Empire Commission Co. v. Carlson

274 P. 1116, 127 Kan. 695, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 194
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1929
DocketNo. 28,254
StatusPublished

This text of 274 P. 1116 (Empire Commission Co. v. Carlson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Empire Commission Co. v. Carlson, 274 P. 1116, 127 Kan. 695, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 194 (kan 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bijrch, J.:

The action was one by a broker to recover the price of corn purchased for his principal, and expenses incurred for the account of the principal in connection with the purchase. The verdict and judgment were for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.

On December 31, 1925, plaintiff received an order from Carlson to purchase for Carlson 10,000 bushels of December corn. Plaintiff executed the order, and the corn was delivered in elevators in Chicago for Carlson. When the corn was purchased, plaintiff had in its hands money of Carlson’s in the sum of $1,000.53. The com was sold for less than the purchase price, and after Carlson was given credit for the money in plaintiff’s hands, there remained due plaintiff a balance of the purchase price and various items of expense.

The petition alleged that defendant refused to accept the corn, but this allegation, was stricken out. The petition also alleged that on or about January 20, 1926, Carlson failed, neglected and refused to pay for the corn. By amendment the date was changed to February 20.

Plaintiff’s testimony established execution in the customary man[696]*696ner of the order to purchase, including usual confirmations to Carlson, and notification to Carlson on January 9, 1926, of the elevators in which the delivered corn was stored. Thomas J. Myers is manager of the plaintiff. Myers testified that in February Carlson directed sale of a quantity of com in a certain elevator at a price of 66 cents per bushel, and the sale was made at that price a few days later. Myers requested payment for the corn. Carlson said the corn was not any good. Myers said the corn was all right, and Carlson requested Myers to go to Chicago and look after his interests there. Myers went to Chicago and investigated the situation. The com w-as all right, but it was elevator corn, and because of loading-out charges and switching charges, elevator corn could not always be marketed on equal terms with other corn of the same grade. On his return from Chicago Myers reported the facts to Carlson. Carlson requested sale of the corn at prices which Myers could not obtain, and Myers asked Carlson to pay in full. Carlson said to sell out, and Myers sold the corn. The sales made pursuant to Carlson’s order to sell out were made on March 2 and March 4. Myers testified he did not request payment until February 20, and testified as follows:

“I did not say Carlson refused on the 20th day of February. He had not refused before that time.”

The defense stated in the answer follows:

“Defendant further admits that on December 31, 1925, he requested plaintiff to purchase 10,000 bushels of corn for him at the prevailing price of corn on that date, but said defendant saj^s that he instructed plaintiff to purchase No. 2 corn, which plaintiff failed and neglected to do, and when said plaintiff informed him, on or about the 4th day of January, 1926, that he had purchased 10,000 bushels of No. 3 and No. 4 com for him, which com was inferior to No. 2 and of a lower grade, defendant refused to accept said corn or pay for the same.”

At the trial Carlson admitted he might have received the usual confirmations which the testimony of plaintiff showed were sent to him. Carlson testified, however, that his order was to purchase No. 2 corn; the corn which plaintiff purchased was No. 3 and No. 4; on January 4 he came to Topeka and talked to Myers about it, and he told Myers he would not accept the com under any conditions.

On January 9 plaintiff wrote and mailed to Carlson the following letter:

[697]*697“Mr. S. J. Carlson, Osage City, Kan.: January 9, 1926.
Dear Sir — Please note that your cash corn is in the following elevators in Chicago:
5,000 bu. Wabash Elevator......................No. 4 mixed
1,270-30 Bock Island A.........................No. 4 yellow
1,571-34 South Chicago C.......................No. 4 mixed
2,139-26 do ...............................No. 3 white
“Yours truly, Empire Commission Co.”

At first Carlson testified he did not know whether he received the letter. Afterward he said: “I did not answer the letter I got from Mr. Myers on January 9. I paid no attention to it.” The reason Carlson gave for not answering the letter was that he had no corn, and told Myers on January 4 he would not take the corn. Carlson testified further as follows:

“Myers called me over the telephone. I think it was February, near the last part. He asked me what I was going to do about that corn. I said I haven’t any corn, Mr. Myers. I told you on the 4th day of January that I wouldn’t accept it under any condition. He says, I am going to Chicago, come and go with me. I said I ain’t got no business in Chicago, and I haven’t got no time to go. Nothing further was said. ... I never in words and substance directed him or authorized him to go to Chicago in my behalf.”

The trouble with Carlson’s case was, the jury did not believe his testimony, and returned the following special findings of fact:

“Q. 1. What kind of corn did defendant instruct the plaintiff to buy? A. December corn.
“Q. 2. Did plaintiff buy that kind of corn? A. Yes.
“Q. 3. Did defendant on January 4, 1926, refuse to accept the corn plaintiff purchased December 31, 1925? A. No.
“Q. 6. Did plaintiff make a trip to Chicago in Februaiy, 1926, to see about the corn he had purchased December 31, 1925? A. Yes.
“Q. 7. Did defendant direct or request the plaintiff to make that trip? A. Yes.”

These findings of fact dispose of the only defense which Carlson made, and the only remaining question relates to the amount which plaintiff should recover. The court instructed the jury on all phases of this subject. Instruction No. 6 and portions of other instructions relate to what Myers should have done if Carlson refused to accept and pay for the corn.

The jury found Carlson did not refuse on January 4 to accept the corn. He received the letter of January 9 telling him of delivery of the corn in specified quantities at specified elevators. According to [698]*698Carlson’s testimony, he made no response. He testified he knew the quality of the corn on January 4. According to his testimony, the next conversation he had with Myers concerning the com was a telephone conversation occurring the latter part of February. Therefore, as a matter of law, he accepted the corn. He was under obligation to reject promptly if he did not desire to accept, and if the elevators in which the corn was stored had burned after January 4, the loss would have been his loss. (Martin v. Scott Lumber Co., 127 Kan. 391, 273 Pac. 411.) Besides that, the findings of fact establish acceptance as a matter of fact, and the instructions to the jury making refusal to accept a factor are now immaterial.

Leaving out of account Carlson’s discredited testimony relating to refusal on January 4 to.

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Related

Martin v. A. L. Scott Lumber Co.
273 P. 411 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 P. 1116, 127 Kan. 695, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-commission-co-v-carlson-kan-1929.