Connersville Co-operative Creamery Ass'n. v. Baltz

180 Ill. App. 376, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 788
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 21, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,295
StatusPublished

This text of 180 Ill. App. 376 (Connersville Co-operative Creamery Ass'n. v. Baltz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connersville Co-operative Creamery Ass'n. v. Baltz, 180 Ill. App. 376, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 788 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was tried without a jury and a judgment was rendered against the plaintiffs in error, Charles Baltz and Otto Diederichs, for an alleged balance of $250.12, due defendant in error for creamery butter.

The butter in question was shipped by defendant in error from its creamery at Downing, Wisconsin, to plaintiffs in error at Chicago in response to a circular letter received from plaintiffs in error dated July 20, 1910, reading as follows:

“We will pay you 28c and a premium for extra quality creamery butter. We are paying now 1c a pound premium, charging you no freight, drayage or commission, Chicago delivery. * * * Mark the tubs B. & B., write the full name in the railroad receipt and mail it to .us and we will remit you an advance check of $10 a tub after receiving same and the balance due you, afterward. Above proposition means 29c to you. Ship us a week’s churning right away, and tell us how many tubs we can have each week during the season to the first of October.”

Defendant in error, July 26, 1910, shipped plaintiffs in error thirteen tubs of butter, 827 lbs. net at Creamery, and wrote them as follows:

“We ship you to-day a small lot of butter in response to your offer of the 20th. We make about 40 tubs per week at present. * * * Whether we can deal with you depends mainly on three points, viz: price, weights and promptness in mailing returns. Please send remittance for this shipment and enclose inspector’s score. ’ ’

Plaintiffs in error, on-July 28, 1910, again wrote as follows:

“Enclosed find check for $130, $10.00 a tub advance money. * * * We would like to have you make us a shipment of a whole week’s churning. We can judge better than by part of the week. We see by your bill of lading that Tuesday is your shipping day. * * * We will take your butter each week on the Elgin basis and a premium for quality up to Oct. 1st. ’ ’

Five days after the butter was inspected, plaintiffs in error wrote their letter of Aug. 3,1910, to defendant in error:

“The quality of the-13 tubs of butter shipped July 26th would be satisfactory, but the flavor is not what it should be, so that the butter will not do for our contracts, would lose us money if we took it in at full price for our regular trade. * * * Such butter is not satisfactory and we can not pay you Elgin and a premium for it, under any circumstances if this lot should be taken by itself on its own merits. We would be willing to take the butter, pay the price and stand a loss on it by using or holding in storage and run the chance of getting out whole later as may seem best to us. However, if you agree to sell us and ship regularly every week, all of your butter output for the balance of the season ending October 1, 1910, we agree to buy your entire output during that time and pay you Elgin and a premium for quality for it, delivery to be made at Chicago also pay our own freight from Downing, deduct no commission or drayage with the understanding that each further shipment shows a normal regular increase in quantity and such gradual improvement in quality, as to be of a grade that we can put out to our trade at top price as best extras butter for the season when made. Otherwise, we can only pay you what the butter is worth to us. As to the weights, it is understood that we will remit at the net weight called for by your invoice on each shipment, whether the butter holds out to that weight or not, provided that you are to make good the billed weights or allow for any shortage that the butter may show before the expiration of this arrangement. * * * If this is not satisfactory, return the advance we sent you by Saturday, make provision for paying the charges and let us know at once on receipt of this letter by telegraph what to do with the butter.”

On August 2, 1910, defendant in error shipped thirty-six tubs of butter, 2,264 lbs. at creamery, and on August 4th wired plaintiffs in error:

“If butter shipped August second grades below extras don’t sell, but store and write for instructions.” They also wrote plaintiffs in error on August 5th: “We have just had an expert at our creamery who says our butter should .grade extra. We cannot contract our output to a commission house depending on their score.”

On the same day, August 5th, plaintiffs in error remitted the balance of $102 for the thirteen tubs, making in all a little more than the Elgin price, 28c, at creamery weights, paid for the first shipment, writing to defendants in error as follows:

“In reference to the 36 tubs of butter how much do you think would be right. It is our effort to please our shippers and get their regular shipments each week, of quality butter. We will report on the 36 tubs on arrival.”

The evidence further discloses that no further shipments of butter were made by defendant in error and that notwithstanding the said two shipments were inspected July 29th and August 5th, respectively, and certified as scoring 88 and 89 points, plaintiffs in error retained and used the butter, without reporting the scores to defendant in error until August 18, 1910. A number of other letters were written by plaintiffs in error urging defendant in error to ship its butter to them, in which the offers were repeated to pay the Elgin price and a premium for the butter already shipped and for its entire output at creamery weight, provided the butter continued to improve and finally score as extra creamery butter. Failing to induce further shipments plaintiffs in error on August 24, 1910, repudiated its former settlement for. the thirteen tubs of butter, and after deducting prior payments remitted the balance as full payment for said shipments, at Chicago weights and Chicago prices according to the following showing:

July 29, 13 tubs, 791 lbs., @ 24c____$189.84
Aug. 5, 36 tubs, 2179 lbs., @ 25c... .$544.75

The evidence also discloses that according to the Elgin plan of inspection perfect butter scores 100 on a basis of 45 points on flavor, 25 on body, 15 on color, 10 on salt and 5 on package; and that the various other grades of butter are extras, scoring 93 or better; extra firsts, scoring 90 to 92; firsts scoring 87 to 89, and seconds 86 and lower; and that butter deteriorates in quality while being shipped and stored and loses in weight, and particularly in hot weather.

The court allowed defendant in error the Elgin price, 28c per lb., for the two shipments of butter, and Chicago weights. Plaintiffs in error contend that as the butter failed to grade as extra butter that defendant in error was only entitled to the Chicago prices as above set forth, or a judgment for $142.59. We think the court properly held that the second shipment should be paid for at the Elgin price and according to Chicago weights.

Plaintiffs in error were asked to hold that shipment and store it for further orders unless it scored as extra. They were afterwards informed by defendant in error that it would expect for that shipment the full contract or Elgin price of 28c.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 Ill. App. 376, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connersville-co-operative-creamery-assn-v-baltz-illappct-1913.