Carlton v. Adams

54 S.W.2d 1073
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 1, 1932
DocketNo. 12687.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 S.W.2d 1073 (Carlton v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlton v. Adams, 54 S.W.2d 1073 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinions

DUNKLIN, J.

On June 29, 1928, J. W. Carlton, who then resided in Young county, Tex., made a shipment of 18,500 pounds of wool from Graham, Tex., to Boston, Mass., for sale. As the result of prior negotiations between the parties, ■the shipment was consigned to Adams & Leland, a partnership firm composed of Samuel G. Adams, Edmund E. Leland, Harry P, Bradford, and Harold M. Cummings, who were engaged in the business of wool commission merchants, selling consignments of wool as agents for shippers on the Boston market for a commission to be paid them by the shipper for their services. The bill of lading issued by the railroad company at Graham named the commission merchants firm of Adams & Leland as consignees and the wool was delivered to them upon its arrival in Boston on July 15, 1928. Attached to the bill of lading was a draft drawn by the shipper upon Adams & Leland for the sum of $5,550, payable to the order of the shipper, and the same was paid by Adams & Leland upon receipt of the wool. That draft was drawn and paid under a prior agreement between the shipper and the consignees that the same would be by way of advancement to'the shipper and that the consignees would account to him for any excess over and above the amount of the draft which might be realized from the sale of the wool, and that, should the wool sell for less, then Carlton, the shipper, should pay to the consignees the difference. There was a further understanding between the parties that, after the wool arrived, consignees would advise the shipper as to the best market price that could be realized and get bis consent thereto before making a sale. Carlton was a customer of the First National Bank of Graham, and both he and Mr. Bloodworth, the cashier of that bank, as his agent, conducted considerable correspondence with the consignees with respect to the sale of the wool. On August 30, 1928, Mr. Bloodworth, for and in behalf of Mr. Carlton, addressed a letter to ¡the consignees inquiring whether or not the wool had been received and what the same could be sold for. Up to that time the consignees had not acknowledged receipt of the wool.

On September 4, 1928, the consignees addressed a letter to Mr. Carlton, acknowledging receipt of the letter from Mr. Bloodworth, and apologizing for failure to notify him of *1074 the receipt of the wool, and further stating that the Shipper’s interest had not suffered on account of that oversight because, ever since the wool arrived, the wool market had been very dull, and that there had been practically no call whatsoever for Texas wool; further stating that the shipment was then on the showroom floor, where it would be exhibited to customers, and further stating that the market value of the wool was about 38 cents per pound. On the same date the consignees also wrote to Mr. Bloodworth, calling attention to the letter already written to Mr. Carlton, and with advices to the same effect. In reply to those letters, Mr. Bloodworth and. Mr. Carlton both notified the consignees of Carlton’s unwillingness to accept 38 cents per pound for the wool. Thereafter there was a further decline in the wool market, during which the consignees tried to induce Carlton to give to them the privilege of selling for the best market obtainable on account of the fact that the market was still declining, and the market price of 36 cents was quoted in some of that correspondence. In reply to those letters, both Carlton and Bloodworth informed the consignees of Carlton’s unwillingness to accept less than 44 cents gross, or 42 cents net for the wool. The decline in the market then continued until it reached an average of 25 cents per pound, and the consignees were finally authorized to sell it and did sell it at that price.

After the sale, the consignees demanded of Carlton payment of $2,855.76, difference between the amount they had advanced to him ■by payment of the draft, drawn on them, to wit, $5,550, and the amount realized from the sale, less freight which they had paid, and their commission of 2 per cent, on the sale; and, upon his refusal of that demand,' the consignees instituted this suit against him in the district court of Young county to recover that sum. And, from a judgment awarding plaintiffs that relief, the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.

In addition to a general denial of plaintiffs’ cause of action, the defendant filed a plea in reconvention to recover of the plaintiffs the sum of $2,220, as the difference between the $5,550 which he had collected from the plaintiffs on his draft and for which he gave plaintiffs credit, and what would have been realized for the wool had it been sold for 42 cents per pound net to him, or 44 cents per pound less 2 per cent, commission to the consignees. The basis of that cross-action consisted in allegations that, upon arrival of the wool in Boston, on July 15,1928, its market value was 44 cents per pound, or 42 cents per pound net after allowing a commission of 2 per cent, to the consignees; that, if plaintiffs had notified him of that market value immediately upon receipt of the wool, as they had agreed to do, he would have instructed them to sell at that price, and that they could then have realized 42 cents per pound net to him. There were further allegations that the plaintiffs were guilty of negligence in failing to notify him of such market value of the wool, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of his loss in failing to realize 42 cents per pound for his wool after deducting the freight and commission from the selling price of 44 cents per pound.

Plaintiffs made out a prima facie case for recovery of the amount awarded to them, which was the difference between the amount which they advanced to the defendant and the amount realized from the sale of the wool. It follows, therefore, that the only issues involved upon the trial of this case "were those growing out of the cross-action by the defendant against the plaintiffs.

The case was tried before a jury, who, in answer to a special issue submitted to them, found that the plaintiffs were not guilty of the negligence alleged in the cross-action, which the defendant averred was the proximate cause of his failure to realize a net price of 42 cents per pound for his wool. That was the only issue submitted to the jury, and no other issue was requested by the defendant except one presenting the same issue of negligence which was passed on by the jury, in different language, and no complaint is presented here to the refusal of that issue.

The only assignments of error presented here are to the rejection of testimony ■of the defendant Carlton and his two witnesses, W. H. Bachellor and D. G. Yick, offered in behalf of the defendant to show the market value of the defendant’s wool in the Boston market at the time of its receipt by the consignees. The objection to that testimony which the court sustained was upon the alleged ground that the witnesses had not qualified to give their opinions of such market value. The testimony of all three of those witnesses showed that, prior to the shipment in controversy, they had been engaged in the shipping of wool for sale on the Boston market, and that they and others engaged in a like business in Texas had kept in touch with the Boston wool market through market quotations in the Port Worth Star-Telegram and other publications, which purported to give daily quotations of that market, and that those market quotations were relied on by such shippers and usually found to be correct.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Houston Packing Company v. Spivey
333 S.W.2d 423 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1960)
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Hillis
320 S.W.2d 687 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1959)
Felts v. Whitaker
129 S.W.2d 682 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1939)
Western Casualty Co. v. Ratliff
76 S.W.2d 185 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.W.2d 1073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlton-v-adams-texapp-1932.