East Carroll Grain Co-op Ass'n V. Hardey

152 So. 2d 572, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1567
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1963
DocketNo. 9919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 So. 2d 572 (East Carroll Grain Co-op Ass'n V. Hardey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Carroll Grain Co-op Ass'n V. Hardey, 152 So. 2d 572, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1567 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

This is a suit on open account in which plaintiff claimed the principal sum of $862.63, which amount was increased by the representation of a supplemental and amended petition to the sum of $1,193.08. In answer, defendant denied his obligations as to the major portion of plaintiff’s claim, and, assuming the position of plaintiff in reconvention, prayed for judgment against plaintiff in the sum of $9,878.57. After trial there was judgment in favor of plaintiff in the principal sum of $1,193.10, and further judgment rejecting the reconven-tional demands of defendant, from which he has appealed.

Plaintiff is a co-op association, hereinafter referred to as “Elevator”, engaged in the drying and storing of grain. By agreement between the parties the defendant’s entire rice crop for the 1960-61 season was delivered to the Elevator, where it was dried, portions being stored for a period of time and the balance delivered, allegedly in accordance with defendant’s instructions. The total charges of the account against defendant for the' services rendered by plaintiff amounted to $9,578.41, against which specified credits had been applied in the sum of $8,385.31, leaving the balance due by defendant, which is the basis of plaintiff’s claim, in the amount of $1,193.10. At this point it is worthy to call attention to the discrepancies — although only here concerned with a matter of one or two cents — in the amount of the claim, the reconciliation of debits and credits and the amount of the judgment. We make this observation because, in attempting to follow the much more complex calculations concerning numbers of bushels, barrels, prices, etc., we note that the testimony of the witnesses, including the parties themselves, is consistently subject to inexplicable discrepancies. Inasmuch as the variations are inconsiderable, we will disregard them for the purposes of this opinion.

The charges made against defendant were established without dispute on trial with the exception of a charge for hauling in the amount of $179.10. This, charge was incurred when Cade Export Company of Alexandria, which had purchased some 25,000 bushels of defendant’s crop, subject to delivery as and when dried, rejected a particular lot of rice on the ground that it was infested with red rice and, therefore, unacceptable. As the result of this rejection, Cade deducted the hauling charges incurred from its account with the Elevator. Defendant contends that it was understood that all of his crop was to be delivered to purchasers, f. o. b. at the Elevator, and, consequently, he is not liable for any hauling charges. It is mere superfluity to observe that, under such circumstances, the Elevator would not be liable for such charges. Inasmuch as the record supports the conclusion that this particular lot of rice was a part of the Hardey crop, its rejection by the consigned purchaser and the responsibility incurred with respect to the hauling charges to and from the Elevator would appear to be a matter for adjustment or settlement between defendant and the purchaser who rejected the delivery. Certainly, the Elevator should not be penalized, since, in any event, it had no responsibility for hauling charges.

We have found no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that plaintiff has abundantly established its claim for charges incurred by t^e defendant in the sum of $1,193.10.

Proceeding to a consideration of the major issue, which involves defendant’s re-conventional claim, we note that an itemization thereof involves (1) the loss of fifty cents per bushel on 3873.09 bushels of registered seed rice, which defendant alleged was mistakenly delivered by the Elevator instead of certified rice, causing a loss of $1,936.54; (2) the value of 339.49 bushels of registered seed rice, negligently lost or misplaced by the Elevator, valued at $2.86 per bushel and amounting to $970.94; and (3) the value of 3,050.03 bushels of certified seed rice, lost or misplaced through the alleged negligence [574]*574of the Elevator, valued at $2.36 per bushel, amounting to $7,198.07.

The aggregate of the above claims amounts to $10,105.55, against which, in his pleading, defendant admitted plaintiff’s claim to the extent of $226.98, leaving the balance claimed by way of reconvention in the sum of $9,878.57.

The following material facts are well established by the record before us. The Elevator received from defendant’s rice crop 45,446.05 bushels of green certified rice and 7,791.72 bushels of green registered rice, all of which was to be dried and delivered, or stored for future delivery. There is a distinction between certified and registered rice which involved a higher value for the latter of approximately fifty cents per bushel. After drying defendant’s rice, the Elevator accounted for a total dry weight of 41,276.55 bushels of certified rice and 7,066.84 bushels of registered rice, showing a difference of 4,169.48 bushels between the green and dried certified rice and a difference of 724.99 bushels between the green and dried registered rice.

It is to be noted that defendant’s claims, as asserted in his pleading, are founded upon the alleged negligence of plaintiff, principally consisting of loss or misplacement. We are in complete agreement with the conclusion of the district judge, as stated in his written reasons for judgment, that this record completely fails to establish any negligence by the Elevator resulting in loss or misplacement of any portion of defendant’s crop.

Reduced to the simplest possible statement, defendant’s claims under items (2) and (3) above noted, rest upon his contention that the loss of weight between the green rice received by the Elevator and the dried rice accounted for is too great. It is clear from defendant’s testimony that he predicates his demands in these respects primarily upon the ground that it was his understanding that his crop was to be dried to a 12% moisture content, and he contends that if this result had been effected he would have been entitled to a substantial increase in the number of dry bushels of rice.

In the final analysis, therefore, defendant’s rights must be determined upon the basis of fact as to whether the difference between the green bushels received and dried bushels delivered, as represented by plaintiff, is disproportionate and excessive.

The manager of plaintiff’s Elevator testified that the computation of green bushels received and dried bushels shipped was based upon the actual weight. As defendant’s crop was received by the Elevator it was weighed and identified by lot numbers and when shipped out the same lot numbers were retained and the dried weight was established. The difference between green and dry weight was then checked against what this witness identified as the Arkansas Rice 'Growers’ Formula for ascertaining dry weights. Comparison of plaintiff’s calculation with the application of the formula disclosed a difference between formula and actual weight of only 1.302%, which the witness testified was within a reasonable limit of tolerance. There is no testimony in the record which controverts this conclusion.

In the effort to support his claims, plaintiff tendered as an expert witness Mr. Austin T. Harrell, an Associate Professor of Agronomy, with the Louisiana State University Experiment Station Service. This witness testified that a formula for the determination of the amount of moisture removed from rice in the drying process had been worked out by “agricultural engineers.” The only thing approaching definite testimony with reference to the problem under consideration is found in the following testimony:

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 2d 572, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-carroll-grain-co-op-assn-v-hardey-lactapp-1963.