Atlantic Phosphate Co. v. Grafflin

114 U.S. 492, 5 S. Ct. 967, 29 L. Ed. 221, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1786
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 4, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 U.S. 492 (Atlantic Phosphate Co. v. Grafflin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Phosphate Co. v. Grafflin, 114 U.S. 492, 5 S. Ct. 967, 29 L. Ed. 221, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1786 (1885).

Opinion

Me. Justice Blatci-ipoed

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action at law, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of South Carolina, by John C. Grafflin against the Atlantic Phosphate Company, a South Carolina corporation. The complaint sets forth, as a first cause of action, that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $2,192.60, .with interest from February 24, 1881, “the same being due to the plaintiff for a cargo of kainit, sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant,” on that day, “ at the special instance and request of the defendant.” It sets forth four other like causes of action, for cargoes of kainit, amounting to $3,341.55, March 3, 1881; $1,743.37, March 15, 1S81; $5,083.53, March 16, 1881; and $2,483.37, March 18, 1881. Bills of particulars are annexed, showing the vessels, quantities and prices. The total amount is $15,450.42; and there is added a cause of action for that sum, with interest, as money advanced, laid out and expended, by the plaintiff for the use of the defendant, at its special instance and request. The cargoes are stated to amount to 2,500 tons.

The answer contains a general denial of all the causes of action. It also avers a purchase by the defendant, in May, 1880, through one Dunan, of Baltimore, representing himself as agent of one Radde, of Hamburg, of 2,500 tons of kainit, to be shipped between August 1, 1880, and October 31, 1880; further purchases by it, afterwards, from the same parties, of 1;550 tons, for future shipment, all by January 1, 1881; the receipt by it of, and payment for, 1,080 tons on the 2,500 tons’contract; its receipt of the five cargoes sued for; and its willingness to pay for the cargoes according to the contracts therefor, subject to its claims for damages for the non-perform- *494 anee, by the vendors, of the contract of May, 1880, in that the cargoes were not shipped within the time and in the manner specified in the contract, but arrived when the business of the year was over, and when the goods were much depreciated in value; which damages, amounting to $9,586.82, it claims to recoup.

The answer also avers that the defendant purchased the cargoes' mentioned in the complaint, at Hamburg, under the contract, and received the same under the circumstances above set forth, and was, from the time of the shipment of the kainit, the pwner thereof; that the invoices for all of the cargoes shipped by Radde to the defendant were in the name of Hunan; that, on January 25, 1881, Dunan requested the defendant to return his invoices and substitute similar ones in the name of Grafflin, and it did so, but it never made any new contract, in regard to any of the cargoes, .with Grafflin ; that it never received any notice of the assignment of the contract or cargoes to Grafflin ;. that, if Grafflin advanced money on the cargoes, he did so subject to the rights of the defendant under the contract, and was conversant with those rights ; and that Grafflin was the real principal in the contract.

To the counter-claim so set up the- plaintiff replied, alleging 'that he, and not Radde, owned the kainit; that it was sold and delivered to, and accepted and received by, the defendant, as the property of the plaintiff, free from the claim made for recoupment; and ■ that he and the defendant never occupied any other relations than those of seller apd buyer of the kainit, set forth in -the complaint, at the prices agreed to be paid.

The case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for the $15,450.42, with interest on the amount of each cargo from the dat-e^f its delivery; and there was a judgment accordingly, to rejdew which the defendant brings this writ of error.'

The bill of excéptions"'embodiés all the evidence, by a stipulation between the parties, made in this court. There was no dispute as to any material question of fact. The transactions originated in the following letter,.dated April 29, 1880, from Hunali, at Baltimore, to Pelzer, Rodgers & Co., at Charleston, *495 they being the general agents there of the defendant: “ Radde cables sell Atlantic 2,500 tons best quality Eagle Mine genuine raw kainit, guaranteed to test not below 24 per cent, sulphate of potash by the German chemist, Dr. Ulex; to be shipped during the summer and fall months — say from August to October inclusive — for $7.50 per ton of 2,240 lbs. in taking Hamburg weights. The kainit to be delivered at your Atlantic Phosphate Company’s wharf, Ashley river, port qf Charleston, S. C. The price of $7.50 per ton includes cost, freight and insurance to your wharf. From the price, as the quantity is large, I will rebate 10 cents per ton. Terms of payment, cash on delivery of each cargo.” Pelzer, Rodgers & Co. replied, by writing to Dunan, on. May 10,1880, as follows: “Ve will' take 2,500 tons of best kainit, as described by you, to test hot less than 24 per cent, sulphate of potash, to be delivered at our wharf on Ashley river, a,t seven dollars per ton of 2,240 lbs.”

Tó enable Radde to send the cargoes to the defendant, the plaintiff, who resided in Baltimore, at the request of Dunan, and for a compensation of one per cent, commission, paid to him by Dunan, sent to R|dde, at Hamburg, a credit with Brown, Shipley & Co., of London, for the amounts of five cargoes, under which Radde drew on Brown, Shipley & Co., paying them their commission, and Brown, Shipley & Co. drew on the plaintiff. They received the shipping documents from Radde and sent them to the plaintiff, and he paid their drafts. He directed them to ship the cargoes to Charleston. The shipping documents consisted of bills of lading, charter party, consular invoices for entry at the custom-house, certificates of analysis and weight in Hamburg, and memorandum invoices. The declarations before the Hnited States consul, at Hamburg, were made by Radde, as owner, and they named the plaintiff as the consignee at Charleston; and they and the consular certificates named Charleston as the intended port of entry. The invoices referred to in, and annexed to, the consu-ar certificates, named the plaintiff as the consignee. The bills )f lading set forth that the kainit was to be delivered at the )ort of Charleston, at the Atlantic Phosphate Company’s *496 wharf, on Ashley River, “unto Mr. J. C. Grafflin, or his assigns.” The Hamburg declarations and invoices and consular certificates, were presented by the plaintiff at the customhouse at Baltimore, and he made oaths to entries, before a deputy collector at the custom-house there, that the goods were consigned to “ J. 0. Grafflin, Charleston,” and the papers were verified by the collector of customs at Baltimore, and were passed by the cashier of customs at that custom-house. These papers and the bills of lading, in this condition, for all the cargoes (the ' bills of lading probably indorsed in blank by the plaintiff, though this is not clear), were put by the plaintiff into the hands of Hunan, at Baltimore, and Hunan sent them all to Pelzer, Rodgers & Co., before January 25, 1881, with invoices made out in his (Hunan’s) name, for the five cargoes in question. On that day, Hunan wrote to the company as follows: “Atlantic Phosphate Co., Charleston, S. 0. Gentlemen, I wish to withdraw all my invoices sent you with the documents for these cargoes, and substitute instead the enclosed invoices from Mr. John C.

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Bluebook (online)
114 U.S. 492, 5 S. Ct. 967, 29 L. Ed. 221, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-phosphate-co-v-grafflin-scotus-1885.