Maize v. Bowman

93 Ky. 205 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1892

CHTEB JUSTICE HOLT

deliveeed the opinion of the cohet.

In March 1886, Howard Bowman delivered a mare belonging to him to the appellee, Hite Bowman, under verbal agreement based upon a valuable- consideration, by which the latter was to breed her at his own expense, and. keep her until the colt, which was to belong to him, was-foaled and weaned, when the mare was to be returned toller owner. Subsequently the appellant, William Maize,. *208.a creditor of Howard Bowman, had the mare levied upon and sold, she being then with foal.

Public notice was given at the sale of Hite Bowman’s •claim, to the unborn colt. Maize became the purchaser.

After the sale, but before the colt was born, the appellee, Bowman, brought suit for the possession of the mare, claiming that by reason of bis contract he had a special interest in her, and was entitled to hold her until the colt was foaled and weaned, which the petition averred would belong to him.

Before the colt was born the action was dismissed upon a demurrer to the petition. After its birth this suit was brought for its recovery.

Maize claims to be the owner of it by virtue of his purchase of the mare, and that the dismissal of the former suit upon demurrer is a bar to this one.

It is urged the contract between the Bowmans was void because the subject matter of it was not in esse, the colt being then unborn. In other words that it was merely a contract to sell something which then had neither an actual or potential existence.

The general rule is, that a sale or mortgage of something thereafter to be acquired, is void as to creditors. If the debtor has, when the contract is made, no right to the article — if as to him it has then neither an actual or potential existence, then the contract is invalid as against his creditors. It relates to a mere possibility coupled with no interest, and public policy forbids the making of such contracts. Thus a mortgage of goods to be thereafter purchased, or of an unsown crop, vests no title in the mortgagee, and none in the vendee in case of a sale, *209.as against creditors and purchasers. This is a settled rule in this State.

This however, is not such a contract. It was not an .agreement to seiba thing not in existence, but for the use of something for a particular purpose. While the owner of a field can not sell the corn to be thereafter raised upon it, and which is then not planted, yet he may contract the use of the field to another for corn raising, and the latter will be entitled to the crop. There is no difference between the latter case and this one.

The appellee was entitled to the possession of tjie mare for a special purpose until a certain time, a.nd her produce in the meantime, and to this end he had her in possession. (McCarty v. Blevins, 26 Am. Dec., 262.)

The instructions of the lower court required the jury in order to find fqr the appellee to believe from the evidence, that the appellant or his agent had notice before the purchase, of the appellee’s claim.

The dismissal of the former suit is not a bar to this one. That related to the possession of the mare, while this relates to the ownership of the colt, which was unborn when the first action was dismissed. The subject matter is different. It is not the same claim.

The statement in the petition in the first suit that the colt when foaled would belong to appellee was unneces- . sary matter. The court had no right in that suit to determine anything as to it. This was not the purpose of that •action. It was not brought to test the title to anything. The gravamen of it was the right to the possession of the ■mare.

Courts do not favor a plea of res judieata unless it be ■■clear that the merits of the case were considered.

*210The opinion of the court in the first case does not show upon what ground the demurrer was sustained. It is true where it does not appear from the record what was determined, it may be shown aliunde, or by parol evidence. It is also true that it matters not whether the facts upon which the court acted were shown by evidence, or were averred in the petition and admitted by demurrer. The determination of the court is equally conclusive, and renders the question res judicata. In either ease the determination has reached the merits of the case, and is therefore conclusive of the matter. It is unlike a case where the action has been dismissed Ujpon demurrer by reason of the lack of a material averment in the petition. This never constitutes a bar to a second action where the petition supplies the averment that was lacking in the first one.

"Where, however, the facts are found by the court, whether upon evidence or by demurrer to a sufficient petition, its judgment is the sentence of the law upon those facts and is conclusive between the parties.

In this case, however, the lower court properly rejected the record of the former suit as evidence, because it appeared from the petition that the subject matter of that action was different from this one. In one it was the right to the possession of the mare ; in the other it is the question of ownership of' the colt. The issue in this suit could not have been determined in that one. The point of controversy was not the same. This appeared from the pleadings, and therefore it was purely a question of law to be determined by the court; and as the petition in the other suit did not present the issue made in this action,, the court was bound to consider that it could not have *211been determined, and therefore it properly refused to hear testimony upon this point. The record of the first suit showed that the question in this case could not have been determined, because it was not presented in the pleadings.

Judgment affirmed.

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