Givens v. Vaughin-Griffin Packing Co.

1 So. 2d 714, 146 Fla. 575, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1197
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 11, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1 So. 2d 714 (Givens v. Vaughin-Griffin Packing 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
Givens v. Vaughin-Griffin Packing Co., 1 So. 2d 714, 146 Fla. 575, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1197 (Fla. 1941).

Opinion

Brown, C. J.

This writ of error brings for review final judgment finding in plaintiff’s favor and awarding it $2,000.00 damages.

On November 25, 1937, the Vaughn-Griffin Packing Co. contracted to purchase the 1937-1938 citrus crop of M. H. Givens. The packing company paid the seller $2,000.00 at the time of making the agreement, and paid for each box of fruit that was picked according to the contract rate. Approximately 6680 boxes of fruit had been picked when a freeze occurred, damaging part of the remaining fruit. A controversy arose between the seller and the packing company as to interpretation of certain provisions of the contract with reference to the damaged fruit. Thereafter, between the date of the freeze and the expiration date of the contract none of the fruit was picked by the packing company. The seller refused to extend the expiration date of the contract. The packing company, upon the theory that the seller’s conduct amounted to rescission or an offer to rescind the contract, sued at law on the common counts, to recover the $2,000.00 paid in advance on the’ contract.

*580 The declaration contained counts for: (1) Money payable by the defendant to the plaintiff for money received by the defendant for the use of the plaintiff. (2) Money paid by the plaintiff for the defendant at his request. (3) Money lent by the plaintiff to the defendant. (4) Money found to be due from the defendant to plaintiff on accounts stated between them.

To the declaration defendant filed pleas of (1) never was indebted as alleged; (2) did not promise as alleged; (3) that defendant has not rescinded any citrus fruit contract with plaintiff and (4) that defendant is not indebted for any interest whatever. There were no pleas of set-off or recoupment.

Upon plaintiff’s motion to strike, the court ordered the second, third and fourth pleas of defendant stricken.

The cause went to trial upon the four common counts and the first plea of the defendant. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff, fixing its damages at $2,000.00, upon which verdict judgment was entered.

Motion for new trial was denied, and writ of error was taken to the final judgment.

The only plea of “never was indebted as alleged” on which the parties went to trial presents the general issue on the common counts. Sec. 4332, 4333 (1) C. G. L., 1927; Poppell v. Culpepper, 53 Fla. 515, 47 So. 351. This plea operates as a denial of those matters of fact from which the liability of the defendant arises. Rule 25 of the Common Law Rules. ■ Under this plea any negative but no affirmative defense may be made. Crandall’s Florida Common Law Practice, p. 225. Set-off, being an affirmative matter of defense, must be specially pleaded. See Sec. 4332, 4333 (6) C. G. L., 1927. In the absence of such a plea of set-off or recoupment the defendant could not introduce evidence of any matter of set-off, because not in issue, and the *581 court could not allow any set-off to be calculated in arriving at the amount set in the final judgment for plaintiff’s recovery.

The whole case, in so far as this writ of error is concerned, turns on whether there was any ground for recovery on the common counts. The common counts could be used only where there was an implied contract, or where there was no contract, as where it had been rescinded; or where an express contract had been fully performed by plaintiff, so that the only thing remaining to be done is the payment of money. Hazen v. Cobb-Vaughn Motor Co., 96 Fla. 151, 117 So. 853.

The contract between the Vaughn-Griffin Packing Company and M. H. Givens, the subject of this litigation, contained the following provisions:

“The seller hereby acknowledges receipt of the sum of $2,000.00 above specified, as a first payment on said fruit, which amount shall be supplied on the total purchase price and to be deducted in making final settlement for said fruit.
“The purchaser shall have up to and including the 15th day of December, 1937,'to remove fruit from trees, fruit to be paid for each morning after following picking day, in which to remove s'aid fruit from said grove or groves and same may be removed by the purcháser at any time prior to said date and the purchaser shall have free ingress and egress over, upon and across the said grove or groves, with such teams and trucks as are necessary to remove the fruit from same, and the right to use all such ladders and boxes and paraphernalia as. may be required in picking said fruit.
“In case the buyer is prevented from shipping said fruit any time prrior to the date of removal by strikes, embargoes, quarantines, the act of God, or any other matter or *582 thing, beyond his control, the time for removing and shipping said fruit shall be extended a length of time equal to such length of time as he was prevented from moving same by the happening of any, either or all of such events.
“It is agreed that this contract covers all fruit, which shall is ready to remove same within the time specified herein. Bad ammoniated, lemon scab, silver skin, frost damage or badly wind damaged fruit not included in this contract.
“The seller agrees that this contract containes the entire agreement relating to the purchase mentioned herein, and that he has received a true copy thereof.”

The whole theory of plaintiff’s case is that by reason of defendant’s conduct the contract has been rescinded, or such conduct amounted to an offer to rescind, which plaintiff accepted and acted accordingly, and that plaintiff was therefore entitled to recover on the common counts the $2,000.00 paid defendant when the contract was executed.

The record shows that the contract was executed on November 25, 1937. Thereafter 6,680 boxes of the estimated 8,000 to 10,000 boxes of fruit were picked and paid for at the contract price. Then a freeze occurred on the nights of December 6 and 7, 1937. Four different fruit groves were covered by the contract, three small groves known as the Columbia, Woodward, Ypsilante, one large grove, known as the Parson Brown. In the Parson Brown Grove considerable fruit was frost damaged, various estimates placing the damage -at 50 per cent to 80 per cent. In the other three groves the damage was estimated at about 10 per cent. The contract, unless extended, expired by its own terms on December 15, 1937. After the freeze, the packing company inspected the groves several times and estimated the frost damage at 75 per cent to 80 per cent in the Parson Brown Grove and about 10 per cent in the three *583 smaller groves, and asked for an extension of time in which to remove the fruit from the Parson Brown Grove, which request was refused by defendant. Defendant insisted that all fruit be picked and removed by the expiration date of the contract; that all the fruit, both frost damaged and good, be picked, and that the Parson Brown grove be picked first.

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Bluebook (online)
1 So. 2d 714, 146 Fla. 575, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/givens-v-vaughin-griffin-packing-co-fla-1941.