El Dorado Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Dingle & Kincaid

292 S.W. 690, 173 Ark. 506, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 4, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 690 (El Dorado Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Dingle & Kincaid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
El Dorado Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Dingle & Kincaid, 292 S.W. 690, 173 Ark. 506, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 193 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Mehapey, J.

On tbe 9th day of January, 1925, tbe appellees, plaintiffs below, filed suit in the justice court against tbe appellants for $300 for labor and material furnished defendants by plaintiff. Summons was issued, returnable on tbe 20th day ,of January, 1925, and summons was returned, served by delivering copy to M. B. Morgan, manager for El Dorado Ice. and. Cold Storage Company, more than 10 days previous to the day of trial. On the 31st day of January, 1925, M. B. Morgan filed affidavit for appeal and bond in the sum of $350. Tbe transcript was filed in tbe second division of tbe circuit court within 30 days. On tbe 14th day of September, 1925, -the circuit court met and set cases covering a p.eriod of two-weeks, beginning tbe 19th of October, and, among others, this case was set. The court announced to tbe bar, on tbe 14th day of September, that a term of court would be held beginning on the 19th of October and to be in session two weeks, in order to try cases and dispose of the crowded condition of the docket. Announcement was made several times during the term of the court, and request was made that all members of the bar be present on the day designated by the court, which was September 26. This case was set on September 26 for the 22d day of October.

When this case was called for trial neither the defendant nor his counsel was present, and no announcement was made by the defendant or his attorney, and the case was dismissed. The court had been informed that the defendant’s regular attorney was sick, but that said attorney had employed other counsel to handle this case in order to be ready when the case was called. Shortly after the case was dismissed the defendant’s attorney appeared and filed a motion to set aside the order dismissing the appeal, in which he alleged that the defendant’s manager had been in Little Rock attending Federal court in the trial of an important case, and did not learn of the setting of the case until the day before the appeal was dismissed. Defendant’s motion to set aside the order dismissing the appeal was as follows:

“Comes the defendant, the El Dorado Ice & Cold Storage Company, and represents to the court that the above cause was set down for trial in this court for the 22d day of October,-1925, and neithér the manager of defendant company nor his attorney was aware of the setting of said cause for trial, and knew nothing of the setting until the morning that the cause was called for trial.

“The defendant’s manager, M. B. Morgan, whose business it was to look after all litigation of the company, had been engaged in the preparation and trial of the cause of King v. The Republic Power & Service Company the entire time since the latter part of the preceding week.. That was a suit for damages in the sum of $35,000 claimed against the defendant in that suit, and that trial required the presence of the said .M. B. Morgan in thé United States District Court, Little Rock, Arkansas, and tlie defendant in this case was wholly unprepared and unable to go into the trial of this case when called, and his attorney knew nothing about the facts in the case, and liad no opportunity to interview the Avitnesses, but offered 1o get the witnesses together if allowed time until 11 a. m. of the 22d day of October, 1925, and, had the defendant’s attorney’s request been granted by the court, the defendant could and would have been ready to go to trial at 11 a. m., as above indicated.

“The defendant had a meritorious defense to the claim sued on herein, which defense was asfolloAVS: The plaintiffs offered to install hrw-pressure gas burners at defendant’s plant at SmackoA^er, Arkansas, and take as their pay one-half the saving in cost of fuel over the preceding month’s bill. The result of that experiment was a loss, and not a saAdng for the defendant.

“The plaintiffs admitted the truth of the above statement, and asked permission to try it another month, and the result of the month’s experiment Avas a loss, and not a saving.

“The plaintiffs, in a further effort to demonstrate the efficiency of their low-pressure burners, got permission from M. B. Morgan to install the same style burners in the El Dorado plant of the aboA-e named defendant, and look out of the El Dorado plant six gas burners OAA'ncd by M. B. Morgan, of the value of $65 each, and took them aAvay, Avithout any authority from the said M. B. Morgan, and appropriated them to plaintiffs’ OAvn use, and the plaintiffs have never returned to ascertain the character of service given by the burners installed by plaintiffs at the El Dorado plant. No price Avas ever made or agreed upon for the nfeAv burners, but the price Avas to be determined by the saving on fuel in the first month-’s service, just as in the case of the Smackover agreement.

“The first specific claim of plaintiffs’ cause of action Avas made knoAvn to- M!. B. Morgan months after-Avard, Avhen one Kincaid called and demanded $50 each for the burners, and the said Kincaid Avas informed that the said defendant did not care to retain the burners, hut warded them removed and the defendant’s old burners restored, to which Kincaid replied that he did not know where the old burners were, and attempted to get the defendant to keep their burners and pay $150 for the whole claim, and the defeiidant refused because the actual records show a loss on the nerv burners over the old burners.

“The next the defendant heard from this claim was about sixty days ago, when a laborer for Dingle & Kin-caid claimed that Dingle & Kincaid were gone and had no further interest in this claim; that the said Dingle & Kincaid had transferred all their interest in the claim to the said Bland, one of their laborers, and that he was the sole owner of the said claim, and offered to take, and demanded, the sum of $150 in full settlement thereof.

“Your petitioner would represent that the above statement of the facts constitutes a full and complete defense to the plaintiffs’ claim and cause of action, and that your petitioner Avould have established the facts above detailed by at least three competent witnesses, and that these witnesses could have been produced in court in two hours’ time after the defendants learned that this case was set down for trial.

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Related

Hodges v. Smith
298 S.W. 1023 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 690, 173 Ark. 506, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-dorado-ice-cold-storage-co-v-dingle-kincaid-ark-1927.