Fernandes Grain Co. v. Hunter

274 S.W. 901, 217 Mo. App. 187, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 18
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 901 (Fernandes Grain Co. v. Hunter) 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
Fernandes Grain Co. v. Hunter, 274 S.W. 901, 217 Mo. App. 187, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 18 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

* Headnotes 1. Appeal and Error, 3 C.J., Section 863; 2. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Sections 6, 289; 3. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 481; 4. Appeal and Error, 4 C.J., Sections 2647, 2651; 5. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 195 (Anno); 6. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 172; 7. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 221; 8. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 176 (Anno); 9. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 197 (Anno); 10. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 176; 11. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 481; 12. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 221 (Anno); 13. Appeal and Error, 4 C.J., Sections 728, 898; 14. Arbitration and Award, 5 C.J., Section 389. This is a suit in equity growing out of a controversy between the parties to this action, members of the Merchants' Exchange of St. Louis, resulting from the action of defendants in accounting for the sale of a carload of wheat to the country shipper, the Farmers Grain Company of Bulpitt, Illinois, instead of to the broker, the plaintiff herein. The matter in dispute was first submitted by an agreement in writing to the arbitration committee of the Exchange by whom an award was rendered in favor of plaintiff. In due time an appeal was taken by defendants, under the rules of the Exchange, to the appeals committee, which committee, after a hearing, reversed the arbitration committee and made an award in favor of defendants. Thereupon plaintiff filed a bill in equity in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, seeking to have the award set aside. The finding of the chancellor was for defendants and a judgment was entered accordingly, from which plaintiff has appealed to this court.

Plaintiff's bill sets out in great detail the facts relative to the hearings before both the arbitration committee and the appeals committee and prays that the award *Page 193 of the latter be found null and void and of no force and effect for the reasons that the committee of appeals (1) did mistake and exceed its powers, (2) was guilty of misconduct and misbehavior, (3) manifested partiality towards defendants and against plaintiff, and (4) made an award against plaintiff by undue means. The court was also asked to decree and adjudge that defendants account to plaintiff for the money received from the sale of the car of wheat.

The answer was a general denial coupled with a plea in bar in which it was asserted that plaintiff had not complied with the laws of Missouri regulating foreign corporations and therefore could not maintain an action in court.

The reply was conventional.

Many of the facts in evidence were uncontradicted. It was undisputed that on September 6, 1921, the Farmers Grain Company of Bulpitt, Illinois, shipped a carload of wheat to themselves or order at St. Louis with a notation on the bill of lading, "notify Fernandes Grain Company at St. Louis;" that the bill of lading was endorsed by them on said date and attached to a sight draft for $1400 drawn on the Fernandes Grain Company at Springfield, Illinois; that the sight draft with bill of lading attached was presented to and paid by the Fernandes Grain Company on September 8, 1921; that said company thereupon forwarded the bill of lading, properly endorsed, to the Von Rump Grain Company of St. Louis with instructions to deliver the same to defendants, the Hunter Grain Company, and that on September 12, 1921, the delivery was made. Defendants sold the wheat for the sum of $1720.44 and made the return therefor to the country shipper, the Farmers Grain Company.

The evidence on the part of plaintiff was that Mr. Oliver H. Schwartz, an employee of the Von Rump Grain Company, gave defendants the bill of lading and instructed them to sell the wheat for the account of plaintiff; the evidence of defendants was that they were instructed *Page 194 by Schwartz to sell and make returns direct to the country shipper.

After considerable correspondence between plaintiff and defendants relative to the disposition of the proceeds of the car, plaintiff finally made a formal demand upon defendants for an accounting, which they refused to make.

On January 3, 1922, plaintiff made complaint against defendants to the Board of Directors of the Merchants' Exchange by whom the matter was referred to the regular arbitration committee of the Exchange and the parties directed to enter into a written agreement of submission to arbitration. After a hearing the arbitration committee rendered an award in favor of plaintiff and against defendants in the sum of $1589.81.

Mr. Eugene Smith, Secretary of the Merchants' Exchange, testified that he was ex-officio secretary of the various committees and identified the records of the several meetings of the committees which were introduced in evidence. His records were only a brief resume of what transpired, showing all persons present, either as members of the committees, litigants, witnesses or stenographers, together with notations of all objections made by either party.

The secretary's records showed that plaintiff was represented before the arbitration committee by Mr. Sim Fernandes, its president and defendants per se. Messrs. H.A. Von Rump, Oliver Schwartz, Adolph Schuessler, a stenographer in the employ of the Hunter Grain Company, and Clyde McClintock, a former manager of the Farmers Grain Company, were present as witnesses. Mr. H.J. Ready, stenographer for defendants, and Mrs. Simmons, for plaintiff, were present to record the testimony. The rules of the Exchange provided that either party to a case might provide a shorthand reporter at its own expense.

Under the rules of the Exchange and in due course defendants appealed from the adverse holding of the arbitration committee to the appeals committee of the Exchange. *Page 195 This committee was composed of twelve members, seven of whom constituted a quorum.

The appeals committee met May 11, 1922, and after a hearing five of the eight members present made a finding in favor of defendants and the remaining three signed a minority report in plaintiff's favor. Plaintiff thereupon requested a new trial and a hearing on this request was set by the appeals committee for June 1, 1922. At that time Mr. Sim Fernandes appeared before the committee and requested that plaintiff be allowed to be represented by counsel. Defendants objected and were sustained. The committee then adjourned over until June 15th in order to give counsel for plaintiff and counsel for the Exchange an opportunity to consider this request further.

On June 15th Mr. Fernandes again appeared before the committee and filed a prepared statement attacking the procedure had before the appeals committee and declined to proceed further. Thereupon plaintiff's application for a rehearing was dismissed.

Many of the minor details of what transpired before these various committees will be set out later in this opinion as they may bear upon the several points for decision.

Appellant's assignment of errors covers two points:

1. That the circuit court erred in dismissing plaintiff's bill because such judgment was contrary to the greater weight of the evidence and contrary to the law applicable to the evidence.

2. That the circuit court erred in not decreeing the award of the committee of appeals void and rendering judgment for the appellant.

Inasmuch as the second point assigned as error was not called to the attention of the lower court in the motion for new trial, the first point remains as the only matter before this court for decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 901, 217 Mo. App. 187, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernandes-grain-co-v-hunter-moctapp-1925.