Bardach Iron & Steel Co. v. Charleston Port Terminals

129 S.E. 687, 143 Va. 656, 1925 Va. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 687 (Bardach Iron & Steel Co. v. Charleston Port Terminals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bardach Iron & Steel Co. v. Charleston Port Terminals, 129 S.E. 687, 143 Va. 656, 1925 Va. LEXIS 297 (Va. 1925).

Opinion

Crump, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Bardach Iron and Steel Company, Incorporated,, is a corporation having its principal office and place-of business in Norfolk. At the time of the transactions, in question in this case, it was engaged in the metal brokerage business and the handling of iron and steel' products, principally iron and steel scrap. In the-month of June, 1922, the company purchased at Jacksonville, Florida, and Charleston, South Carolina, a large quantity of iron and steel scrap at each place. The steel purchased consisted of steel rails of from twenty to thirty feet in length, and the iron material of scrap five feet long and under. It chartered the steamer Moritz to load first at Jacksonville and then at Charleston and transport the material to the-Bethlehem Steel Company at Sparrow’s Point, Maryland, to which all of this metal scrap had been sold.. [661]*661The Charleston Port Terminals was a corporation engaged in a general terminal business at Charleston, South Carolina, undertaking to unload materials from ears and carry to the docks and there stevedore or load upon vessels.

The Bardach Company engaged the services of the Charleston Company in the matter of handling and loading or stevedoring the steel rails and iron scrap at Charleston. The scrap material to be handled and loaded was purchased by the Bardach Company in two lots, one from L. Schoenburg to arrive in Charleston loaded on cars, and the other lot from the Charleston Steel and Metal Company which was in Charleston, loaded on cars. The metal scrap material at Jacksonville was loaded at that point, whereupon the steamer Moritz proceeded to Charleston, arriving there on June 28, 1922, and after being loaded with the material which had been placed on the dock at Charleston by the Charleston Port Terminals, which occupied some ten days, the steamer proceeded to Sparrow’s Point and reached that port on July 11th.

By a notice of motion returnable to the lower court on the 12th day of March, 1923, the Charleston Port Terminals brought an action against the Bardach Iron and Steel Company, Incorporated, for the sum of $2,348.91, with interest, upon the cause of action briefly stated in the notice as follows:

“* * * the said amount being due the undersigned from you by reason of your failure to pay for services rendered in stevedoring, handling and storing a certain lot of scrap iron at your special instance and request. The said indebtedness is evidence by an open account, a copy of which is hereto attached and made a part hereof.”

The account is as follows:

[662]*662“Account of
“Bardach Iron and Steel Company.
“Norfolk, Va.
“For handling scrap from cars to wharf and to vessel
“Bill#395 Stevedoring........................................$ 589.38
“Bill 396 Handling.............................................. 1,669.61
“Storage.......................................4______ 89.92
“Total account...................................$2,348.91
“Bill #395 — Itemized—Stevedoring charges
“14 Cars from L. Schoenburg............ 568,200 pounds
“36 Cars from Chas. Steel & Metal....2,467,460 pounds
3,035,660 pounds
1,354.9 gross tons
“Stevedoring at 43-l-2c per ton............................$589.38
“Bill #396 — Itemized—Terminal charges
“14 Cars from L. Schoenburg............ 568,200 pounds
“36 Cars from Chas. Steel & Metal____2,467,460 pounds
3,033,660 pounds
1,517.83 net tons
“Wharfage and two handlings by agreement ..$1,669.61
“Storage (open)
“L. Schoenburg 1 month on 129,500 lb. at 10c per ton_________________:______$ 6.48
“Chas. Steel & Metal Co. 1 month on 1,668.74 lb. at 10c per ton ..$ 83.44
'“Total..............................................$ 89.92
“Total account - $2,348.91”

[663]*663It will be noticed from the account that there are-three separate items of charge, being on account of stevedoring, handling and storage.

The Bardach Company appeared and plead the-general issue, and also filed a special plea of set-off. The special plea of the defendant to the motion alleges-that the plaintiff, as a stevedoring company, made an agreement with the defendant to unload all the material from the ears, store it on the dock and then to load and store it aboard the vessel to be placed at the dock by the defendant, all for the sum of eighty cents per gross ton; that for the number of tons so unloaded and loaded at the said rate of eighty cents the defendant owed the plaintiff no more than $1,084.16. The plea of offset further avers that when the steamer Moritz arrived at Charleston the metal scrap loaded at Jacksonville,, and similar to that to be loaded at Charleston, had been properly loaded and stowed on the vessel, the rails having been loaded and stowed separate from the short or iron scrap material; that the plaintiff in loading the Charleston material did so carelessly, negligently and improperly, so that all the materials, including those first loaded upon the vessel, became intermingled, causing great additional expense in unloading at Sparrow’s Point; and that by reason of such negligent and improper loading the defendant had suffered a loss of $5,509.69, which, set-off against the claim of the plaintiff, reduced as alleged in the plea to $1,084.16, left the plaintiff indebted to the defendant in the sum of $4,425.53, which the defendant alleged it was entitled to recover of the plaintiff in excess of the amount that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from it.

The issue being joined upon this plea a trial was-had before a jury both upon the general issue and the plea of set-off, and the jury rendered a verdict as follows:

[664]*664“We, the jury, find for the Charleston Port Terminals, as plaintiff, in the sum of $1,478.01, and also find for the Charleston Port Terminals, as defendant, on the set-off.”

The trial court having overruled a motion made by the Bardach Company for a new trial, and judgment having been entered upon the verdict, the said company obtained this writ of error.

On the issues raised between the two parties, the burden was upon the complainant to show what its services were, and whether or not it was entitled, for the rendition of such services, to the amount which it claimed in its account filed with the notice, or, if not to the whole amount, what recovery it was entitled to.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 687, 143 Va. 656, 1925 Va. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bardach-iron-steel-co-v-charleston-port-terminals-va-1925.