G. I. Frazier Co. v. Owensboro Stave & Barrel Co.

172 S.W. 652, 162 Ky. 301, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 22, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 652 (G. I. Frazier Co. v. Owensboro Stave & Barrel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. I. Frazier Co. v. Owensboro Stave & Barrel Co., 172 S.W. 652, 162 Ky. 301, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 63 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

[302]*302OPINION op the .Court by

Judge Hurt

Affirming.

The Gr. I. Frazier Company was the appellant, doing business as a stave dealer, with office in Nashville, Tennessee. Hiram Blow and Company was a partnership, which was engaged in dealing in barrel staves, with offices in Nashville, Tennessee, in the same building in which Gr. I. Frazier had his office. Y. J. Blow had control of the active management of the affairs of Hiram Blow & Company, and H. B. Carter was also a general manager for Hiram Blow & Company. The Owensboro Stave & Barrel Company was a corporation, engaged in the business of a cooper at Owensboro, Kentucky.

Y. J. Blow was the president of the Owensboro Stave & Barrel Company, and had control of the management of its affairs as its general manager until about the first of July, 1910, when the directors at a meeting removed him from the management and invested E. S. Dinwiddie with the business of general manager of the affairs of the corporation. Some time previous to the shipping of the staves in controversy, V. J. Blow, acting for Hiram Blow & Company, and E. S. Dinwiddie, acting for the Owensboro Stave & Barrel Company, which hereafter Ave will call the appellee, made an arrang-ement whereby it was agreed that BEiram Blow & Company would furnish all of the staves, similar to the ones in controversy, at $1.50 per set (a set being a sufficiency of staves to make a barrel which was 81 inches in circumference), which were needed by the appellee, over and above what it could buy from other sources. Toward the latter part ■of July, 1911, Hiram Blow & Company gave Gr. I. Frazier Company, whom we will hereafter call the appellant, an order to ship to the appellee the two carloads of staves in controversy, at Owensboro, Kentucky, which appellant did, consigning them to himself. The appellant bought the staves from the Brown Stave Company, at Monroe, Louisiana. When appellant received the bills of lading he endorsed them “in blank” and delivered the bills to Hiram Blow & Company, and at the same time charged the staves to Hiram Blow & Company upon his books. Hiram Blow & Company then delivered the bills to the appellee, and at the same time sent it an invoice, in which the price of the staves was stated as being $1.75 per set. At the same time Hiram Blow & Company charged the staves to appellee upon its books, and credited appellant with them. The staves arrived at [303]*303the railroad station at Owensboro about the last of July or the first of August, 1911. The negotiations between Hiram Blow & Company and appellee were thence forward conducted through the medium of letters dispatched by the mails. On August 3rd Hiram Blow & Company wrote to appellee in substance acknowledging receipt of appellee’s communication in regard to the staves, and asking it to “get a report from Joe on this, as Mr.Frazier is exceedingly anxious to have it and there is no reason why Joe can’t make some kind of a report and we can settle with Frazier and fight the matter of price out between you.” What the communication was that the above letter was in response to does not appear.

On August 7th appellee wrote to Hiram Blow & Company that Joe had shown Dinwiddie the bills of the staves, and “it could not pay more than $1.50 per set for them. Please advise if the above is satisfactory before we unload them.” It appears that between this date and August 14th that Hiram Blow & Company had written appellee and requested it to send them “some acceptances.” This letter does not appear in the evidence.

On the 14th day of August appellee wrote Blow &. Company, saying: “Enclosed please find our acceptances on the three last cars shipped us. You will note we have not inspected these cars or gotten the freight amounts to deduct, which will be charged to your account.” There were two of the acceptances, one for the' sum of $1,159.50, which was endorsed that it was in payment of staves in car No. 24128, I. C., and the other acceptance was for the sum of $1,140.00, and endorsed that it was for the payment of staves in car No. 25797 Y. S. & P. These were the ears containing the staves! in controversy. These acceptances were drawn in favor of Blow & Company, and promised the payment of the amounts respectively, the one thirty days after date, and the other forty-five days after date. Blow & Company accepted said “acceptances’’and at once negotiated them, and thereafter they were paid by appellee, the one on September 14th and the other on September 29th. Instead of Blow & Company entering the acceptances as payment for said two ears of staves, as directed by ap-pellee, it credited them upon appellee’s general account. Upon the same day, August 14th, upon which appellee mailed the acceptances to Blow & Company, Blow & [304]*304Company wrote to appellee saying, in substance, that appellee’s communication of the 3rd “would have had more prompt attention, but Carter has been away from Nashville, but on the staves I should like to have a full and complete report of just what the staves are that you have received, and I am quite positive that the price at which they are billed is not at all unreasonable, and that it would be a good idea for you to have some of them K. D. & S. staves on hand.” Further: “I had Mr. McQuay write you a day or two ago asking you to send us some acceptances, which I trust you will do, and, if it is convenient for you to pay part cash, it will be quite acceptable to us. We will have no trouble in settling all matters, when we can get together for this purpose.”

On the same day H. B. Carter, general manager of Iiiram Blow & Company, reported to appellant that the staves shipped to Owensboro were not satisfactory to appellee, when appellant said to him, “Mr. Carter, see .what they will allow you for the staves, and if we can, let us adjust it.” On the same day Blow & Company wrote appellant in substance that the staves at Owensboro had been rejected, and that they desired to turn the staves over to appellant “so you may arrange a settlement on same.” Further: “I am sorry that you have had this trouble on these shipments, but before we would want to take any further responsibility in regard to the staves you would have to make proper settlement with the Owensboro Stave & Barrel Company, and, therefore, we think it best to reject these staves.” On the 15th day of August Blow & Company wrote ap-pellee acknowledging receipt of its letter of the 14th, and saying that they desired a statement and report on the staves, and that they were crediting the acceptances on account and not against any particular car, and to get the report requested as quickly as possible, as they had rejected the staves to the party shipping, and do not consider the staves “our property until we come to some further adjustment.” Further: “I am going to be in Louisville on Saturday, and I am anxious to see you in reference to the Owensboro situation, and, in fact, a, number of matters.” On August 21st appellee wrote to Blow & Company, in substance, saying that the first time Dinwiddle is in Owensboro that he will attend to the taking of the staves, and enclosed freight receipts paid for the staves, in the sum of $200.00, and says: [305]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 652, 162 Ky. 301, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-i-frazier-co-v-owensboro-stave-barrel-co-kyctapp-1915.