F. G. Barton Cotton Co. v. Vardele

275 S.W. 62, 217 Mo. App. 691
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 13, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 62 (F. G. Barton Cotton Co. v. Vardele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. G. Barton Cotton Co. v. Vardele, 275 S.W. 62, 217 Mo. App. 691 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

*698 BRADLEY, J.

This cause, based on a promissory note, was filed in Dunklin county, but the venue was changed to Butler county, where upon trial before the court and a jury plaintiff obtained judgment on the note for $1015.16, the amount sued for, and defendant on a counterclaim obtained judgment against plaintiff for $1,100. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial on the counterclaim was overruled and it appealed.

Plaintiff in an amended petition alleged that it is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Tennessee, being incorporated as a cotton factor and commission merchant with its principal office in Memphis, Tennessee, and authorized to do business in the State of Missouri; that defendant by his promissory note dated December 8, 1920, promised to pay to plaintiff or order $1187.61 on February 1, 1921, with interest at six per cent from date. Then follows allegations of credits totaling $348.64 and the prayer for judgment.

Defendant denied liability on the note, and filed a counterclaim seeking affirmative relief. In the answer defendant admits that plaintiff is a Tennessee corporation engaged in the business of a cotton factor and commission merchant in that State and in the State of Missouri; and alleges that at the special instance and request of plaintiff he shipped to plaintiff, between January 3rd and February 10, 1920, twenty bales of cotton to be stored and sold by plaintiff to defendant’s use and benefits; that according to the conditions and terms of said shipment, defendant drew on said cotton the sum of *699 $2000 to be paid from the proceeds of the sale of said cotton by plaintiff, according to the contract of shipment-; that thereafter, between the — day of June, 1920, and December 8, 1920, plaintiff sold twelve bales of said cotton; that on the 8th of December, 1920, plaintiff, through its agent and representative came to defendant and represented to defendant that plaintiff was in need of collateral to place with banks which it owed and that it could not use accounts, such as it had with defendant and asked defendant to place said account in the form of a note in order that it could use the same; that for the purpose of accommodating plaintiff, and for no other purpose, he executed the note sued on and turned same over to plaintiff to be used as stated; that there was no consideration for said note, and that it was mutually agreed between the parties that the note would stand in the same relation as the account had stood and that the account was not closed and would not be closed until the cotton was all sold and disposed of..

In the counterclaim it is alleged that plaintiff was engaged in the business of a cotton factor and commission merchant at Memphis solicited customers in various states to ship' cotton to it to be stored in its warehouses in Memphis, and to be sold by plaintiff when directed by shippers; that it is customary with such cotton factors and commission merchants to pay freight, drayage and insurance on all cotton shipped and to charge the customer a fee for storage and a. commission for selling, all to be charged to the account of the customer and paid when said cotton is sold; that between January 3rd and February 10, 1920, defendant shipped to plaintiff for sale twenty bales of cotton, which would average 500 pounds per bale, with instructions to sell at once upon tbe open market for the best price obtainable; that on said dates there was a strong demand on the Memphis market for the class and grade of cotton shipped by defendant and that such cotton was selling for thirty-five to forty cents per pound; that plaintiff failed and refused to sell *700 said cotton at the price obtaining when received and ignored and failed, to follow the instructions of defendant to sell said cotton upon delivery.

Defendant further avers that when he ascertained that plaintiff had not sold said cotton as he had ordered and directed he sent, in March, 1920, his agent to Memphis to find out why said cotton had not been sold; that plaintiff represented to the agent of defendant that it would not place said cotton on the market at the price obtaining at that time, which was thirty-two cents per pound; that at that time defendant’s agent again instructed and ordered plaintiff to sell said cotton, but that plaintiff ignored said orders and instructions and failed and refused to place said cotton on the market or sell any part thereof until June 17, 1920; that after the — day of March, 1920,.cotton began to decline and continued to decline until there was no market for cotton, and until cotton of the class and grade shipped by defendant would not bring the carrying charges; that from June 17,1920, until March 8,1921, plaintiff sold fourteen bales of said cotton on a declining market at a price ranging from seven to twenty-five cents per pound and at an average of sixteen cents per pound, causing defendant to lose on said cotton, so sold from sixteen to twenty-five cents per pound, and causing defendant to lose in the other six bales thirty-two cents per pound; that if said cotton had been sold when directed by defendant the said fourteen bales would have brought sixteen cents per pound more than plaintiff received therefor, and that said six bales which plaintiff failed to sell would have brought thirty-two cents per pound; that because of the negligence, carelessness and wilfulness of plaintiff in failing and refusing to sell said cotton as ordered and directed, defendant was damaged in the sum of $1872; that plaintiff had said cotton in its control and that defendant could not sell the same under the terms and conditions of the shipping agreement between plaintiff and defendant. *701 After unsuccessfully moving to strike out the counterclaim plaintiff filed reply putting in issue the new matter pleaded in the answer and counterclaim.

Error is assigned (1) on the overruling of plaintiff’s motion to strike the counterclaim; (2) on the refusal of plaintiff’s request for a directed verdict in its favor on the counterclaim; (3) on the admission of evidence; and (4) on the instructions.

We shall consider the first two assignments together. The peremptory request at the close of the case we think covered the field. In this request plaintiff asked for a directed verdict in its favor both on the note and on the counterclaim. When this was refused plaintiff asked for a directed verdict on the note, and this was given. Plaintiff contends that its assignment based on the refusal of its peremptory request for a directed verdict on the .counterclaim may be sustained upon two theories, viz.: (1) that the matters and things between plaintiff and defendant became, after execution and delivery of the note sued on, an account stated; (2) that there was no Substantial evidence to support the counterclaim.

Did the matters and things between the plaintiff and defendant after the execution and delivery of the note become on account stated. Let us first look to the situation existing between the parties at the time the note was given on December 8,1920. At that time it is undisputed that defendant owed plaintiff $2000 for money advanced on the twenty bales of cotton plus charges and commission earned up to that time, and from plaintiff’s viewpoint it only owed defendant for the proceeds of the sale of twelve-bales of cotton which had been sold up to that time.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 62, 217 Mo. App. 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-g-barton-cotton-co-v-vardele-moctapp-1925.