Anderson, Clayton & Co. v. Daniels

192 So. 432, 187 Miss. 255
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1939
DocketNo. 33875.
StatusPublished

This text of 192 So. 432 (Anderson, Clayton & Co. v. Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson, Clayton & Co. v. Daniels, 192 So. 432, 187 Miss. 255 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

*257 Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The three named appellees filed separate suits against Anderson, Clayton & Company for the recovery of certain bales of cotton claimed to have been stolen from the respective appellees, which they claim were finally traced to Anderson, Clayton & Company at New Orleans, Louisiana. There was a judgment for each of the appellees for the value of their respective claimed cotton,, from which judgment appellants prosecute an appeal here. On the trial of the cases below, by consent of counsel for both sides, the causes were tried and decided together. The suit was tried in the chancery court. How *258 ever, the evidence in each case is separate, and each case depends upon its own proper evidence.

In the case of J. R. Daniels, the cotton was stolen from the premises of Daniels by one Smith, who was produced, and testified, as a witness for the plaintiff. Smith testified that he stole the said cotton from the premises of J. R. Daniels located upon the highway between Canton and Yazoo City, Mississippi; that, after stealing the cotton, he carried it to Lincoln County and turned it over to one McCullough, who carried it to Brookhaven and sold it and brought the money back and delivered it to him. McCullough sold cotton to Anderson, Clayton & Company corresponding in weight with that stolen from Daniels, but the weights were not identical, and the numbers were placed on this cotton at Brookhaven and shipped to New Orleans, Louisiana. The evidence in this case is sufficient to identify the cotton sold by McCullough to Anderson, Clayton & Company through their agent. The value of the cotton was proven sufficiently to warrant judgment in favor of Daniels.

In the case of P. H. Wharton, it appears that five bales of cotton were stolen from him on November 5-, 1937. Wharton testified that he recovered two bales of the cotton before it was shipped out of the State. He also testified that the other three bales weighed 376, 386 and 562 pounds respectively, that these weights were substantially the same as the gin weights; and, that, he went to New Orleans in company with the Sheriff of Claiborne County, the Chief of Police of Hazlehurst, Mississippi, and a Negro named Willie Williams, who had ginned the cotton. Willie Williams testified that he had a peculiar method of wrapping and tying cotton. He operated a gin for an oil mill in Claiborne County, and it does not appear from the record how many customers he had at said gin the season involved, or how much cotton he ginned, wrapped and tied, using his peculiar (claimed) ■method. The substance of his testimony is that the cotton found in New Orleans at Anderson, Clayton & *259 Company corresponded in that the. ties and bagging nsed and the method of fastening ties were similar to that used in his work at the said gin. He undertook to say from these circumstances that the three hales of cotton found in New Orleans were the bales which he ginned and wrapped for Mr. Wharton. In an effort to identify the stolen cotton, Wharton testified as follows: “A. I had this cotton under the shed right in the front yard, and there was manure there, and also I had just cut the lawn with-the mowing machine and there was grass all over the cotton, pine straw, mud and gravel, where they had dumped it out in the road on a rainy night, and loaded it on a truck. It was all right there, weights all the same, the bagging the same; had some there that had the old-time bagging on it, and some had the new bagging on it.

“Q. From the marks, the manure, the bagging, and the staple of the cotton — A. (Interposing) That’s right, the staple of the cotton.

“Q. You can testify positively — A. (Interposing) Yes, sir, I can testify positively it was my cotton.”

He further testified that he had been growing cotton for twenty years, and, in addition to farming, was in the mercantile business; that, the staple of his cotton was from V-Á to 1 3/16 inches; hut he had not cut the cotton bagging to obtain a sample as he had procured a sample from the gin; at the time the cotton was grown it was worth 10‡ per pound; that, it was stored under a shed near his house, and there was a big lawn in front of his house which he had just mowed with a mowing machine; the night of the theft it was rainy, and it was rolled across this lawn to the highway, resulting in grass, pine straw, mud and gravel getting on the cotton. Mr. Wharton endeavored to identify the cotton found in New Orleans in the possession of Anderson, Clayton & Company by these indications, by reason of the grass, pine straw, mud and gravel, the unusual wrapping and tying, and by the fact that the bagging had not been cut for sam *260 pies. He accounted for the discrepancy in the weights by the fact that the Negroes on the place improperly gauged the seed cotton picked, thereby ginning two light bales.

The testimony of Williams with reference to the method used by him in tying the cotton was as follows: “I tied it with the buckles, being thin, I tied the buckles even across all the way, and the ends of them was turned under, the ends of the ties turned out, and after they let the pressure off they don’t straighten out, they stay that way. ”

The Sheriff of Claiborne County testified as a witness that he could not identify the cotton, but there was dirt and sand on the bagging of the bales he saw in New Orleans which Willie Williams claimed to be the cotton he had ginned for .Mr. Wharton. He further testified that on being notified of the theft that he made an immediate investigation of the premises and from all indications the cotton had been loaded on a truck at the drain on the side of the road; after the hog wire fence had been cut and the bales rolled across the lawn; and there was physical evidence of where the bales had been mashed down and an imprint made in the mud, similar mud being on the bagging of the cotton inspected in New Orleans. He also testified that it had rained the night the cotton was stolen; that, one could clearly see the indentation of the bagging in the mud on the lawn, and that the bagging on the cotton in New Orleans was of the same mesh as indicated by the impressions in the mud in front of the house; and that there were blades of straw four or five inches long still sticking to the bagging that compared with the kind of grass on the lawn which the cotton had been rolled across, the lawn being three or four acres, or approximately 175 yards to the road, which had been mowed not very long before.

E. J. Harrison, an employee of the Mississippi Compress Company of Brookhaven, testified that his records showed cotton receipts Nos. 56851, 56852 and 56853 issued in the name of Ed Harris,- and stated that this cotton was *261 delivered at the compress at Brookhaven, Mississippi, November 10, 1937, and was bought by Anderson, Clayton & Company.. Harris was not introduced as a witness, and there was nothing to show that Harris was the person who had stolen the cotton. It seems to have been assumed that the cotton was stolen and sold by Harris.

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192 So. 432, 187 Miss. 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-clayton-co-v-daniels-miss-1939.