Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Chapman

4 F.2d 319, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2969
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1925
DocketNo. 4225
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 F.2d 319 (Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Chapman, 4 F.2d 319, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2969 (5th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Plaintiff, an Oklahoma corporation, domiciled at Chickasha, said state, sued the defendants, as members of an alleged partnership, styled the Planters’ Cotton Oil Company, located in the City of Waxahachie, Tex., for damages alleged to have been sustained by the breach of a contract to purchase 20 tanks, of 60,-000 pounds each, of refined cotton seed oil. It alleged that the oil was sold at a price of 18 cents per pound for delivery in July, 1920, but that, upon Die defendants’ refusal to accept, the same was resold at the best. [320]*320obtainable price o£ 11.6 cents, and-that petitioner was thereby damaged to the extent of the decline in price and expenses incident to making the subsequent sale, etc.

Plaintiff further alleged that, after the resale of the oil, the matter was submitted to arbitrators, as required by the rules and regulations of the Interstate Cotton Seed Crushers’ Association, of which both plaintiff and defendants were members; that the arbitration committee of said association, acting within said rules and regulations, had heard the parties and decided the cause in its favor. Wherefore plaintiff prayed that the award of the arbitrators be enforced, and that it have judgment for the sum allowed, and, in the alternative, if for any reason such award were held not binding, then that it recover of defendants its damages as alleged.

Defendants denied that they were partners, that the broker alleged to have made the sale had 'any authority so to do, or that H. C. McCarter, manager of the Planters’ Cotton Oil Company, was authorized to bind them, either in making the alleged contract or in submitting the controversy to arbitration. Defendants also pleaded the prescription of two years in bar of plaintiff’s de•mand. They further averred that the transaction was a future gambling scheme, with no- intention on the- part of the purported seller-to deliver, or of the said McCarter to receive, said oil, but that the matter- should be settled upon the basis of the market at the time of performance, and that therefore they were not bound by either the alleged contract or the arbitration settlement.

Further, in the alternative, they averred that, if it should be found that said contract was enforceable, then the award of the arbitrators was without effect, for the reason that the rules of said association for arbitration attempted to deprive the courts of jurisdiction, and that the machinery and procedure therein provided prevented the parties from hawing a fair and- just hearing of their differences; that the said arbitration committee was illegally constituted, and composed of improper persons, who had an interest in the subject-matter before them, and was biased and prejudiced in favor of the plaintiff; that it considered evidence on behalf of plaintiff not permitted by the rules of the association, and refused to receive legal proof of defendants.

They also averred that the pretended claim of plaintiff that it had oil for delivery at Gretna, La., was untrue, and merely a fraudulent scheme for making it appear that defendants had refused to receive it under the terms of the alleged contract, in order to lay the basis of a claim for breach of contract; further, that the pretended sale of said oil through the Oklahoma Cotton Products Trading Company was fraudulent and illegal, because rule 32 of the Interstate Cotton Seed Crushers’ Association requires that such broker shall be disinterested; whereas, in truth and in fact, the said Oklahoma Cotton Products Trading Company1 was the agent of the plaintiff, owned and controlled by it or its officers, and that the pretended sale was one “by itself to itself” contrary to law and good morals; that there was never any agreement as to the issue to be arbitrated, but that McCarter, purporting to act for defendants, filed a statement setting up certain issues, whereas those claimed by plaintiff were entirely different, and omitted important questions relied upon by McCarter, all of which was in violation of the said rules, and served to divest the said committee of proper-jurisdiction for their determination; further, that the said committee refused to receive necessary and proper evidence bear-, ing upon defendants’ side of the case, consisting of the testimony of certain important witnesses, who would not voluntarily appear before the committee, but would furnish their testimony in documentary form, in compliance with the rules of said association, if permitted; that, notwithstanding its refusal to receive such proof, the chairman of said committee, of his own motion, went out and sought evidence on behalf of plaintiff, not in writing, as required by the rules, but oral and unsworn, which was used and 'considered in determining said cause, to the great injury and prejudice of defendants, all of which was arbitrary, partial, and unfair.

Then, by way of cross-action, defendants averred that, in event the defenses set up by them against plaintiff’s demands were not good, and the court should find that the award of the arbitrators was binding, the plaintiff was indebted unto defendants in the sum of $54,000, with interest from May 24, 1924, as for money had and received for its use and benefit, which was paid to plaintiff in consideration of the postponing of delivery of 20 tanks of oil from May to July delivery, and that, plaintiff having failed and refused to deliver said oil, according to agreement, notwithstanding repeated demand, defendants were entitled to recover the said sum, together with damages. Defendants further claimed in reeonvention or cross-action the sum of $32,940.70 as the amount of their loss resulting from the failure to [321]*321deliver 5 ears of oil, contracted for in January,, to be delivered in June, which oil was not up to contract requirements, and was sold by defendants for account of plaintiff, with a resultant loss of said sum.

Defendants prayed that plaintiff’s demands be rejected, and that they have judgment on their cross-claim for $100,000. The cause was tried before a jury, which denied the claims of plaintiff, and» found for defendants in reeonvention in the sum of $1,-483.63. The motion of plaintiff for new trial was overruled, upon condition that defendants should enter a remittitur of the judgment in their favor, which was voluntarily done. Both sides have prosecuted writs of error to 'this court.

The writ of error of the defendants must be dismissed, for the reason that by entering the remittitur without protest and in compliance with the suggestion of the lower court, rather than have the motion of plaintiff for new trial allowed, they thereby acquiesced in that ruling and precluded themselves from seeking a review at the hands of this court. It is not consistent to say to the lower court that “I will surrender the judgment in my favor, if you will not allow the plaintiff to submit its claims to another jury,” and then to attempt to have an appellate court hold that it is entitled to more than the first jury awarded. The voluntary entering of the remittitur was in effect an admission that nothing was due on the cross-action or reconventional demand.

Plaintiff relies upon nine assignments of error which we take up in their order as follows:

In its assignments Nos. 1 to 4, inclusive, it complains of the refusal of the court to allow it to prove by the depositions of Carl Eichenberg and others that other cotton seed oil mills were dealing generally in the products of each other during the season of 3920-1921 and that defendant during 3921-1922 was also dealing in the same products.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F.2d 319, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chickasha-cotton-oil-co-v-chapman-ca5-1925.