Cottondale State Bank v. Burroughs Adding Machine Co.

61 Fla. 143
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 Fla. 143 (Cottondale State Bank v. Burroughs Adding Machine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottondale State Bank v. Burroughs Adding Machine Co., 61 Fla. 143 (Fla. 1911).

Opinion

Hockbr, J.

The Burroughs Adding Machine Company brought an action at law against the Cottondale State Bank in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, in which the declaration is as follows:

“Burroughs Adding Machine Co., a Corporation,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Cottondale State Bank, a Corporation,
Defendant.

The plaintiff in the above stated case sues the defendant and alleges, that on the 26th day of March, 1907, the defendant by written order to the plaintiff had ordered and purchased from plaintiff one Burroughs Adding & Listing Machine, style No. 9, for which defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff $375.00 net cash, .or send plaintiff on arrival of said machine a certificate of deposit for $375.00, which amount was not to be withdrawn before January 1st, 1908, which said written order and contract is in the words and figures as follows, to-wit:

[145]*145City Cottondale,
State Florida.
Date March 26.
Burroughs Adding Machine Co., Detroit, Michigan.
Please ship to us as soon as possible, by express prepaid, one Burroughs Adding and Listing Machine, Style No. 9, for which we agree to pay you 375.00 net cash. Or send you on arrival certificate of deposit for that amount not to be withdrawn before Jan. 1st, 1908.
You to guarantee said machine for one year from date of delivery.
Cottondale State Bank,.
Per W. H. Milton, Ohmn.
Organization Committee.
Arthur J. Doyle, Salesman.

Plaintiff now alleges that in compliance with said written order, it shipped to the defendant by express prepaid, the said Burroughs Adding & Listing Machine, style No. 9, the price of which was $375.00, and plaintiff alleges that the defendant did not pay the plaintiff any cash for said machine, nor did it send the plaintiff any certificate of deposit as provided for in said order and contract. And plaintiff alleges that said sum of $375.00 as the purchase price of said machine is now long over due, and plaintiff claims interest thereon from the first day of Jan. 1908, whereof plaintiff sues and claims $500.00 damages.

The original order and contract sued upon is hereto attached and made a part of this declaration.

C. L. Wilson,
Atty. for Plaintiff.
18637- 3661
[146]*146City Cottondale,
State, Fla.,
Date March 26th. Burroughs Adding Machine Co.
Detroit, Michigan.
Please ship to us as soon as possible, by express prepaid, one Burroughs Adding and Listing Machine, Style No. 9, for which we agree to pay you 375.00 net cash. Or send you on arrival certificate of deposit for the amount not to be withdrawn before Jan. 1st, 1908.
You to guarantee said machine for one year from date of delivery.
Cottondale State Bank, per W. H.' Milton, Chmn. Organization Committee.
Arthur J. Doyle,
Salesman.”

The defendant filed four pleas:

1st. Never indebted.

2nd. That the alleged order which is attached to said declaration and made a part, thereof, is not the order of this defendant.

3rd. That W. H. Milton, the person purporting to sign the order for the machine, the purchase price of which is sued for in plaintiff’s declaration, was not authorized by this defendant to purchase said machine, and that the acts of the said W. H. Milton, in signing said order were not the acts of this corporation, or done by its authority.

4th. For further plea to plaintiff’s declaration, this defendant says, that at the time of the ordering of said machine it was understood between the plaintiff and the defendant that said machine was to be shipped on trial to this defendant, and if defendant was pleased therewith and concluded to take said machine, then, in such event, [147]*147this defendant would pay therefor, or make the deposit set forth and described in the order attached to plaintiff’s declaration; but, if, after trial of the said machine this defendant was not satisfied therewith, then it was to return the said machine and said order was to be cancelled. Defendant avers that it received the machine upon trial as aforesaid, and after making a trial thereof, was not satisfied therewith, and notified the said plaintiff, that it was not satisfied with said machine and held it subject to the order of the plaintiff; and under and by virtue of the agreement made between the plaintiff and the defendant with reference thereto, this defendant is not indebted to the plaintiff for any sum or sums of money whatsoever.

The first plea was stricken on motion of plaintiff. Plaintiff demurred to the 2nd, 3rd and 4th pleas, because each of them was indefinite, uncertain and insufficient and set up no defense to plaintiff’s cause of action. The fourth plea was also demurred to for the reason that it undertakes to set up a contemporaneous verbal agreement for the purpose of contradicting and varying the terms of the written order and contract sued on.

The court sustained the demurrer to the 3rd and 4th pleas, and overruled the demurrer to the 2nd plea. After-wards the defendant filed the following additional plea: That prior to the institution of this suit, the machine to recover the value of which this suit is brought was delivered to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff accepted the same in full settlement of plaintiff’s claims herein. The plaintiff then joined issue on the 2nd and additional pleas, and the case was tried on the issues made by them.

The first and second assignments of error are abandoned. The third and fourth assignments complain of rulings of the court permitting W. H. Milton to testify that he signed the order attached to the declaration as chairman of the organization committee, and the intro[148]*148duction in evidence of said order, without any proof from the minutes of the proceedings of the directors or officials of the bank or otherwise, of the creation of any such committee, or of the powers conferred upon it. In view of the issue made by the second plea, it seems to us that the assignments are well taken.

After the foregoing evidence had been admitted on cross-examination Mr. Milton testified on the first meeting night of the bank all those who helped organize the bank were there; that he and Mr. Mathis were appointed as a committee to complete the organization and buy the stationery, furniture and fixtures. His recollection is that he kept a memorandum of the minutes of the meeting; that he wrote up a copy of the minutes. He does not think that by the minutes it was specifically named that he and Mathis were to buy an adding machine. They were to buy vault doors for the vault, stationery, &c.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Fla. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottondale-state-bank-v-burroughs-adding-machine-co-fla-1911.