Armour Fertilizer Works v. Logan

99 A. 766, 116 Me. 33, 1917 Me. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 3, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 99 A. 766 (Armour Fertilizer Works v. Logan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armour Fertilizer Works v. Logan, 99 A. 766, 116 Me. 33, 1917 Me. LEXIS 8 (Me. 1917).

Opinion

Savage, C. J.

Assumpsit upon a promissory note given in payment for fifteen tons of commercial fertilizer prepared and sold by the plaintiff. The fertilizer was delivered to the defendant from the plaintiff’s storehouse in Houlton, in the Spring of 1914. It was of the brand known as Armour’s “Blood, bone and potash, 5-8-7.” It was prepared in Chrome, New Jersey, and was shipped in bulk by barge from Chrome to Bucksport, Maine, in October, 1913, and in barrels by rail from Bucksport to Houlton in November.' It was then placed in the storehouse and remained there until sold and delivered to the defendant the following Spring.

The defendant pleaded the general issue; and by way of brief statement alleged that the consideration for the note failed; that the fertilizer to pay for which the note was given was warranted to be of a certain grade and quality; that the warranty was not kept; and that thereby the defendant was damaged. The case comes before this court on report.

The defendant claims that the fertilizer was guaranteed to contain certain definite percentages of nitrogen, available phosphoric acid, and potash soluble in water, and that the fertilizer sold and delivered was deficient in all three of these particulars. Thereupon the defendant contends that the sale was made in the violation of statute, and that, for that reason, the plaintiff cannot recover. He also contends that he is, in any event, entitled to recoup in damages.

The contention of the defendant will be understood better if we refer to the statute regulating the sale of commercial fertilizers. R. S., (1916) Chap. 36, (which prior to the last revision was Chap. 119, of the laws of 1911). Section 1 provides that, — “No person shall, within this State, manufacture, sell .... commercial fertili[35]*35zer .... which is adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of this chapter.” By Section 6 it is provided that, — “Every lot or package of commercial fertilizer which is ... . sold .... in the State shall have affixed in a conspicuous place on the outside thereof a plainly printed statement clearly and truly giving the number of net pounds in the package, . . . and a chemical analysis stating the minimum percentage of nitrogen, or its equivalent of ammonia in available form, of potash soluble in water, of phosphoric acid in available form, soluble and reverted, and of total phosphoric acid.” Section 8 requires the dealer before any sale is made, to file with the commissioner of agriculture, for each brand, a certified copy of the statement mentioned in Section 6. Section 12 declares that commercial fertilizer shall be deemed to be “adulterated,” “if its weight, composition, quality, strength or purity do not conform in each particular to the claims made upon the affixed guaranty.” By Section 13 the term “misbranded” is made to apply to commercial fertilizer, “the package or label of which shall bear any statement, design or device regarding such article or the ingredients or substances contained therein which shall be false or misleading in any particular.” Sections 15 and 16 provide for the analysis of fertilizers, either as determined by the commissioner of agriculture, or at the request of any person within the State. By Section 21 sales in violation of any provision of the Chapter are made punishable by fine.

It is admitted that a printed statement was actually affixed to the barrels bought by the defendant, as required by statute. A corresponding statement was certified by the plaintiff to the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station. The “blood bone and potash” fertilizer was certified to contain not less than 4.11% of nitrogen, or its equivalent, 5% in ammonia, 8% of available soluble and reverted phosphoric acid, total phosphoric acid 8.50%, and 7% of potash soluble in water. From these figures comes the legend “5-8-7.” This printed statement affixed to each barrel was the guaranty for breach of which the defendant claims the right to recoup. And because of his claim that the fertilizer contained less than the percentages named in the statement or guaranty, the defendant insists that the fertilizer was adulterated within the meaning of the statute, that the plaintiff was forbidden to sell adulterated fertilizer and [36]*36that it or its agent is punishable by fine for selling it; and hence that the transaction was unlawful, and that the plaintiff cannot recover.

The crucial question is one of fact; it is, whether the percentage of one or more of the three ingredients referred to was lower than that guaranteed. The defendant, presented evidence of three classes:— First, that his own potato crop in 1914 which had been fertilized with the “5-8-7” which he bought yielded only 40 barrels to the acre, and that less than half of these were marketable; next, that some of his neighbors whose lands were near, or contiguous to his own, and some of them similarly situated, used substantially like amounts per acre of the same brand of fertilizer, taken from the same barge load, and experienced the like unsatisfactory result of a small crop; and lastly that he caused to be analyzed in February, 1915, a sample made by mixing some of the contents of two of his own barrels, two of Mr. Moore’s, and one of Mr. Parks, both near neighbors, and that the analyses of the composite sample showed the nitrogen to be only 3.41%, the available phosphoric acid, 6.57%, the total phosphoric acid, 7.77%, and the potash 6.09%, all lower than the guaranty.

All this evidence must be viewed with reference to a single point, namely the percentages of nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash, because nothing else was guaranteed, and no other guaranty is pleaded or relied upon. There was no guaranty of suitableness, nor of results from the use of the fertilizer. Philbrick v. Kendall, 111 Maine, 198. It is not' questioned that the analysis of the fertilizer was competent evidence upon the precise issue involved. Of that we will speak later. But the plaintiff contends that neither of the other classes of evidence is admissible upon this issue. 'It objected to the evidence when offered, and although the case was reported after the evidence was taken out, it was reported with the stipulation that it was to be determined “upon all of the admissible testimony.” By. this we are bound to consider only so much of the testimony as would be admissible in a trial before a jury.

The objection to the first class, the defendant’s own experience, is that the proof is too uncertain, and too speculative or conjectural, to throw any real light upon the percentages of the ingredients of the fertilizer. The plaintiff claims, and truly, that the growth of a crop of potatoes depends upon many factors, the knowledge and ability of the grower himself, the previous preparation of the land, its culti[37]*37vation during the growth of the crop, the selection of seed, and whether it had been properly stored, the presence or absence of insect pests, the means taken to destroy them, the physical structure of the land, the suitableness of the soil, the previous rotation of crops, the weather, and the fertilizer. The plaintiff says that until all other factors have been determined, a crop failure cannot properly be attributed to a deficiency in the guaranteed percentages of the ingredients of the fertilizer, and that it is not evidence from which percentages can be determined. And it has been held that such evidence is inadmissible when the fertilizer was sold on a guaranteed analysis basis only. Walker v. Pue, 57 Md., 155; Germofert Mfg. Co. v. Cathcart, 104 S. C., 125: 88 S. E., 535.

With this view we agree.

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Related

Germofert Mfg. Co. v. Cathcart
88 S.E. 535 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1916)
Scott & Co. v. McDonald
9 S.E. 770 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1889)
Walker v. Pue
57 Md. 155 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 766, 116 Me. 33, 1917 Me. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armour-fertilizer-works-v-logan-me-1917.