Carter v. American Fruit Growers, Inc.

134 S.E. 292, 136 S.C. 389, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 16, 1926
Docket12014
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 134 S.E. 292 (Carter v. American Fruit Growers, Inc.) 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
Carter v. American Fruit Growers, Inc., 134 S.E. 292, 136 S.C. 389, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 145 (S.C. 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was rendered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

Second appeal. 130 S. C., 280; 125 S. E., 641. The action is to recover the alleged purchase price of 16 carloads of watermelons alleged to have been sold during the season of 1922 by the plaintiff to the defendant. The complaint contains 16 separate causes of action, each consisting of an alleged sale and purchase of a carload of watermelons at a stipulated price. The total sum alleged to *395 be due upon all the causes .of action, after the allowance of certain credits by payments on account, is $2,540.90, for which judgment was demanded.

The pivotal question upon the first trial and upon the second was whether the watermelons were shipped by the plaintiff to the defendant upon a contract of sale, or upon consignment to sell as brokers for the account of the plaintiff; the plaintiff contended the former, and the defendant the latter.

The case was first tried before Judge Henry and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the full amount claimed in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant appealed, and this Court ordered a new trial upon a question of evidence which does not come up again. The second trial was had before Judge Wilson and a jury, and resulted as did the first. The defendant has again appealed.

It appears that the plaintiff began to ship watermelons to the defendant on July 7, 1922, and between that date and August 2, 1922, he shipped 21 carloads, 5 of which were settled for and not included in this action. The terms of such shipments, as stated, constitute the point of difference between the parties.

The plaintiff testified that the shipments were all made in pursuance of a verbal contract, by which the defendant agreed to pay him the price named for each carload described in the complaint, f. o. b. at Lodge, S. C. He had no written evidence of a sale; not a single communication from him to the defendant, or vice versa, indicating a sale; no notification to defendant that he was shipping upon a contract of sale; no account rendered by him to the defendant as for a sale; no draft drawn by him upon the defendant for the alleged agreed price; no demand by him upon the defendant for the purchase price; through all of the 21 transactions, between July 7th and August 2d, not the *396 slightest evidence that either party considered any one of them as a sale.

Notwithstanding the testimony of the plaintiff that the transactions constituted sales, the documentary evidence in the case, which is for the construction of the Court, demonstrates beyond the shadow of a doubt that consignments for the sale of the watermelons for the account of the plaintiff were intended in every instance by both parties. The Court is not unmindful of the distressing disadvantage to which the shippers of produce to foreign markets are subjected in consignments, and is disposed to scrutinize the conduct of consignees in such cases, owing to the unlimited opportunity of oppression; yet this is not such a case. The plaintiff alleges outright sales, and brings his suit for the purchase price. He makes no complaint as to the manner in which the shipments were handled.

In determining the pivotal question in the case, the shipments made by the plaintiff will be taken up1 in order. It will be noted that shipments numbered 3, 4, 9, 10, and 11 do not appear among the 16 causes of action set up in the complaint; they have been settled for, and settled for upon a consignment basis. Upon the others of the 21, the plaintiff claims $2,700, less credits upon 2, 14, 15, and 16, amounting to $155.10, balance $2,544.90 (placed in the complaint at $2,540.90). The credit allowed on No. 16, $38.93, was really a debit,' and should have been added to the $2,544.90, if the plaintiff be entitled to anything.

The first shipment (cause of action No. 1), was in car No. 37768 on July 7th. On July 29th the defendant furnished the plaintiff with an account sales showing a sale “for account of” the plaintiff, of the carload, for $50, the purchaser paying the freight. Commissions of $25 were charged, and the net proceeds, $25, passed to the credit of the plaintiff.

*397 Evidently referring to this shipment, the plaintiff wrote to the defendant, “Please place them for me.” No objection appears to have been entered by the plaintiff to the inevitable construction which needs have been placed upon the account sales. They could have meant nothing but consignments. See shipment No. 17, where the plaintiff was given credit for this $25.

The second shipment (cause of action No. 2) was in car No. 24351, on July 7th. On July 15th the defendant furnished the plaintiff with an account sales showing a sale “for account of” the plaintiff, of the carload, for $175. After deducting freight charges and commissions, the net proceeds were shown to be $14.28, which were passed to the credit of the plaintiff. On July 21st, the defendant mailed to the plaintiff a check for $14.28. Attached to the check was a statement of the net proceeds of the sale of that particular car, $14.28. Upon the back of that check was:

“Indorsement of this check constitutes a receipt in full for items listed on statement to be detached and retained by payee.”

The check was received, indorsed by the plaintiff and cashed without objection.

The third shipment, not included in the 16 causes of action, was in car No. 39941, on July 7th. On July 21st the defendant furnished the plaintiff with an account sales, showing a sale “for account of” the plaintiff, of the carload, for $75, the purchaser evidently paying the freight. After deducting commissions of $25, the net proceeds were shown to be $50, which were passed to the credit of the plaintiff. On July 21st, the defendant mailed to the plaintiff a check for $50. Attached to the check was a statement of the net proceeds of that particular car, $50. Upon the back of the check was the same memorandum as stated above. *398 The check was received, indorsed by the plaintiff, and cashed without objection.

The fourth shipment, not included in the 16 causes of action, was in the car No. 42916, on July 8th. On July 21st the defendant furnished the plaintiff with an account sales, showing a sale “for account of” the plaintiff, of the carload, for $115, the purchaser evidently paying the freight. After deducting commissions, $25, the net proceeds were shown to be $90, which were passed to the credit of the plaintiff. On July-21st, the defendant mailed to the plaintiff a check for $90. Attached to the check was a statement of the net proceeds of that particular car, $90. Upon the back of the check was the same memorandum as stated above. The check was received, indorsed by the plaintiff, and cashed without objection.

On July 8th, the plaintiff after having made the fourth shipment, wrote to the defendant that he would have seven or eight cars for the following week and said:

“I hope that you gentlemen will be able to handle all my melons to a great advantage to me; it will be highly appreciated. When sending returns for those melons to me, please send me a bill of each car,”

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Related

Moody v. Stem
51 S.E.2d 163 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1948)
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26 S.E.2d 16 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1943)
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138 S.E. 888 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.E. 292, 136 S.C. 389, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-american-fruit-growers-inc-sc-1926.