Brooke v. Laurens Milling Co.

66 S.E. 294, 84 S.C. 299, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 26, 1909
Docket7391
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 294 (Brooke v. Laurens Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooke v. Laurens Milling Co., 66 S.E. 294, 84 S.C. 299, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 267 (S.C. 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Jones.

This is the second appeal. The first appeal is reported in 78 S. C., 200, and resulted in a reversal of the verdict and judgment for defendant. On the second trial the verdict was for defendant and plaintiff again appeals.

We adopt, with some alteration, the following full and clear statement from the argument of appellant:

The complaint is based upon a contract in writing made by George W. Brooke and Laurens Milling Company, on January 16, 1904, whereby plaintiff was to store in a public elevator plant, Nashville, Tenn., 9,600' bushels of No. 2 white corn in bulk for the defendant, to be delivered to defendant, at Laurens, S. C., in four equal monthly quantities of 2,400 bushels for the months of March, April, May and June, 1904, for which defendant agreed to pay plaintiff 68 3-4 cents per bushel for the 2,400 bushels, to be ordered out for March, and one cent per month additional for the remainder of the corn, one cent per month being stipulated as storage. The contract also provided that the weights and grades of West Nashville Public Elevator should be accepted by both parties as final, and that upon failure of defendant to order out said corn as per contract, the plaintiff had the option to sell said corn for the account of Laurens Milling Company, and that delays in shipments by negli *301 gence or defective instrumentalities of railroads should not be chargeable to plaintiff.

The plaintiff shipped two cars of the corn under the March delivery, which were accepted by the defendants, and paid for. The plaintiff shipped two other cars of corn, comprising the remainder of the March delivery and a part of the April delivery, but when this shipment arrived at Laurens they were rejected by defendant. At this time the defendant notified the plaintiff not to ship any more corn. Whereupon the plaintiff brought this action for breach of the contract in not accepting the shipped portion, and for not ordering out the unshipped portion, claiming the difference between the contract price and the price for which the corn was sold, to wit, $635.36. The two cars rejected at Laurens were sold for 40 and 50 cents per bushel, and the unshipped corn was sold at Nashville for 66J-2 cents per bushel, basis Laurens, S. C.

The answer of defendant was in substance that the plaintiff shipped corn to defendant inferior in quality and grade to that stated in contract, and fraudulently shipped corn that was musty and mildewed, and alleged a rescission of the contract by defendant, and set up also four counterclaims, (1) for $297.50 for loss in quality of the com accepted by defendant, (2) $188.58, the difference between the contract price and the price for which plaintiff sold the 6,286 bushels of the unshipped com after defendant’s rescission of contract; (3) for $378, the difference between the contract price and the market price on the 6,286 bushels of unshipped corn at the time contracted to be delivered; (4) for $337.52, the difference between the contract price and the selling price of corn at the time defendant rejected the two cars of com at Laurens, S. C.

The first two counterclaims were rejected by Judge Memminger because they were identical to the counterclaims disallowed in the former appeal of this case, but as to *302 the third counter claim his Honor, Judge Memminger, overruled the demurrer.

Appellant alleges error in his Honor, the trial Judge, in refusing to sustain demurrer to third counterclaim, in refusing to charge the jury that the decision of the inspector, N. L,. Coggins, was binding as to grade, in charging that the jury could decide on the question of the grade of the corn that was shipped, in charging the jury that they should set off the loss of plaintiff on the shipped portion of the corn against the profit he should have made on the unshipped portion of the corn, and in not charging plaintiff’s first and second requests to charge, which are as follows:

1. “Your Honor is requested by the plaintiff .to charge the jury that there is no competent testimony impeaching the honesty of N. L. Coggins, the inspector of the corn at Nashville, and that the grading of the com in this case by the said N. L. Coggins is binding upon the parties.

2. “The plaintiff requests his Honor to charge the jury that the grading of corn by N. L. Coggins, the inspector, was final, and it is immaterial what was the condition of the two' cars of corn when they arrived at Taurens, and the defendant was bound to accept the corn when it arrived, and having failed to do so the plaintiff had a right to resell the rejected com for the account of the defendant, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover the difference in the price of the corn at the contract price of 69Ya cents and the price at which it was sold, to wit: 40 cents and 50 cents per bushel.”

1. We think the demurrer was properly overruled.

1 The reason for this ruling is stated by Judge Memminger as follows : “The Court: Well, the way I look upon it, I do not see that there is any view of the case under which the defendant could recover an absolutely affirmative judgment for money against the plaintiff.' This contract has to be regarded iii its entirety and' it seems to me that if the plaintiff showed a loss on the delivered corn as against the defendant and the defendant could *303 show that the plaintiff derived a profit from the undelivered corn, or should have derived a profit if he had complied with the rule laid down by the Supreme Court, that they ought to be able to set that off as against the other loss or the loss charged against them on the actually delivered corn, and I suppose that -would come under the head of a counterclaim. They could set off that amount against the other. I don’t see under any view of the case — do you gentlemen claim that you are entitled to a money judgment against the plaintiff?

“Mr. Cooper: No, sir; we don’t ask for anything against the plaintiff.
“The Court: That is the way I am going to view the case, that one of these may be set off against the other. It might arise by way of defense, directly under the defense, but it is set up in the way of counterclaim, and I think it would be better understood that way. So we will try and go on with the case along those lines and see if we can work it out as we proceed.”

It thus appears that the matter in the answer objected to was not sustained as a strict counterclaim, but really as matter of defense. The plaintiff is seeking to enforce a contract in its entirety, and the defendant should be allowed to plead any matter which goes to defeat recovery in whole or in part upon such contract.

The contract sought to be enforced gave plaintiff “option to resell said grain for account of said Laurens Milling-Company.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 294, 84 S.C. 299, 1909 S.C. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooke-v-laurens-milling-co-sc-1909.