Gilmore Puckett Co. v. Glenn

86 So. 864, 124 Miss. 123
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1920
DocketNo. 21437
StatusPublished

This text of 86 So. 864 (Gilmore Puckett Co. v. Glenn) 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
Gilmore Puckett Co. v. Glenn, 86 So. 864, 124 Miss. 123 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee brought suit against the appellant for certain lumber claimed to have been delivered by Glenn upon a public highway under contract providing as follows:

“You may enter our order for fifty thousand feet of two-inch pine cut in dimensions of 2x4 to 2x12 at fifteen-dollars per thousand, delivered on Pike Road about one-half mile east of Leverett’s milk One car of one-inch board about sixteen thousand feet at eighteen dollars, delivered [131]*131on Pike. Stock to be delivered when dry. Terms cash less two per cent. In consideration of this sale the Gilmore Puckett 'Company has advanced me two hundred fifty dollars, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and I agree to let the proceeds of the lumber go towards paying the two hundred fifty dollars advanced.”

The lumber called for by this contract according to the plaintiff’s testimony was delivered upon the Pike Road at the designated point. That is to say, the lumber was placed upon the Pike Road at the designated point. The appellant had the lumber trucked from the point on the Pike to their yards at Amory, Miss. There was a difference between the plaintiff’s testimony as to what was delivered on the Pike Road and the defendant’s testimony as to what was received at its yards in Amory. The appellant, the defendant, rendered certain statements from time to time to the plaintiff, the appellee, and paid money according to its statement. Subsequent to the execution of the contract set out above, there was a letter addressed to plaintiff by the appellant, defendant, in the following language:

“Mr. J. L. Glenn, Quincy,, Mississippi — Dear Sir: We are in position to haul the rest of your lumber now and if you can get it out to the road would like to move it while the roads are dry. And if your stock is not as dry as you would like for it to be send it on anyway. It would help you up on price some to offset the extra cost of hauling.
“Yours very truly,
“Gilmore Puckett Co.,
“By L. E. Puckett.”

After the writing of this letter some lumber was delivered and paid for at the rate of twenty-one dollars per thousand; the appellant’s statement showing the lumber at this price and at other' prices, and the appellee’s or plaintiff’s figures showing the amounts delivered or left upon the highway.

[132]*132When the lumber was moved plaintiff; contended, that he had not been paid a sum due of five hundred twenty-seven dollars and eighty-two cents. The lumber claimed to have been delivered and not paid for, according to the plaintiff, amounting to four thousand three hundred and three feet at twenty-one dollars per thousand; twelve thousand eight hundred seventy-eight feet at eighteen, dollars per thousand; and fourteen thousand four' hundred twenty-nine feet at fifteen dollars per thousand. The plaintiff’s books and memorandum did not show with precision the exact amount of each kind of lumber delivered, as he did not keep his books so as to show delivery by pieces, but he arrived 'at his demand by showing the total of number of feet loaded on his wagons and delivered and got the average or basis on a comparison with the statements of the appellant, which, were rendered on a basis of pieces received.

It was the contention of the plaintiff that he was entitled to pay for the lumber delivered by him upon the Pike at the designated place. While the appellant contended that the lumber was not considered delivered under the contract until it had been received at the lumber .yards, inspected, and checked out. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant moved the court to exclude the evidence as to the alleged shortage, first because there is no proof in the record that the lumber was ever accepted, tallied, or measured or received by the Gilmore Puckett Company; and, second, because the sale and delivery was never completed in contemplation of law until there was an acceptance and an opportunity to measure and ascertain the amount of lumber for which the buyer paid; third, because under the order for the lumber and under the dealings between the plaintiff and the defendant it is shown that both understood, as the law implies, that the lumber must be delivered to the Gilmore Puckett Company at their yards in Amory and paid for there, the delivery on the Pike Road east of Leverett’s sawmill being nothing more than a step in the direction of [133]*133delivering the lumber and the sale not being complete until it was measured by the buyer according to the usage of trade at Amory, where it ivas sold and paid for; and, fourth, because there is no proof to show that the Gilmore Puckett Company received any lumber except that for which they rendered statements and paid. On this motion the court ruled as follows:

“I will hear from the other side. There is only one thing in my mind that this case is entitled to go to the jury on, but I will hear from you gentlemen.”

And after argument of counsel on the proposition the court rendered the following ruling:

“The motion is overruled in part and sustained in part. The court is of the opinion that under all the testimony in the case that the only question that the plaintiff is entitled to go to the jury on is whether or not the defendants actually received more lumber than they paid for.”

Thereupon the defendant introduced evidence of its president showing the amount of lumber received at the yards according to the ^statement rendered by its lumber checkers at the yard, and also the lumber checker as to the amount of lumber he checked from the truck bringing the lumber from the Pike, and the testimony of the person who hauled the lumber from the Pike to the yards, which testimony showed less lumber received at the yard than the plaintiff claimed to-have delivered on the Pike Eoad at the point designated. At the conclusion of all the evidence the defendant requested a peremptory instruction, the ground of the motion being because there is no proof before the jury whatever that the defendant ever received any lumber other than what was paid for and could not have, as shown by the proof, and for all the other reasons shown at the close of their testimony and, further, because there is no proof that the hauler, Orr, removed any of Glenn’s lumber and delivered it to anybody else except the Gilmore Puckett Company, for all of which the Gilmore Puckett Company accounted.

[134]*134In ruling upon the motion for a peremptory instruction the court said:

“For the reason that the plaintiff’s testimony shows that he delivered a- certain amount of lumber on the road and all the testimony shows that no one else except defendant’s hauler' hauled any of it away from there as far as anybody knows, and the plaintiff has testified that he asked the defendant to go out through the lumber with him and help him try to locate it, and defendant failed and refused to do this, and it is for the jury to pass on and not the court. Under all the circumstances in this case it is a question for the jury to pass on as to what became of the lumber if it ever ivas there. It is all for the-jury to pass on.”

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Related

Hart v. Livermore Foundry & Machine Co.
72 Miss. 809 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1895)
Cole v. Bryant
73 Miss. 297 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1895)
Tallahatchie Lumber Co. v. Thatch
78 So. 154 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
86 So. 864, 124 Miss. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-puckett-co-v-glenn-miss-1920.