Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. Creek Cotton Oil Co.

1923 OK 752, 221 P. 499, 96 Okla. 189, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 9, 1923
Docket11272
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1923 OK 752 (Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. Creek Cotton Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. Creek Cotton Oil Co., 1923 OK 752, 221 P. 499, 96 Okla. 189, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 259 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

This action was commenced by the Creek Cotton Oil Company to recover for loss on an insurance policy issued by the deféndant company on the following property to wit: ‘Wotton baled, and unbaled, ginned and unginned, seed cotton and cotton seed.” Fire damáged .a .certain amount of cotton, including 5ffi bales of what is commonly called “linters." The only controversy is whether the fifty-one bales of cotton commonly called “lint-ers”' comes within the property described in the policy. There is practically no difference in the evidence regarding what “lint-ers'’ are. In ginning cotton, the seed cotton passes through the gin, and the long lint is separated from the seed and baled. The seed is carried on through to the seed house. The seed when taken to the oil mill goes through another gin especially constructed to remove the short lint, and the short lint is removed, and baled and called “linters.” The only difference between what is known as an ordinary bale of cotton and a bale of linters cotton Js the bale of cotton is the long lint separated from the seed by the first ginning, while the linters is the short lint taken from the seed through the second process of ginning. Both are baled and about the same size ánd weight.

Mr. Epps for the oil company testified in substance that there were nine different recognized grades of cotton. Contracts for the sale of cotton are controlled by the two large exchanges, and in selling cotton on the market the term “bale of cotton” refers to cotton of a certain grade. The lower grades of cotton are sold under special contract. In' addition to “linters” cotton there is cotton that does not open and it is opened by machinery; that kind and character is a lower grade and called “grab-hots.” The difference between what is ierm'ed an ordinary bale of cotton and a bale of “linters” cotton is the length of the staple. The ordinary cotton contains the *190 longer staple or lint, and the linters the short lint. There is a groat deal of difference in the value. In the instant case the long lint cotton when baled was valued at from 20 to 25 cents per pound, while the linters was less than five cents per 'pound. There were only two witnesses who testified in the ease regarding what “liinters” were, and there is very little difference between their testimony. Both of them testified that a “bale of cotton” when sold referred to lint cotton produced from first ginning and the bale of linters .is that portion of the lint taken off the seed at the oil mill. The court found from the evidence that linters was cotton within the meaning of the terms of the policy.

The plaintiff in error, however, relies upon certain cases to support its contention that linters is not cotton within the term “cotton baled or unbaled, ginned or un-ginned, seed cotton or cotton seed.” The first case relied upon is the case of C., R. I. & P. Ry. v. Cleveland, 61 Okla. 64, 160 Pac. 328. In that case the railroad company had two different tariffs, one for cotton and a different one for linters, and was advised that the cotton shipped was “grab-bots.” They issued a bill of lading describing the same as, 61 bales of cotton. It was contended the bill of lading incorrectly described the freight, and violated the statute, which required the bill of lading to properly identify the freight. The evidence disclosed in thaf case there was a general custom prevailing with shippers of cotton after securing a bill of lading to draw a draft with the bill of lading attached, and the. draft would be paid' before the cotton arrived. In that case the court stated that the term “bale of cotton,” as used in the commercial and business world, means a standard package of merchantable lint cotton separated from the seed, weighing approximately 500 pounds, and class-able under one of the recognized market grades. This is in exact accord with the testimony of Mr. Epps. The policy in the instant case does not refer to “bales of cotton,” but refers to “cotton baled or un-baled.” Nor does the policy attempt to limit the same to any particular grade. There might be some merit in plaintiff in error’s contention, if it were shown there was a custom prevailing among the insui-anee companies when using the term “cotton baled or unbaled,” that it referred to only that grade of cotton which is sold as baled cotton in the commercial and business world or on the cotton exchange, and did not refer to the inferior grades sold under special contract.

The case of Board of Mississippi Levee Com’rs v. Refuge Cotton Oil Co. (Miss.) 44 South. 828, is also cited and relied upon. In that ease the court stated that “grab-bots” and “linters” cotton are both very low and inferior grades of cotton and command nothing like the price in the market of ordinary lint cotton ginned in the ordinary gin. The court in that case held that the Legislature in levying a tax to be placed upon “cotton” did not include “grab-bots” or “linters.” This was apparent from the fact that by so construing it, it would be placing the same tax upon this inferior grade of cotton as it would upon the merchantable cotton or cotton sold upon the exchange. The court, however, did say it was cotton.

The case of Houssels v. Coe & Hampton (Tex. Civ. App.) 159 S. W. 864, is also cited, but there is nothing in that case which we think has any application to the facts in the ease at bar.

The case of Soudan Planting Company v. Stevenson (Ark.) 102 S. W. 1114, is also cited. That ease we think has no application to the ease at bar, but simply construes a contract for the sale of land, where the party agreed to accept cotton in place of cash payments. The court there, in construing the contract, held the contract referred to cotton grown on the land sold. There was evidence that the cotton grown on that land was of greater value than the average cotton placed on the market.

We should give the policy a fair and reasonable construction. A person owns a cotton mill wherein he has stored cotton of different grades and insures the same. The company insures him against loss and defines his products as “cotton baled and unbaled, ginned and unginned, seed cotton and cotton seed.” (Can it be said that an inferior gjrade o'f cotton haled does, not come within the meaning of the term “cotton baled and unbaled"? We think hot. The case was tried' to the court without a jury, and the court found as a matter of fact under the evidence that the bales of cotton commonly called linters came within the meaning of the term “cotton baled and unbaled.” We think that finding is supported by the evidence and a fair and reasonable construction of the contract. There might be some weight to plaintiff in error’s contention if they were liable for so much a bale, irrespective of the value of the grade or value of the cotton, but when the cotton is an inferior grade of cotton, they are only liable for the value *191 of that inferior grade. There is no evidence that in writing an insurance policy there is any altempt to make any classification of the grade of cotton. The company is not prejudiced in any way because the cotton is of an inferior grade. The liability of the company is the value of the grade of cotton destroyed. To hold that ‘•linters” was not within the terms of the policy would be to hold that it was not cotton. This would be contrary to the evidence in the case and every adjudicated ease cited.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 752, 221 P. 499, 96 Okla. 189, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-union-assurance-co-v-creek-cotton-oil-co-okla-1923.