Austin MacHinery Corp. v. Clark-Hunt Contracting Co.

103 So. 1, 140 Miss. 78, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 236
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1925
DocketNo. 24582.
StatusPublished

This text of 103 So. 1 (Austin MacHinery Corp. v. Clark-Hunt Contracting Co.) 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
Austin MacHinery Corp. v. Clark-Hunt Contracting Co., 103 So. 1, 140 Miss. 78, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 236 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Holden, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a replevin suit brought in the circuit court of Quitman county in August, 1923, by the appellee Clark-Hunt Contracting Company, against-the appellant,'Austin Machinery Corporation, to recover the possession of an Austin No. 12 drag line ditch and dredging machine valued at forty-three thousand five hundred dollars, which machine had been shipped over the T. & M. Y. Railroad by appellant to the appellee at a station .named Darling, under a contract of sale, with bill of lading to shipper’s order, with draft attached and notes to be signed according to the terms of the contract of sale. The machine was in fact replevied from the railroad company, but the appellant shipper was substituted as the defendant in the place of the railroad company, and the trial upon the merits took place nearly one year after the writ of replevin was executed.

At the conclusion of the testimony the court granted a peremptory instruction to the jury to find the possession for the defendant, the appellant herein, and- sub mitted the question of damages to the jury for the wrongful taking and detention, and the jury returned a verdict for two thousand, one hundred seventy-five dollars, which *85 was the interest on the value of the machine from the time of taking to the date of the trial, as damages in favor of the defendant.

Both the plaintiff and the defendant being dissatisfied with the result of the trial, the appellant, Austin Machinery Corporation, the seller and shipper of the.machine, defendant below, appeals directly from that part of the judgment as to damages, upon the ground that the court erred in limiting the amount of the recovery to six per cent, interest on forty-three thousand, five hundred dollars, the value of the machine at the time it was taken under the writ of replevin. The plaintiff below, direct appellee here, cross-appeals, on the ground that the court erred in granting the peremptory instruction to find the possession for the defendant, under the evidence in the case.

We shall state only so much of the case as is absolutely necessary to an understanding of the decision. Here it is: The Austin Machinery Corporation, domiciled at Toledo, Ohio, entered into a written contract with the appellees, Clark-Hunt Contracting. Company, to sell the latter the dredging, machine here involved for the sum of forty-three thousand five hundred dollars. The terms of the contract provided that the machine was to be shipped to appellee, who was to pay fourteen thousand five hundred dollars cash upon its arrival at Darling, Miss., and also execute two notes for fourteen thousand five hundred dollars each for the balance of the purchase money.

The machine was shipped with shipper’s order bill of lading attached to draft for the fourteen thousand five hundred dollars to be paid by appellee, who was also to execute the two notes, in which event the bill of lading was to be delivered to appellee and it to then receive the machine from the railroad company. When the machine arrived the appellee purchaser, was notified by the bank to call and make the cash payment and execute the notes and receive the bill of lading for the machine. The appellee called at the bank, inspected the bill of lad *86 ing, draft and notes, and without making any complaint thereat, failed and refused to pay the draft and execute the notes, but instead of doing so in accordance with the contract between the parties, the appellee immediately sued out the writ of replevin herein, took possession of the machine and gave bond for it to await the result of the trial, and proceeded to use the machine in its ditching and dredging work.

The testimony at the trial showed conclusively, as we view this record, that the appellee, plaintiff below, was not entitled to the possession of the machine because it had not complied with the terms of the written contract of sale, with reference to the payment of the draft for fourteen thousand five hundred dollars and the execution of the notes for the balance of the purchase money, and therefore was not entitled to the bill of lading with which to obtain possession of the machine from the railroad company at the point of destination.

We have considered carefully the contention of appellee with reference to the accommodation note given byappellee to appellant before the shipment was made, but we are unable to see wherein this part of the transaction between the parties could have had any effect upon the terms and requirements of the undisputed written contract (as well as the oral testimony supporting it), upon which the sale and shipment were finally made. Therefore we shall at once dispose of the cross-appeal by holding there is no merit in it, and as to it the judgment must be affirmed.

Now, as to the direct appeal, which is based upon the one ground that the lower court erred in announcing by instructions the measure of damages recoverable by the appellant for the wrongful taking, detention and use of the machine-by appellee for about ten months before the date of the trial. The exact complaint of the appellant on the direct appeal is that the court, by instruction No. 2 granted the plaintiff below, which in part is in the following language:

*87 ‘ ‘ The court further instructs the jury that the measure of the damages which you are permitted under the law to award to the defendant is six per cent, interest on such value as fixed by you, from August 14, 1923, to date, unless you believe from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that in suing out the writ of replevin herein, the plaintiff was actuated by motives of malice, oppression, or willful wrong ’ ’—limited the jury to an allowance of interest on the purchase price of the machine as the only recoverable damages suffered by the defendant. To put it in another way, the appellant contends that it should have been permitted to recover such actual damages as was shown that it suffered on account of the depreciation in the market value of the machine on account of the detention, use, and injury to it between the time of its taking and the date of the trial. The appellee opposes this claim on the theory that no damages may be allowed in such case for the depreciation in the market value of the machine, because, as contended, the interest on the market value of the machine at the time it was sold is all that can be recovered under certain decisions of this court; and for a further reason, that the proof does not show the machine was actually damaged by the appellee in its detention and use of it in dredging ditches.

We have reviewed the decisions referred to by counsel on both sides, and we are unable to find any pronouncement which limits the recovery of damages to the interest on the value of the property, where the property is wrongfully detained and injured and damaged by its use and thereby depreciated in value.

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 1, 140 Miss. 78, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-machinery-corp-v-clark-hunt-contracting-co-miss-1925.