Cooper & Griffin, Inc. v. W. C. Cooke & Co., Inc.

115 S.E. 312, 122 S.C. 314, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 9, 1922
Docket11026
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 115 S.E. 312 (Cooper & Griffin, Inc. v. W. C. Cooke & Co., 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
Cooper & Griffin, Inc. v. W. C. Cooke & Co., Inc., 115 S.E. 312, 122 S.C. 314, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 256 (S.C. 1922).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Gary.

*316 This is an action for. an alleged breach of contract involving the sale of 60 bales of cotton. The complaint, omitting paragraphs I and II, which merely allege the corporate existence of the parties, is as follows:

“III. That.on May 12, 1919, the plaintiff entered into an agreement with the defendant, whereby the defendant agreed to sell to the plaintiff 60 bales of cotton of the grade hereinafter specified at the price of 15^3 cents landed, and that the defendant entered into a written memorandum, signed by it, of which the following is a copy: (Same as Exhibit I.)
“IV. That according to the Carolina Mill Rules it is provided that cotton sold for prompt shipment must be shipped and B/E dated fourteen (14) days from the date of sale. ,
“V. That actual delivery of said cotton was intended and contemplated by both parties to said contract.
“VI. That the defendant did not ship the said cotton within the time provided by the contract and said rules, but the plaintiff did not insist upon strict compliance with the stipulations as to shipment and that, the defendant having failed to make shipment, the plaintiff on May 30th wrote a letter to the defendant, calling upon defendant to comply with its contract; that to this letter no reply was made, and the plaintiff, on June 16th, again wrote to the defendant, calling upon it to comply with its contract, and advising the defendant that unless it delivered the. cotton the plaintiff within 10 days would buy other cotton for its account, charging the difference against the defendant; that the defendant failed and neglected to make shipment of said cotton, and that the plaintiff on June 26th purchased of A. C. Walker, a cotton merchant of the city of Greenville, 60 bales of cotton of the grade which the defendant had contracted to deliver, at the price of 23 cents per pound charging the difference, to wit, $2,016, against the defendant.
*317 “VII. That after the contract entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant, the price of cotton advanced, and the plaintiff has been damaged by the defendant’s breach of contract in the sum of $2,016.
“Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment against the defendant for the sum of $2,016 and the costs of this action.”

The defendant by its answer denied the allegations of the complaint, and set up two defenses, but it is only necessary to state the first, which is as follows:

“That it denies specifically each and every allegation contained in the complaint, and requires strict proof thereof.
“II. As a defense to said action, defendant alleges: (1) That on or about the 12th day of May, A. D. 1919, the plaintiff contracted to purchase 60 bales of cotton, grade ‘blue, equal types’ 20 bales of which were in warehouse at Laurel Hill, in the State of North Carolina, and 40 bales of which were stored at Gibson, in the State of North Carolina; (2) that on or about the 12th day of May, A. D. 1919, defendants agreed to sell said cotton to the plaintiffs, notifying them where the same was stored, plaintiffs agreeing to send a man immediately to Laurel Hill and Gibson, in the State of North Carolina, and take up the cotton without further effort or concern of the defendants, but said plaintiffs failed and refused to take up said cotton as they had agreed, and by reason thereof the said cotton was sold to other parties, and, if any damage; was suffered by ■the plaintiffs, as set forth in the complaint, it was through their own negligence and willful failure and- refusal to take up the cotton as they had agreed and not through any fault of the defendants.”

His Honor, the presiding Judge, thus charged the jury:

“I agree with counsel in this much of what they have said, that there is nothing here for you to have to pass on. The whole thing is practically a question of law. I do not conceive that there are really any facts in dispute which are ■legally raised by the issues by the complaint, on the one *318 hand, and the answer on the other. The complaint sets out in terms and in full, an alleged contract which they understood to prove, and which was not disputed. Therefore I can say to you that that was the contract proved before you. Now the law makes the Judge the exclusive Judge of the construction of a contract when it is in writing, or any document that is in writing is exclusively for the Judge. As I say, the plaintiff sets up and has offered testimony to-prove what was the contract between the parties, and he sets that contract out in his complaint. Now the defendant comes in and denies that contract. Well, he would have a perfect right to do that, but in his testimony, he admits it. He admits that he signed it. Therefore that goes out of the case. Then he undertakes to set up what is practically a different verbal contract, varying to some extent the contract which is set out in the complaint, and which the defendant admits that he signed, varying it in certain particulars. Well, the law is just this: That where parties enter into an agreement in writing, and then finally put that agreement' in writing, that writing comprehends the whole agreement between the parties-, and no testimony is admissible to change, vary or modify that contract. The law says that, when parties meet together and contract, or whether they meet or not, and negotiate about a contract, and then finally get together and put it in writing, that writing is the whole thing, and that writing cannot be disturbed unless the party attacking it alleges that it was done by mistake or by fraud, or unless he alleges- that, even though that contract was made, there was a subsequent contract that changed it. Well, there are no allegations to that extent in this answer at all, absolutely none. Consequently we can go merely by the contract that is set up in writing and that has been proved, and that contract which it is my duty to construe provides, in terms, that W. C. Cooke & Co. agreed to sell, and did sell in this contract, which they confirm, to the agent of the plaintiffs, Cooper & Griffin, Inc., 60 bales *319 of cotton, that they did that on the 12th day of May, and that that cotton was to be blues equal types. They have explained to you, as they had a right to do under that feature of the contract, what is meant by blues equal types; that the price was to be 15}4 cents per pound, and that the cotton was to be landed. I allowed testimony to show what ‘landed’ meant, and that meant, the witnesses testified without dispute — no conflict of testimony there — that that meant that the cotton was to be practically, as it were, delivered; in other words, the seller was to pay the freight, provided it was shipped within a reasonable distance where freights would not be excessive. The rules further provided that the shipment was to be prompt, and that the shipment waste be made with draft and bill of lading attached, and that the shipment was to be made under the Carolina Mill Rules of 1915.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 S.E. 312, 122 S.C. 314, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-griffin-inc-v-w-c-cooke-co-inc-sc-1922.