Casteel v. White River Grocery Co.

251 S.W. 31, 159 Ark. 93, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 14, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 31 (Casteel v. White River Grocery Co.) 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
Casteel v. White River Grocery Co., 251 S.W. 31, 159 Ark. 93, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 4 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Wood, J.

On the 14th of October, 1916, W. H. Casteel, a merchant at Buffalo, Arkansas, entered into a verbal contract with the White River Grocer Company (hereafter called company) by which he turned over to the company his stock of goods and accounts due him for merchandise. Casteel at that time owed about $2,750, which he was unable to pay. He owed to the company about $400. His stock of goods invoiced $1,525. It was the understanding between- Casteel and the company that the latter should account to the creditors of Casteel for the amount of the invoice, less ten per cent.

This action was instituted by Casteel against the company. He set up in his original complaint the contract, as above stated, and alleged that the company was to collect the accounts promptly, without cost to Casteel, and, after paying the debt to itself and the other debts, was to turn all uncollected accounts back to Casteel; that the company had settled all the debts owing by Casteel for about fifty cents on the dollar, and had collected a large sum of money on the accounts for merchandise due him, for which it had refused to account; that it had suffered such of the notes and accounts as were due but not collected to become outlawed — barred by the statute of limitation. He prayed for an accounting, and judgment for the amount of the notes and accounts which the company had negligently permitted to become barred by limitation. By an amendment to his complaint, Casteel alleged that the contract was that both Casteel and the company were to collect the notes ,and accounts due Casteel without cost to Casteel; that he, in good faith, was proceeding to collect the accounts, when the company, without right, notified his debtors not to pay him, and that’ therefore he was unable to make collections; that the company negligently failed to make collections, and this conduct of th,e company amounted to a conversion by the company of Casteel’s notes and accounts, and that it was liable to him, on an accounting, for the whole amount of the uncollected accounts.

The company answered the complaint, and admitted that the stock of goods, notes and accounts of Casteel were turned over to it, as alleged, but it denied that the notes and accounts were to be collected without cost to Casteel. On the contrary, it alleged that the notes and accounts were to be collected by the company as far as possible. It alleged that it took charge of the goods, the notes and accounts, under the contract, and sold the goods for the best price obtainable, eighty cents on the dollar, and turned the notes and accounts over to one S. E. Denton for collection, who collected wliat was possible, and the company applied the entire proceeds on the debts of Casteel, including its own deíbt, pro rata. But the sum realized was not sufficient to pay the creditors of Casteel, and that he was still due the company the sum of $227.50. It alleged that Casteel, after he had turned over his notes and accounts to the company to be applied on this indebtedness to his creditors, continued to collect same himself and to apply the proceeds so collected to his own use, in violation of his contract with the company. It alleged, among other things, that many of the notes and accounts were denied by the parties who Casteel claimed were thus indebted to him; that many produced proof that they had paid'same to Casteel. It alleged that the notes and accounts were largely worthless, and that the company realized only a small per cent, in the collection of the same, and that such amount, after paying a reasonable fee for collection, together with the proceeds from the sale of the stock of goods, was applied to the payment of Casteel’s debts, and the entire sum was sufficient to pay only slightly over fifty cents on the dollar of those debts. The company, by way of cross-complaint, set up that Casteel was indebted to it in the sum of $227.50, as above stated, for which it prayed judgment.

The prayer of the complaint for an accounting to be had before a master was granted. While the record is silent as to whether the master to be named was agreed upon by the parties, the master’s report shows that Z. M. Horton was named as special master, and that the cause was referred to him to state an account. His report shows that he took the depositions of Casteel and two of his brothers and of Harrison Gaines and James Carter, for Casteel, and the depositions of Seth Matthews and S. E. Denton for the company, and, after considering these depositions, with all the exhibits and pleading's in the cause, he made certain findings of fact to the effect that the stock of goods and books and accounts, etc., which Casteel had on hand at 'his store in Buffalo, Arkansas, were turned over to the company, which undertook to collect in the matter of winding up the business of Casteel, according to the contract between them. The master found that the company had used due diligence in its effort to collect these accounts, and that, after calling to its assistance S. E. Denton of Cotter, one of the best of collectors, it realized the sum of $178.92, which, added to the sum of $1,372.68 realized from the stock of goods, it applied to Casteel’s debts; that the amount paid only about fifty-five per cent, of the principal of those debts. The master found that the company had acted in good faith in carrying out the contract; that many of the accounts turned over to the company had not been collected; that many of these accounts were against near relatives of Casteel, and that some of them were denied by the alleged debtors-; that the company, having accounted to the creditors for all sums that had come into its hands, was not liable to Casteel in any sum.

The report of the master recites that the attorneys for the respective parties argued the case before him by brief. His report was made at the April term of the court, 1921. After the report of the master was filed, the depositions of the two brothers of Casteel were retaken, and also Casteel took tlie deposition of one Bonner. In their original depositions the brothers of Cas-teel testified that they were present during the conversation between Will Casteel and Seth Matthews, the representative of the company, in which conversation they entered into the verbal contract out of which this action arose. They were called as witnesses to the agreement, and testified as to what was said. The testimony was elicited by question and answer. They stated, in substance, that the contract was that the company was to take the stock at ten per cent, discount and take tlhe accounts, and each one was to collect on the accounts to cover the indebtedness, and the balance of the accounts were to he turned hack to their brother, Will Casteel.

In the depositions of James and Elbert Caste'el that were retaken after the filing of the master’s report, both stated that Will Casteel and the company were to collect on the accounts, and there was to he no expense to the collections: that neither he nor any one else was to have any pay for making the collections.

The testimony of Bonner was to the effect that the accounts due Casteel were turned over to the company for joint collection. The company was to hold the hooks,' and the amount collected, without any discount of fees for collection, was to he credited on Casteel’s debt. Casteel stated at. the time that the accounts were all g'ood, and that he could collect them all.

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 31, 159 Ark. 93, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casteel-v-white-river-grocery-co-ark-1923.