Drager v. Carlson Hybrid Corn Co.

56 N.W.2d 18, 244 Iowa 78
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1952
Docket48128
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 56 N.W.2d 18 (Drager v. Carlson Hybrid Corn Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drager v. Carlson Hybrid Corn Co., 56 N.W.2d 18, 244 Iowa 78 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

Gareield, J.

Plaintiff Drager owns and supervises the operation of two adjoining quarter-section farms. Plaintiff Rabe occupies one farm, plaintiff Thomsen the other. They are Drag-er’s sons-in-law. Defendant-corporation grows, buys and sells hybrid seed corn. This is a law action to recover the agreed price of $3.50 per bushel-for 3290 bushels of seed corn grown by plaintiffs and sold to defendant during 1948. The answer and counterclaim alleges a breach of implied warranty in the sale. At the close of the evidence the trial court directed a .verdict for plaintiffs on both defendant’s counterclaim and the full amount of plaintiffs’ claim. From judgment thereon defendant has appealed.

Plaintiffs’ petition alleges that during March or April 1948 they made an oral agreement with defendant whereby plaintiffs agreed to sell and defendant agreed to buy all seed corn raised by plaintiffs in 1948 at the agreed price of $3.50 per bushel, defendant was to furnish the seed and truck the corn from the farms to its plant; plaintiffs grew the corn, delivered to defendant 3290 bushels during the fall and winter of 1948-49 and duly performed all conditions of the contract on their part; defendant has refused to pay for the corn except that $2000 was paid. Judgment is asked for $9515 with interest from August 1, 1949.

Defendant’s answer and counterclaim denies the allegations of the petition. Division II alleges the making of the oral agreement substantially as alleged by plaintiffs; that at the time of the agreement plaintiffs knew defendant was agreeing to buy the corn produced by them for the purpose of selling it at retail for hybrid seed, and defendant, in entering into the agreement, was relying upon plaintiffs’ skill, judgment and experience .as growers of hybrid seed corn; at the end of the 1948 season plain *81 tiffs delivered to defendant 3290 bushels of corn for seed purposes ; in selling the corn to defendant with the knowledge and under the circumstances aforesaid plaintiffs impliedly warranted it to be reasonably suitable for retail sale as seed; that 1410 bushels of the corn was unsuitable for resale as hybrid seed corn and its only value was for sale as feed; if the corn had been suitable for seed it would have been worth $10 per bushel, but being unsuitable for seed it was not worth more than $1.10 per bushel and consequently defendant was damaged $12,549 for which judgment was asked. Plaintiffs’ reply denies the allegations of Division II of the answer and counterclaim.

. At the conclusion of trial to a jury the court directed a verdict against defendant not only on Division II of its answer and counterclaim but for the full amount of plaintiffs’ claim. From judgment thereon defendant has appealed. The court’s ruling on Division II indicates it was .based on failure of proof as to (1) the measure of damages and (2) reliance by defendant on the seller’s skill or judgment. Plaintiffs’ motion for directed verdict on their claim, which defendant contends was made upon a suggestion by the court, merely asserts as a ground “that the evidence * * * is so clear and unequivocal a jury could find in no other fashion.”

Of course it is our duty under innumerable decisions to consider the evidence in the light most favorable to defendant. The three plaintiffs testified for themselves. Elmer Carlson, controlling owner of defendant-corporation, and four of its employees were witnesses for defendant.

The oral agreement in question was made between plaintiff Drager for himself and coplaintiffs and Elmer Carlson for defendant. Drager had grown hybrid seed corn for himself and for sale to different companies for about nine years before 1948. The first transaction between Drager and Carlson was initiated by Drager in the spring of 1946 when Carlson purchased 600 or 700 bushels of Drager’s 1945 hybrid seed corn at $3 per bushel. In April 1946 Drager and Carlson entered into a written contract under which Drager agreed to grow hybrid seed corn for sale to Carlson in 1946 at $3 per bushel at Drager’s farm, Carlson to furnish the seed. The contract provided: “First party *82 [Carlson] reserves tbe right to reject any and all of the crop for seed in event it does not for any reason in the judgment of first party qualify for seed corn. * * * rejected corn will be weighed and delivered back to the grower.”

Drager and defendant performed the 1946 contract. In March 1947 Drager moved off the farm he had been occupying and Babe moved on it. In 1947 Drager and his coplaintiffs grew seed corn for sale to defendant at $3 per bushel under an oral agreement, defendant again furnishing the seed. The oral agreement for 1948 (the year in controversy) called for a price of $3.50 per bushel at the farm, defendant to furnish the seed as in 1946 and 1947.

At different times in the fall and winter of 1948-49 plaintiffs delivered to defendant at the farm a total of 3290 bushels of 1948 shelled corn. As each load arrived at defendant’s plant a sample was taken for testing and it was all put in one bin, unmixed with other corn. Defendant’s general foreman testifies he noticed quite a lot of rotten and cracked kernels. Carlson and an employee say 7% per cent of all corn delivered was damaged by mold or other causes and was unsatisfactory for seed.

In November 1948, after part of the corn was delivered, Carlson told Drager he was not satisfied with it. About April 1 (1949), after Drager returned from California, Carlson informed him 1410 bushels of this corn graded out as unsuitable for seed on the “gravity machine”, it could be sold for $1.25 a bushel, market price for feeding corn, or Drager could have it back. Drager refused to take a discount on the corn and apparently refused to take back any of it. In the meantime, about January, defendant paid Babe and Thomsen each $1000, after part of the corn had been delivered.

We consider now whether the evidence would warrant a finding of implied warranty in the sale of the corn. Section 554.16(1), Code, 1950, provides: “Where the buyer, expressly or by implication, makes known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are required, and it appears that the buyer relies on the seller’s skill or judgment, whether he be the grower or manufacturer or not, there is an implied warranty that the goods shall be reasonably fit for such purpose.”

*83 This part of the Uniform Sales Act contains two vital requirements: (1) That the buyer,.expressly or by implication, makes known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are required, and (2) it appears the buyer relies on the seller’s skill or judgment. See Brandenberg v. The Samuel Stores, 211 Iowa 1321, 1324, 1325, 235 N.W. 741, 77 A. L. R. 1161; Kurriss v. Conrad & Co., 312 Mass. 670, 46 N.E.2d 12, 16; 46 Am. Jur., Sales, section 356.

There can be little doubt defendant made known to Drager (and through him to his coplaintiffs) that the corn it was purchasing from plaintiffs was for the particular purpose of resale for hybrid seed. Drager as a witness in effect so admits.

Plaintiffs well knew defendant was engaged in the purchase and sale of hybrid seed corn. Drager testifies with regard to the 1948 agreement, “I suppose it was an agreement to produce hybrid seed, parent stock.

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56 N.W.2d 18, 244 Iowa 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drager-v-carlson-hybrid-corn-co-iowa-1952.