Flowood Corp. v. Chain

152 So. 2d 915, 247 Miss. 434, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 314
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1963
DocketNo. 42643
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 So. 2d 915 (Flowood Corp. v. Chain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowood Corp. v. Chain, 152 So. 2d 915, 247 Miss. 434, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 314 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Kyle, J.

C. W. Chain, plaintiff in the court below, recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court of Covington County against The Flowood Corporation, defendant in the court below, for the sum of $4,500, as damages for breach of a verbal contract for the growing of chickens. From that judgment the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.

The plaintiff, C. W. Chain, alleged in his declaration that on or about March 14, 1960, the defendant and the plaintiff entered into a verbal contract whereby the plaintiff agreed to grow the defendant’s chickens on a commercial basis in consideration of a commission to be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff at a stipulated commission per pound and per chicken for all chickens grown by the plaintiff, individually, and for a stipulated commission for all of the defendant’s chickens grown by subcontractors under the plaintiff’s supervision; that the terms and conditions of the verbal contract were set out in full in a written unsigned contract, a copy of which was marked Exhibit “A” and was attached and made a part of the plaintiff’s declaration. The plaintiff further alleged that, in addition to the terms and provisions of the agreement set out in the form contract attached as Exhibit “A”, it was verbally agreed and understood by and between the plaintiff and the defendant as a part of the consideration of the contract, that the contract would be [438]*438irrevocable from the date the same was entered into on March 14, 1960, until May 1, 1961, and as long thereafter as it was necessary to grow to maturity all of the baby chickens on hand on May 1, 1961, whereupon the unsigned contract was modified accordingly.

The plaintiff further alleged that the contract and agreement set out in the exhibit was not signed by the plaintiff or the defendant for the reason that the plaintiff was not sure that the language of the contract was sufficient to make the same irrevocable as set out above; that the defendant and the plaintiff, however, agreed upon the terms and conditions of the typewritten contract verbally entered into the performance of the contract, except that the plaintiff and the defendant agreed verbally that the typewritten contract was modified and amended so as to make it an irrevocable contract as stated above; and that the parties continued to operate in the growing of chickens under the contract until the last week in November 1960.

The plaintiff further alleged that, in order to carry out the provisions of the contract, the plaintiff expended the sum of $3500 in the purchase of a used GMC truck and a new truck body, and the sum of $8500 for the construction of a chicken house, and the sum of $375 for the purchase of spray equipment and $95 for a lease of an unloading spur track at a railroad siding. The plaintiff further alleged that, from the date the contract was entered into, the plaintiff stored the defendant’s feed at the plaintiff’s warehouse in the Town of Mount Olive, grew the defendant’s chickens, transported the defendant’s feed and medication to the chicken growers under subcontracts, and the plaintiff individually grew and placed approximately 15,000 baby chicks per week for the defendant; that the plaintiff entered into subcontracts and grower’s agreements with eight chicken growers in the community, and in all respect fulfilled the terms and conditions of the verbal contract until [439]*439the last week in November 1960, when the defendant without cause failed and refused to deliver to the plaintiff baby chickens in the Town of Mount Olive, and failed and refused to furnish and deliver feed and medication to the plaintiff’s warehouse in the Town of Mount Olive, for the purpose of growing additional chickens under the terms and provisions of the verbal contract.

The plaintiff further charged that the defendant wilfully and wrongfully breached its contract in the last week in November 1960, in failing to continue to furnish chickens and supplies to the plaintiff as stated above, and that as a direct proximate result of the defendant’s breach of the contract the plaintiff had suffered losses aggregating the sum of $7200 in commissions which the plaintiff would have collected on chickens grown by subcontractors, and losses aggregating the additional sum of $2500 in commissions which the plaintiff would have received from chickens grown by the plaintiff individually, had the provisions of the agreement been complied with. The plaintiff therefore sued and demanded judgment for the sum of $9700.

The defendant admitted in its answer that the defendant and the plaintiff had entered into an arrangement whereby the plaintiff was to grow the defendant’s chickens on a commercial basis for a consideration, as specified in the form contract attached as an exhibit to the plaintiff’s declaration, and the defendant admitted that the plaintiff grew chickens for the defendant until the last week of November 1960 under an oral agreement between them, the terms of which were substantially the same as the terms set forth in the plaintiff’s exhibit. But the defendant denied that the parties agreed that such arrangement would be irrevocable, or that the defendant agreed to furnish chickens to the plaintiff at any time in the future. The defendant denied that it had entered into the contract alleged in [440]*440the plaintiff’s declaration; but the defendant admitted that from March 14, 1960 until the last week in November 1960, the plaintiff had grown chickens for the defendant. The defendant denied that, without cause, it had failed and refused to deliver to the plaintiff baby chickens after the last week in November 1960, or that the defendant had failed and refused to deliver feed and medication to the plaintiff for the growing of additional chickens. The defendant averred in its answer that it had been forced to halt operations with the plaintiff because of the failure of the plaintiff to fulfill the terms and conditions of the agreement under which they were operating.

The defendant averred in its answer that the plaintiff failed to provide adequate housing for the growing of chickens as contemplated in the contract, or to properly feed, care for and attend to the chickens furnished him by the defendant, and that the failure of the plaintiff to properly perform the contract became so gross that in November 1960 the defendant was forced to withdraw its offer to contract with the plaintiff, and the defendant ceased furnishing chickens and other property to the plaintiff because of his failure to accept the contract tendered him and because of his failure and inability to perform the terms and conditions of the contract. The defendant filed with its answer a special plea in bar, in which it alleged that the contract sued on was a verbal contract which could not .have been performed, and was not intended to be performed, within fifteen months from the making thereof, and accordingly was in violation of Section 264, Miss. Code of 1942, Rec., and no action could be brought thereon against the defendant for that reason.

The case was tried before a jury at the July 1962 term of the court.

The plaintiff, C. W. Chain, testifying in his own behalf, stated that he was engaged in the mercantile [441]*441business in Mount Olive, and tbat he handled machinery, appliances, seed, feed and fertilizer, and that he raised chickens for himself prior to the time that he entered into the contract with Flowood; that on or about March 14 or 15, 1960, he attended a meeting at Durward Corley’s farm near Mize, Mississippi, with L. L.

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Gibbons v. Associated Distributors, Inc.
370 So. 2d 925 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 2d 915, 247 Miss. 434, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowood-corp-v-chain-miss-1963.