Fleischer v. Virginia Carolina Chemical Co.

89 So. 401, 82 Fla. 50
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 89 So. 401 (Fleischer v. Virginia Carolina Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleischer v. Virginia Carolina Chemical Co., 89 So. 401, 82 Fla. 50 (Fla. 1921).

Opinions

West, J.

This is a suit brought to subject certain lots of land of the defendant Jennie Fleischer, a married woman, to the payment of a debt alleged to be due by her to complainant for fertilizer sold and delivered by it to said defendant married woman and used by her in farming, cultivating and improving said land. The defense'to the suit which raises the question presented by this appeal is contained in the folowing paragraph of-the answer: [52]*52“And these defendants say. that the item of $1,006.00 charged under date of November 6, 1917, in the statement annexed to the bill included a charge of $663.00 for 13 tons of mixed fertilizer, and that the item of $1500:00 under date of December 1, 1917, in the said statement, was for thirty tons of mixed fertilizer. That immediately after the receipt of each purchase they submitted fair samples of each of said lots of fertilizer to the Commissioner of Agriculture for analysis. That each of the samples selected and submitted-was selected in the presence of two disinterested persons and was taken, bottled, corked and sealed in their presence, and each of said samples was placed in the hands of a disinterested person who forwarded each of them to the Commissioner of Agriculture at the expense of the defendant Jennie Fleischer. And the Commissioner of Agriculture did require the State Chemist to analyze the said sample packages, who certified his analysis of the same according to law, and the defendants found from analysis and aver that each of the said lots of fertilizer was deficient in several of the constituent elements shown by the labels attached to the said'fertilizer wherefore these defendants say that the defendant Jennie Fleischer has been defrauded by the complainant by reason of the said deficiencies of constituent elements, and that the complainant is indebted to her in double the amount demanded of her by the complainant on account of said two lots of fertilizer namely in the sum of $4326.00 with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from December 1, 1917, and that there is a balance due from the complainant to the defendant Jennie Fleischer, and these defendants aver that they are citizens of this State and pray that an account may be stated by or under the direction of this Honorable Court, between the complainant and the defendant Jennie Fleischer, and that the complainant may [53]*53be decreed to pay her such balance as may be shown to be due her from the complainant by the said account. ’ ’

Testimony was taken and upon a final hearing the Court sustained objections of complainant to certain documentary evidence offered by defendants and entered a final decree for complainant. From the final decree this appeal was entered and this ruling and the entry of a final decree for complainant are assigned as error.

The documentary evidence, objections to the introduction of which were sustained, is certificates of analysis by the State Chemist of the fertilizer sold by complainant to defendants. It is recited in the final decree that this ruling substantially disposed of the case and no further rulings on the evidence were made. In the brief of counsel for appellants, defendants below, it is asserted that the controlling question in the case is the'ruling of the Circuit Court in excluding the certificates of analyses by the State Chemist. It is also stated that the ground of objections to their introduction upon which the Court based its ruling excluding them was that the certificates did not show that the analyses were made by the State Chemist in person.

The contention of the defendants was that the analyses of the State Chemist showed certain quantities of the fertilizer, for the value of which complainant sought recovery, deficient in certain constituent elements and that defendants therefore, upon proof of the fact of such deficiency in quality, were entitled to recovery from complainant a sum equal to twice the amount demanded therefor as allowed under the provisions of Section 2406, Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920. Two certificates of analyses were offered. The verifications of these certificates are identical in form. One of the certificates is as follows:

[54]*54“State of Florida, Agricultural Department,

Division of Chemistry, Fertilizer Section, Tallahassee,

February 11, 1918.

Analysis of Special Samples Under Articles 1271, General Statutes of Florida,

Hon. W. A. McRae, Commissioner of Agriculture, Tallahassee, Florida.

Dear Sir: I submit the following analysis of Special Fertilizer Sample No. 4412 Marked Mixed Fertilizer No. 5, From C. M. Berry, of Sanford, Fla. For M. Fleischer, of Sanford, Fla.,

Under date of Nov. 17, 1917, by mail to Com. of Agriculture

Received Nov. 19, 1917, in sealed tin can

Analysis.

Moisture 7.50%

Available Phosphoric Acid 6.75%

Insoluble Phosphoric Acid • 0.55%

Ammonia (NH3) • 5.10%

Potash (K20) 1.47% Short 53%

Chlorine

“Remarks.

Respectfully submitted,

R. E. Rose, State Chemist,

“Tallahassee, Fla.,' May 13-1918.

“Personally appeared before me, ■ the undersigned authority, Frank T. Wilson, who, being sworn, says he is Assistant State Chemist of Florida, Fertilizer Analyst, duly qualified and commissioned as such; that he person^ [55]*55ally analyzed the samples referred to on the reverse hereof, and that the results of the- analysis are’ correctly stated.

Frank T. Wilson,

Assistant State Chemist.

Sworn to and subscribed before me this 13 day of May, 1918.

“ Laura Smith, Notary Public'

‘ ‘-My commission expires Nov. 25) 1920 •

“(Notary Seal)

' ‘ ‘ Personally - appeared before me,' the undersigned authority, R. E. Rose, who having been sworn, says that he is the State Chemist of Florida, duly qualified and conn missioned as' such, that the foregoing record of Sample No.-- and the analysis of the s'ámé as herein, is true and correct.

' “R. E. Rose, State Chenii'st

Sworn to and Subscribed befofe níé; this 13 day of May 1918 .......

‘•‘Laura Smith; Notary Public,

“My commission expires'Nov. 25, 1920

"'“(Notary Seal)'”

In Kimbro v. Bradshaw, 68 Flá. 12, 65 South. Rep. '868, the Court held that it was not error to exclude certificates of analyses vérified by the Assistant State Chemist because the statute (Sec.‘ 1271, Gen. Stats. 1906') making such certificates competent evidence required them to be verified by the affidavit of the State Chemist, and it was probably upon the authority of .that case that the certificates offered in this case were excluded. The certificates under consideration were made before Chapter 7939, Acts of 1919 (Section 2405 Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920) authorizing such certificates to be verified by the officer making fhe ¿nalyses, was enacted.

[56]*56It will be noted that the certificates or records of the analyses made in this case are verified by the affidavits of the State Chemist as the statute requires. Sec. 1271 Gen. Stats. 1906.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 So. 401, 82 Fla. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleischer-v-virginia-carolina-chemical-co-fla-1921.