Farm Bureau Cooperative Mill & Supply, Inc. v. Blue Star Foods, Inc.

137 F. Supp. 486, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3896
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 21, 1956
Docket1084, 1090
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 F. Supp. 486 (Farm Bureau Cooperative Mill & Supply, Inc. v. Blue Star Foods, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farm Bureau Cooperative Mill & Supply, Inc. v. Blue Star Foods, Inc., 137 F. Supp. 486, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3896 (W.D. Mo. 1956).

Opinion

WHITTAKER, District Judge.

These causes, having been earlier consolidated for trial, came on before the *488 Court for trial without a jury at Joplin on December 14, 1955, and were fully heard and were argued by counsel. Whereupon counsel for the parties asked, and were granted, leave to file briefs, which they have now done, and these causes have now been finally submitted for decision.

The facts giving rise to these actions are indeed “story book”, and are as “unbelievable” in this modern age as they are interesting. In broad outline, they are that Watson, an experienced “chicken raiser” in Washington County, Arkansas, had 25,000 young chickens which he mortgaged, to Arkansas Farm Bureau Finance, Inc., a corporation (hereinafter called the “finance company”) on May 18, 1954, as security for his note of that date, payable to the order of the finance company, in the amount of $13,-599 due August 16, 1954, which mortgage was in the usual form and was duly recorded. One Lester N. Glover of Cave Springs, Arkansas, was, and for about 20 years had been, in the business of buying chickens in northwest Arkansas from “growers” and selling them to food processors, in the surrounding community, and, for the purpose maintained a place of business in Cave Springs, and a fleet of trucks and the necessary complement of employees. It was the practice of the finance company, at least upon inquiry, to advise Glover of the names and addresses of growers who had chickens ready for market and for sale, and to suggest that Glover inspect them and try to buy them from the grower. It was also the practice of the finance company to permit its old and trusted customers (which included Watson) — and in this case it orally expressly authorized Watson — to sell the mortgaged chickens at such time, for such price, and to such purchaser, as he chose, upon the understanding or condition, however, that he would pay over the proceeds of the sale to the finance company for application upon the note secured by the mortgage.

On or about ..the 14th of August, 1955, in response to Glover’s inquiry, the finance company advised him that Watson had these chickens which should be ready for market and suggested that Glover inspect, and try to purchase, them. Accordingly, on August 14, Glover went to Watson’s place, inspected the chickens and, says Watson, “agreed to buy all” of the chickens at 23<i per pound. (Watson did not thereafter see or hear from Glover until after the 5 truckloads of chickens here involved were hauled away by Glover’s men). On the next day one of Glover’s trucks, manned by a driver and accompanied by several “catchers”, arrived at Watson’s place and was filled with Watson’s chickens, after which the truck driver stopped at Watson’s store and asked “how he wanted his check made out”, and Watson replied “Ottis Watson”, but the truck driver, feigning feared inaccuracy, asked Watson to write on a folded piece of paper, which he presented, “exactly how he wanted his check issued” and Watson wrote across that paper his true signature, and handed the paper back to the truck driver. Though there is some controversy about it, it appears that the same events occurred on each of the following 4 days when similar loads of chickens were obtained by Glover’s men from Watson.

Not having received any money for the 5 truckloads of chickens and having heard that some of Glover’s recent checks had “bounced”, Watson went to Glover’s office in Cave Springs on August 21 and asked payment for his chickens. Glover produced invoices showing live weights of each of the 5 loads and the price, calculated at 23?! per pound, and then issued his 5 checks payable to “Ottis Watson & Farm Bureau Co-Op” for the correct amounts of $1,865.30, $1,757.20, $1,975.-70, $1,867.60 and $1,925.50, respectively, aggregating $9,386.30, which checks were endorsed by Watson and delivered to Farm Bureau, who also endorsed and deposited them, but payment of each was refused, when presented, for insufficient funds.

There was a written agreement between defendant, Blue Star Foods, Inc., and Glover, dated May 1, 1954, which is in evidence, which, after reciting that *489 defendant is engaged in processing poultry at Anderson, Missouri, and interested in securing live poultry from that vicinity, and that Glover has certain described vehicular equipment “and is desirous of hauling live poultry” therein to defendant’s plant, provides: “first party (defendant) agrees to pay and second party (Glover) agrees to accept one-half (%) cent per pound of live poultry delivered at first party’s door in Anderson, Missouri, for the use of the truck or trucks hauling said poultry and the further sum of one-fourth (14) cent per pound of live poultry at first party’s door in Anderson, Missouri, in payment of services rendered either for second party or anyone hired by him.” Glover was furnished with a book of blank drafts containing the name of defendant, which Glover was authorized to issue to chicken growers in payment for chickens purchased by Glover for defendant. It further appears from the evidence that Glover would phone defendant and inquire whether it needed chickens for delivery a few days ahead, and, if so, about how many and what price it would pay, and Glover would then attempt to purchase that amount of chickens within that price and issue one of defendant’s drafts to the grower in payment and deliver the chickens to defendant at Anderson, Missouri. It also appears that Glover did not buy chickens only for de-. fendant, but for himself as well and for others, and was generally engaged in that business. But it does appear that defendant, Blue Star Foods, withheld Federal income taxes and Social Security taxes from Glover’s earnings from de-. fendant under the contract mentioned.

It appears from the evidence that the blank pieces of paper, upon the backs of which Glover’s truck driver asked Watson to write his name — which he did as above stated — were, in fact, blank Blue Star drafts which were later filled out by someone — the evidence does not show who, but presumably it was Glover because he got the money on them — dated August 13, August 14, August 14, August 17 and August 17, respectively, and made payable to the order of “Ottis Watson” in the same amounts as the 5 August 21 checks later issued by Glover to Watson, as above stated, signed by “Lester N. Glover” and drawn on defendant through “Anderson State Bank”. These drafts, bearing the name of “Ottis Watson” on the reverse side, were each then endorsed by Lester N. Glover and were deposited by him in his bank to his credit which bank, in turn, timely presented them to defendant, who, having received the chickens and noting that the endorsements on the drafts appeared regular, accepted and paid the drafts.

Watson admits that the endorsement on the first of these drafts is his genuine signature, but, while saying that the endorsement on the other 4 drafts looks like his signature, he does not remember endorsing, and does not believe he endorsed them. I should say now, as I did at the conclusion of the trial, that comparison of these questioned signatures with admittedly genuine ones and hearing the testimony of Mr. Charles Scott, a highly competent questioned document examiner, convinces me that the name “Ottis Watson” on the reverse side of each of these 5 drafts is his genuine signature.

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28 T.C. 728 (U.S. Tax Court, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
137 F. Supp. 486, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-bureau-cooperative-mill-supply-inc-v-blue-star-foods-inc-mowd-1956.