conclusion of appellant’s evidence, upon motion of appellees,
It was shown by the evidence that appellee Coyner was the owner of a certain described farm; that appellee Owen was his tenant; that on February 13, 1903, appellee Coyner sold to John C. Newby, president of appellant bank, for the bank, “one hundred thirty-sis dollars and fifteen cents' worth of the landlord’s portion of the crop raised on Coyner’s farm;” that said sale was evidenced by a written bill of sale, and the purchase price was paid at that time; that the crops were not planted at the time of the sale. The bill of sale did not specify what the crop was to consist of, nor when it should be raised. It was, however, shown by the evidence that in 1903 corn was raised on the land described, and it was not shown that any other crop was raised. It was also shown that Coyner directed his tenant to gather the landlord’s portion of the corn raised in 1903 on the tract described, and to place it in a crib separate from corn raised from other tracts belonging to Coyner, which the same tenant had rented, saying: “The bank might get that corn.” Afterwards Coyner had a conversation with John C. Newby, representing the bank, in which he, for the bank, demanded the corn, and Coyner said: “ I do not want you to take that corn, I want it to feed, and if you will give me ten days to make a note I will do that. ’ ’ To which Newby replied: ‘ ‘ All right, we do not want the corn, what we want is the money. ’' To which Coyner replied: “Now if I do not make arrangements in ten days about this note you can come and take that
The record shows that there was evidence from which the jury might infer that Coyner, in separating and specifically designating the corn in question as the bank’s corn, intended thereby to deliver the corn to the bank in conformity with the terms of sale theretofore made. Under the foregoing rules, it is our opinion that the court erred in giving the peremptory instruction, directing the jury to find for the appellees.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to grant a new trial.