Deadwyler & Co. v. Karow & Forrer

62 S.E. 172, 131 Ga. 227, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 11, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 172 (Deadwyler & Co. v. Karow & Forrer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deadwyler & Co. v. Karow & Forrer, 62 S.E. 172, 131 Ga. 227, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 51 (Ga. 1908).

Opinion

Holden, J.

The plaintiffs brought suit against the defendants for the contract price of 100 bales of cotton alleged to have been sold by them to the defendants. 58 bales of the cotton were consumed by fire before there was any actual delivery. After some correspondence between the parties, the remaining 42 bales were taken by the defendants, and a payment for the purpose of settling [228]*228the amount due for them was made, but which did not fully cover the principal and interest due; and the court, to whom the matter was submitted without the intervention of a jury, found in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendants for this balance, and found in favor of the defendants on the main issues in the case, the effect of which was to find that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover the price of the cotton destroyed by fire. To this judgment the plaintiffs excepted. The following facts appear from the testimony: The plaintiffs were cotton factors and warehousemen in Atheñs, and the .defendants were cotton dealers in Savannah, with a buyer located in Athens. There was evidence by the plaintiffs to show that there was in the Athens market, among cotton factors and warehousemen and buyers from them, the following custom: The factors would extract from each bale of cotton in their possession for sale a sample, in which was wrapped a tag on which was written the number and marks of the bale from which it was drawn, and to the bale was attached a duplicate tag having on it the same number and marks. This sample, with its enclosed tag, was taken to the sample-room and there kept for exhibition to and examination by prospective buyers. The bale in the warehouse^ represented by the sample could be positively identified by the duplicate tag attached thereto. When a buyer wished to purchase cotton, he would examine these samples and agree with the cotton factors on the price to be paid for each bale represented by the respective samples. It was also the custom of the market that when this agreement was made, and the samples, with the tags therein, delivered to the buyer, or left with the cotton factor to be sent for by the buyer, and the sale listed on the books of the cotton factor, such bales then became the property of the buyer and were held by the warehousemen thenceforth at his risk. It was a part of the custom that each bale, was to be reweighed by a weigher representing the buyer, in the presence of the warehouse weigher, and the cotton settled for by the buyer at these reweights on the basis of the price per pound agreed upon when the samples were examined and the contract made. The buyer could waive the reweighing and take the cotton at the weights when first put into the warehouse, but the custom was to reweigh each bale bought. If any bale bought was “falsely packed,” or damaged, or was “mixed packed,” or failed to come up to the sample, the [229]*229buyer had the right to reject it. When the defects were not excessive, the seller would make good the defects by compromise or settlement of some kind. ' When the cotton was reweighed a bill therefor was made out according to such reweights and payment for the cotton made. Sometimes the buyer, at the request of the seller, would make a payment before the reweighing. The difference would then be paid when the cotton was reweighed. In this particular ease, the buyer of the defendants located in Athens contracted to buy from the plaintiffs, at a price of 11 3/16 cents per pound on a basis of Athens middling grade, 100 bales of cotton from samples,“on a Saturday afternoon. The samples, with the enclosed tags, were kept by the plaintiffs and placed in a basket in their office. On the books of the plaintiff these 100 bales were listed as having been sold to the defendants, and a duplicate list of the marks, numbers, and grades of the bales was made out, one for the scalesman and one for the warehouseman. The buyer, Mr. Butt, took the list and the number of each grade and went back to his office. This transaction occurred in the afternoon, after banking and business hours. Early the following morning all of the cotton was consumed by fire except the 42 bales above referred to. The samples were left in the office of the plaintiffs, subject to the order of the buyer. Prior to the fire the defendants’ agent did not reweigh the cotton. Nothing was paid before the fire on the cotton bought. There was no express agreement about reweighing, or when the cotton was to be reweighed or delivered to the buyer, nor was there any express agreement about the time of payment. There was no testimony as to how long the 100 bales had been in the warehouse after being first weighed, nor was there any testimony as to whether or not the bales would come up to sample.

1. The plaintiffs in this case contend that they are entitled to recover the price of the 58 bales of cotton sold and consumed by fire. The 42 bales not destroyed were delivered to the defendants and paid for by them, except a small balance due as interest. Tinder the letters that passed between the parties, and the other facts in the case, the acceptance of these 42 bales and the payment therefor would not have the effect of making the defendants liable for the cotton burned. One of the contentions of the plaintiffs is that they are entitled to recover the price of the 58 bales burned, under the Civil Code, §3546,.which is as follows: “Cot[230]*230ton, corn, rice, crude turpentine, spirits turpentine, rbsin, pitch, tar, and other products sold by planters and commission merchants on cash sale, shall not be considered as the property of the buyer until fully paid for, although it may have been delivered to the buyer: Provided, that in cases where the whole or any part of the property has been delivered to the buyer, the right of the seller to collect the purchase-money shall not be affected by its subsequent loss or destruction.” The plaintiffs contend, that, outside of any custom, the proved facts immediately connected with this sale show a constructive delivery of the cotton, and that under the provisions contained in the latter part of the section just quoted they are entitled to recover the purchase-price of the cotton which was burned. They further contend that, even if the facts do not show there was a delivery, there was by custom a constructive delivery of the property to the buyer. It .appears that at the time of the transaction between the parties the only thing expressly agreed upon was the price per pound, on a basis of middling grade, to be paid by the buyer for the bales of cotton represented by the samples and identified by the tags. Nothing whatever was said between the parties as to the weight of any bales. Under the custom testified to, the amount to be paid by the buyer for each bale was the price per pound agreed on, according to the weights when reweighed by the buyer; and it was customary for the buyer to have the cotton reweighed by his scalesman. Moreover, it was a part of the custom that when the cotton was reweighed and actually delivered, the buyer had the right to reject any bales “falsely packed,” or “mixed packed,” or damaged, or that did not come up to sample, and have the matter adjusted. If this was a proved and valid custom entering into the contract as a part thereof, the amount to be paid for each bale of cotton could not, according to the contract, be determined until there was a reweighing and acceptance by the buyer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 172, 131 Ga. 227, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deadwyler-co-v-karow-forrer-ga-1908.