DocketNumber: No. 38929
Judges: Ethridge, Hall, Holmes, Lee, Roberds
Filed Date: 12/14/1953
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
This suit was originally brought in the Chancery Court of Forrest County by W. E. Eastburn against Mrs. C. L. Lipscomb, administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, C. L. Lipscomb, seeking to recover the sum of $821.48 for forty (40) Jewel Model 501 Radios, alleged to have been purchased by and shipped and consigned to
The original bill was filed on August 19, 1947. The cause was continued from time to time until June 30, 1950, when a hearing was had and testimony heard, including the testimony of the complainant, and at the conclusion of the hearing the chancellor took the case under advisement for the further hearing of testimony and a decision in vacation. In the meantime, the complainant, W. E. Eastburn, died and the administration of his estate was concluded and this cause was revived in the name of Stanley Roger Dalton, the sole beneficiary of his estate. On the 26th day of September, 1952, a final hearing was had and a final decree rendered, finding that the radios in question had been received by the defendant and not accounted for and adjudging the said Stanley Roger Dalton to be entitled to recover of the defendant the sum of $821.48 and costs, and from this decree the defendant appealed.
The suit arises out of the following state of facts: The defendant’s decedent, O. L. Lipscomb, at the time of his death on March 17, 1946, was the owner and operator of Dixie Auto-Lec Store in the City of Hattiesburg, and was engaged in the business of selling at retail radios, various household accessories and appliances, and automobile parts. The original complainant, W. E. Eastburn, who lived at Hattiesburg, was preparing in the early part of the year 1946 to open four Auto-Lec Stores, one at Ellis-ville, Alabama, one at West Point, Mississippi, one at Brookhaven, Mississippi, and one at Ackerman, Mississippi. Before these stores were opened, Mr. Eastburn ordered through the Concession Enterprises, New Orleans, Louisiana, factory representative for the firm in New York handling the Jewel Model 501 Radios, 100 of such radios for each of the stores he was preparing to
The appellant contends, first, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the delivery sheets of the Railway Express Agency showing the delivery of the radios to the appellant. It is argued by the appellant that the delivery sheets were not properly identified as true records of the Railway Express Agency. We think the court committed no error in admitting in evidence the
It is further contended by the appellant that the value of the radios as of the time of the alleged conversion was not proven. It was shown by the complainant that the purchase price paid by Eastburn for the radios was $821.48, and that the radios were delivered to and received by the appellant very shortly thereafter. There was no other proof with respect to the value of the radios and we think that the evidence as to the price paid for the radios was competent to be considered by the chancellor in determining the value thereof as of the time of the alleged conversion. This court held in the case of Gowan v. State Highway Commission, 193 Miss. 365, 9 So. 2d 637, that the general rule sustained by the weight of authority is that the price paid for land bj^ the present owner or by a party in privity with him is admissible in evidence, providing the time was close enough to throw some light on the question of present value. In 31 C. J. S., page 895, it is said that evidence of the price realized on a bona fide sale of personal property is admissible to prove the value of the chattel unless the sale took place at a time remote from the time as of which the property is to be valued. In the case of Gilbert v. Lewisburg Ice Cream Co., 184 S. E. 244, 117 W. Va. 107, it was held that the recent purchase price of an automobile in the absence of other proof is presumptive evidence of its value. We think, therefore, that the proof of the purchase price paid for the radios just prior to the time of the alleged conversion thereof by the appellant, in the absence of other proof, was sufficient to warrant the chancellor in finding that the amount of such purchase price was the
It is also assigned as error and contended by the appellant that the chancellor erred in overruling the appellant’s motion to suppress the deposition of the witness Solly Magdoff. It is argued that the testimony of this witness was based upon records which were available but not produced and further that the testimony of the witness was too vague, indefinite, and uncertain to be of any probative value. We think there was no reversible error in the action of the court in overruling the motion to suppress the deposition. It is true that the testimony of the witness was vague and uncertain in some of its phases but such vagueness and uncertainty affected the weight of the testimony and not its competency. The refusal of the court to sustain the motion to suppress the deposition upon the grounds that the witness said that his testimony was based upon recollection plus records was harmless error, if error at all, since his testimony as a whole was so uncertain and indefinite as to be of no substantial probative value. The fact of the purchase of the radios by Eastburn to which the interrogatories to the witness were directed was clearly established by other proof, and the testimony sought to be elicited from the witness was of cumulative nature.
It is also urged by the appellant that the decree of the chancellor is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence and, therefore, manifestly wrong. It is argued by the appellant that there is no proof as to what the two shipments contained at the time they were delivered to the carrier in New York, and no proof of what the shipments contained when they were reconsigned from Brook-haven to Ackerman, and no proof that the radios were actually delivered to and received by the appellant. The proof upon which the chancellor manifestly based his finding was the undisputed evidence that Eastburn ordered the radios to be shipped to and consigned to him at
Affirmed.