Dallas Waste Mills v. Early-Foster Co.

218 S.W. 515, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1348
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1919
DocketNo. 6106.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 515 (Dallas Waste Mills v. Early-Foster Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dallas Waste Mills v. Early-Foster Co., 218 S.W. 515, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1348 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

KEY, C. J.

Early-Foster Company, a pri- ■ vate corporation, brought this suit against Dallas Waste Mills, another private corporation, and recovered a judgment for $1,181.68, for an alleged breach of a contract; and the defendant has appealed.

The contract was in writing, and read as follows:

“Ft. Worth, Texas, Feb. 29, 1916.
“Contract No. 1148.
“Early-Foster Co., Waco, Texas, Buyers. “Dallas Waste Mills, Dallas, Texas, Sellers.
“Gentlemen: Referring to ‘phone conversations and exchange of telegrams to-day between Mr. Foster of the Early-Foster Co., Waco, Texas, and Mr. Glarner of the Dallas Waste Mills, Dallas, Texas, and ourselves:
“We beg to confirm having this day sold to Early-Foster Co., Waco, Texas, for account of the Dallas Waste Mills, millrun Linters made from sound cotton seed and free from damage, *516 at the price of five dollars eighty-two and one-half cents ($5.82½.) per hundred pounds f. o. b. cars Texas Common Point Mills.
“Shipment: Immediate.
“Terms: Demand draft with B/L attached. “Routing: Buyers’ option.
“This contract is made in triplicate, one copy being sent to each buyer and seller and the original retained in our office on file, which has been duly stamped.
“This sale is made subject to the Rules of the Texas Cotton Seed Crushers’ Ass’n. “Commission: Twenty-five cents (25⅜⅞) per bale to be paid by the seller, payable at Port Worth, Texas.
“Yours truly, Kyser-Ruble Brokerage Co., “Per [Signed] C. R. Ruble. “CRR/LH (As Brokers Only).”

The plaintiff, whose place of business was in Waco, McLennan county, Tex., accepted the terms of the contract at that place, as they had previously done by telephone. A rule of the Texas Cotton Seed Crushers’ Association prescribes that all trades in cottonseed products may be for either immediate, prompt, or specified dates of shipment, and that the word “immediate,” as therein used, means within five working days. Another rule of that association reads as follows:

“Should a buyer fail to give shipping instructions for linters or to receive them when shipped in accordance with the terms of the • contract, the seller may after 48 hours’ notice to the buyer cancel the contract or sell the linters in dispute through a recognized broker for the buyer’s account, and any loss sustained will be a valid claim against the buyer. Conversely, a buyer may protect himself in case of nondelivery of linters bought.”

W. M. Foster, who was president and general manager of Early-Fostér Company, testified, among other things:

“The matter in controversy here is covered by a written contract dated February 29, 1916, covered a purchase by Early-Foster Company of 250 bales of linters from the Dallas Waste Mills. I handled this transaction for Early-Foster Company. As to what is meant in the contract by ‘demand draft with B/L attached,’ I will say there was to be a draft drawn on demand payable upon presentation, not at sight, but a demand draft with bill of lading attached sent to Waco, and we were to pay it on presentation. It was a cash item. The draft was to be paid in Waco, in McLennan county. As tó what is a ‘bill of lading,’ will say we had a shipment of 250 bales of linters. They secured a bill of lading from the railroad company for 250 bales of linters, attached the same to the draft and forwarded same to Waco to be paid. They would obtain that bill of lading from the railroad company whenever they had the linters loaded in the cars, and the agent then signed it. The Dallas Waste Mills would draw the draft. By ‘draft’ I mean an ordinary customers’ draft drawn through the banks. The draft would reach Waco through the banks in the ordinary course of bank collection. The contract has this language in it: ‘This sale is made subject to the rules of the Texas Cotton Seed Crushers’ Association.’ The Texas Cotton Seed Crushers’ Association is an association' gotten up by the millmen, brokers, and dealers, where we all get together and formulate and make rules to trade under. It existed in the state of Texas, and is at present in existence with headquarters at Dallas. They had theretofore promulgated certain rules which were the rules we traded under and the rules referred to in this contract. There is another provision in the contract which reads: ‘We ‘beg to con Son having this day sold to Early-Foster Co. for account Dallas Waste Mills, Dallas, Texas, 250 bales clean millrun linters made from sound seed and free from damage, at the price of $5.82½ per hundred pounds f. o.-b. cars Texas Common Point Mills.’ As to what is meant by the word ‘mills,’ I will say it is the mill that produces or manufactures linters. The letters ‘f. o. b.’ mean free on board railroad cars. ‘Texas Common Point Mills’ is a term that is applied — meaning the same freight rate would apply to Chicago or points that are shipped to from Texas points where the same rate applies. As to what is meant by a common point on railroads, I will say that is a point where the rate is the same as a number of points or a certain territory — in groups you might ‘call it. Texas common point rates would protect within the radius of Waco north, Temple north to say 150 miles. That would be the same rate of freight to New Orleans or Memphis or to Chicago or to Kansas City. I mean the same rate of freight would apply from any of those points, say. to New Orleans, Chicago, Memphis, etc. Those calculations are commonly known in the railroad world and the business world. Waco in McLennan county at that time was such a common point. When I use the word ‘mill,’ that means a mill located at one of these common points. We could not force them to deliver f. o. b. a common point where there was no mill. That means a mill located at one of these Texas common points on the railroad. I did not ever actually receive from the Dallas Waste Mills any of the cotton linters under this contract. I did rely on the Dallas Waste Mills to deliver said linters within the five days provided in the contract and under the rules. We did go into the market and buy 250 bales of cotton linters on March 6, 1918. We bought the 250 bales from the Waco Cotton Linters Company and paid therefor 6¾ cents per pound f. o. b. Texas common mill point. About 27,000 pounds is what we received. You say I' have it 27,755; I think that is correct. We had a customer to whom we had sold the linters and expected to deliver them these linters; that is what we bought them for. We bought these linters from the Waco Cotton Linters Company for the purpose of filling our contract.”

’ It was also shown by Mr. Foster’s testimony that on March 3, 1916, the defendant tendered to plaintiff delivery of 250 bales of linters, at Galveston, Tex., and drew a draft on the plaintiff for the contract price, not with bill of lading attached, but with warehouse receipts attached. Mr. Foster testified that there was no cotton seed mill at Galveston, and that it was not a common point or shipping place within the terms of the contract. So, the *517

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218 S.W. 515, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-waste-mills-v-early-foster-co-texapp-1919.