Early & Daniel Co. v. Wedgefield, Inc.

164 F. Supp. 414, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3825
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 15, 1958
DocketCiv. A. C-152-G-57
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 164 F. Supp. 414 (Early & Daniel Co. v. Wedgefield, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Early & Daniel Co. v. Wedgefield, Inc., 164 F. Supp. 414, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3825 (M.D.N.C. 1958).

Opinion

STANLEY, District Judge.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff to recover $18,968.59 of the defendant for merchandise sold and delivered. The defendant admits owing said amount, less $384.33, the price of 140 fifty-pound bags of laying mash sold by plaintiff to defendant on March 29, 1957. Defendant claims that this laying mash contained an anticoccidial agent called nicarbazin” which was highly destructive to the layability of its flock of 16,-500 chickens, rather than an ingredient known as “wormal”, a poultry medication for laying chickens, as had been specified by the defendant. The defendant has filed a counterclaim against plaintiff for $250,000 damages, claiming that when said mash was fed to its chickens the nicarbazin in the mash caused a decrease in the production of eggs to a negligible number in quantity and that the quality of such eggs as were produced rendered them worthless, and that the nicarbazin in the mash so permanently damaged both the layability and the health of its flock that their slaughter was necessary. a

The plaintiff, in its reply to the counterclaim, denies that the nicarbazin contained in the mash was in such quantity as to be highly dangerous and permanently destructive to the layability of defendant’s laying flock. As a defense, the plaintiff pleads that the defendant negligently slaughtered its flock of chickens and sold it for meat for human consumption without investigating the cause of the condition of its flock and before it could be ascertained that the nicarbazin in the feed was at fault, and that if the defendant, instead of hastily slaughtering its flock, had waited until it was ascertained that nicarbazin was at fault, defendant would have known that the nicarbazin in the mash was not lethal and was only in sufficient quantity to affect temporarily the layability of defendant’s flock of chickens, and that it was wholly unnecessary for the flock to be slaughtered. As a further defense to the counterclaim, plaintiff pleads that defendant is estopped to assert any claim that its flock was permanently damaged because defendant while itself in ignorance of the cause or causes of the condition of its flock, and without ascertaining any of the true facts thereto, voluntarily killed its flock of chickens, and by so doing rendered impossible the improvement, recovery or restoration of the flock to a normal condition that would otherwise have occurred.

[416]*416The defendant has timely moved under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1404(a)1 for an order transferring the action to the district court for the Eastern District of South Carolina, Charleston Division, where it might have been brought, on the ground that the convenience of the parties and witnesses, and the interest of justice, will be promoted by such transfer.

From the pleadings, and from the affidavits filed in support of and in opposition to the motion to transfer, it appears that the plaintiff is a corporation created and existing under the laws of the State of Ohio, with its principal place of business in Cincinnati, Ohio; that the defendant is a corporation created and existing under the laws of the State of North Carolina, but is domesticated in South Carolina and maintains its only office and transacts all of its business in or near Georgetown, within the Eastern District of South Carolina; that the plaintiff maintains an office and manufacturing plant at Sumter, within the Eastern District of South Carolina; that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant maintains an office or transacts any business whatever in the State of North Carolina; that the place of all the occurrences referred to in the pleadings is exclusively within the State of South Carolina; that the laying mash referred to in the pleadings was manufactured and sold by the plaintiff to the defendant in South Carolina, and the defendant fed the mash to its poultry flock in South Carolina; and that the only relationship North Carolina has to the controversy is the fact that the defendant is a North Carolina corporation.

It further appears that Sumter, South Carolina, where the plaintiff maintains a manufacturing plant, and where the mash in question was mixed, is about 75 miles from Charleston, whereas it is about 170 miles from Greensboro; that Georgetown, South Carolina, where the defendant transacts all of its business, and where the poultry flock in question was located, is about 60 miles from Charleston, whereas it is about 230 miles from Greensboro; that Charleston and Greensboro are about 255 miles apart; that Columbia, South Carolina, where some of the witnesses live, is about 180 miles from Greensboro and 110 miles from Charleston.

Since the indebtedness referred to in the complaint is admitted by the defendant, except |384.33 representing the purchase price of the allegedly contaminated laying mash, and since the plaintiff concedes that it inadvertently substituted a quantity of nicarbazin for wormal in the mash in question, the real controversy centers around the amount of nicarbazin in the mash, the temporary and permanent effect the feeding of the mash had on the defendant’s laying flock, and the alleged negligence of the defendant in hastily slaughtering its flock.

The defendant has filed affidavits listing a number of witnesses which it claims are essential to the proof of its counterclaim. These witnesses include (1) a salesman and a number of unskilled employees of the plaintiff who live in or near Sumter, South Carolina, who will be expected to testify as to the manner of mixing the feed in question, (2) two officers and six employees of the defendant corporation, all residents of Georgetown, South Carolina, who are expected to testify with respect to the receipt of the feed in question, the feeding thereof, the resulting damage to the layability and physical condition of the flock, as well as the condition and good health of the flock prior to the feeding of the mash, (3) two employees of the Colonial Supermarket at Columbia, South Carolina, who are expected to testify as to the condition of the defendant’s flock and the subsequent slaughter and sale of the flock to Colonial Stores, (4) two expert witnesses from Columbia, South Carolina, who are expected to testify as to the condition of the flock by reason of the laying mash having been [417]*417fed to them and the result of a chemical analysis made of the mash, (5) an expert witness from Atlanta, Georgia, who is expected to testify as to the result of the chemical analysis made of the mash and (6) two doctors of veterinary medicine from the State of Iowa, one of whom made a chemical analysis of the feed in question. The other witness is alleged to have visited the defendant’s poultry farm immediately after the feeding of the mash in question and to have performed a number of necropsies on the affected chickens.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 F. Supp. 414, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/early-daniel-co-v-wedgefield-inc-ncmd-1958.