Burr v. Williams

23 Ark. 244
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 Ark. 244 (Burr v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burr v. Williams, 23 Ark. 244 (Ark. 1861).

Opinion

Hon. Thomas Joussoit, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by Robinson against Burr and Archer, as partners in trade, etc., in the Independence Circuit Court. At the September term, 1858, the cause was submitted to a jury upon the issues of non-assumpsit and set-off, and they returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for one hundred and ninety-five dollars damages, and costs. The defendants filed a motion for a new trial, which was granted .by the court. At the March term, 1860, the cause was again submitted to a jury, who also returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and assessed his damages at two hundred and thirty dollars and ten cents. The defendants again presented their motion for a new trial, which being refused by the court, they brought their appeal to this court. The declaration contains six separate counts. The first three are predicated upon a supposed special contract, and are substantially the same. They allege, in substance, that on the first day of November, 1855, the plaintiff agreed to deliver to the defendants twelve hundred bushels of good merchantable corn on the bank of White river, in Independence county, within a reasonable time; that the defendants were to furnish the sacks in which it was to be placed, and that upon its delivery they were to pay him thirty cents per bushel for the corn. He avers that, on the day and year aforesaid, he did shell and put into the defendants’ sacks, twelve hundred bushels of good merchantable corn, and placed the same on the bank of White river in rail pens, and covered the pens so as to protect the corn from the weather; and that on the day and year aforesaid, he advised the defendants of the fact, and then concludes with a denial that they had paid him the price stipulated, or any part thereof. The other three are the common counts, the first two charging that on the first day of May, 1856, the defendants were indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of three hundred and sixty dollars, for twelve hundred bushels of merchantable corn, before that time sold and delivered to them, and that being so indebted they promised to pay it when requested; and the third alleges that • on the day and year aforesaid the defendants were indebted to the plaintiff in a like sum of money for the same amount of corn before that time sold and delivered to the defendants, and that being so indebted they promised to pay him so much money as the corn was worth, etc. The objections urged against the verdict of the jury, and which are insisted upon here, are that they found against the instructions of the court, and against law and evidence. The first point that we will examine is, whether the court below erred in refusing to set aside the verdict as being contrary to the evidence.

James Rutherford, a witness introduced by the plaintiff, testified that in the spring of 1856, the plaintiff hauled to the bank of White river, in independence county, a quantity of corn, which was shelled and sacked, and put into rail pens, and covered with boards. That the corn was put up so as to be protected from the weather, and placed on a high bank, where it could not have been reached except by a very high rise, but that it was wet by the high water in May, 1858, which injured all but the top layers, so as to be unfit for shipment. That the rise referred to was the highest he had ever known, and he had been living on that river ten years; that the corn was put up in good order, and was good merchantable corn, and, in his judgment, there were from 1,000 to 1,500 bushels. That Mr. Burr, of Burr & Co., had a conversation with him whilst the plaintiff was placing the corn upon the bank of the river, in which he told him that Burr & Co. had bought corn of the plaintiff, but that if he (the plaintiff) wished to sell it he could do so, and Burr & Co. would wait upon him twelve months for the amount they had advanced, or paid on it. That corn had then fallen to about twenty or twenty-five cents per bushel, but that in the fall and winter previous it had been worth thirty or thirty-five cents, that is, when shelled and sacked and delivered at a shipping point. He further stated that after the water had subsided, Mr. Archer, of Burr & Co., passed down the river in a steamboat, that he stopped at the pens, and chat by his directions the hands of the boat took off the top layers of the corn. That the corn remained in the pens four or five weeks, and that during the month of April the mail boats made several trips between Batesville and Napoleon, passing the corn, and that those boats were then shipping corn through to New Orleans, and that New Orleans was the general destination of corn shipped from the county that year.

Blankership, another witness, stated that in the winter or spring of 1856, he assisted the plaintiff in delivering corn; that from his judgment they put from 1,000 to 1,500 bushels in the pens on a high bank of the river, that the pens were well covered, the pens were well put up, and that it was good merchantable corn. That he was present when Mr. Archer, of Burr & Co., passed in a steamboat and had the pens uncovered and some sacks of the corn taken into the boat, that he asked him (the witness) to cover up the pens again, which he declined, and Mr. Archer went along leaving the pens uncovered.

Mr. Carpenter also testified that he saw the plaintiff putting corn in pens on the bank of White river, near Rutherford’s warehouse, in the spring of 1856, that he was himself putting a pen of corn there for Mr. Burr, that in his opinion there were from 1,000 to 1,500 bushels placed there by the plaintiff, and that it remained there some four or five weeks before the high rise in the river in May, 1856.

John C. Robinson, another witness for the plaintiff, testified that he helped his father to gather, shell and sack and place corn on the bank of White river in good covered rail pens, that the corn was good, and from 1,000 to 1,500 bushels. That after the corn was delivered on the bank of the river, his father sent him up to Batesville to Burr & Co. to notify them of its delivery, that he went to their store, and finding M. S. Sheppard in the counting-room, who was acting as their clerk, told him that the corn was ready for them; that Sheppard replied that in a few days a steamboat would be along and they would be down to take the corn, that he made a memorandum in a book of what he told him, and that it was four or five weeks before the freshet in May, 1856.

Walter B. Rutherford testified, that in the winter of 1856, he was in the counting-room of Burr & Co., and that Mr. Archer, of Burr & Co., asked him if the plaintiff was good for a contract for 1,200 bushels of corn that was to be sacked, and said, at the same time, that Burr & Co. had bought that quantity of the plaintiff, and paid on it one hundred and sixty dollars.

James Rutherford, a witness for the defendant, said that the cost of gunny bags, that held two bushels and a peck, during the fall of 1855 and winter of 1856, was about 21 cents, and that for such as held two and a half and three bushels, the price would be more in proportion. John G. Robinson, who also testified for the defendant, stated that his father got some eight hundred bushels of the corn in question from a Mr. Met-calf; and that Burr & Co. paid Metcalf one hundred and sixty five dollars for it, and that they paid it to him for the plaintiff, and at his request; and that to sack the corn, he, for his father, got two bales of sacks from Mr. Burr.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ark. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burr-v-williams-ark-1861.