H. W. Benedict & Co. v. Inland Grain Co.

80 Mo. App. 449, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 187
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 Mo. App. 449 (H. W. Benedict & Co. v. Inland Grain Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. W. Benedict & Co. v. Inland Grain Co., 80 Mo. App. 449, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 187 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

SMITH, P. L

Statement. The plaintiffs were commission merchants engaged in selling hay on commission at New Orleans, and the defendant was an incorporated commission company engaged in buying and selling hay at Kansas City. About the middle of January, 1896, defendant shipped to the plaintiffs three car loads of hay to be sold on commission on the New Orleans market. At the time of the shipment the defendant drew three drafts amounting to $275 against said consignment which were paid by the plaintiffs. The hay was not sold until the tenth of August following.

The account of sales reported showed that it brought $10 per ton. After deducting .advancements and charges, there appeared to be due plaintiffs $202.01, the payment of which was demanded by plaintiffs and refused by defendant, and to recover which this suit was brought.

The defendant by its answer pleaded a counterclaim to the effect that the plaintiffs had negligently held the hay shipped to them by defendant and that if they had exercised ordinary diligence they could have sold the same at a profit-, and that in consequence of the negligence of the plaintiffs in the premises defendant had been damaged, etc. The plaiutiffs in their reply alleged as an excuse for the delay in making sale of the hay a drooping market, occasioned by the supply exceeding the demand, etc.

There was a trial and judgment for defendant for $21.

[453]*453The plaintiffs assign as error the action of the court in giving’ an instruction for defendant which told the jury that it was the duty of plaintiffs to sell the hay in question within a reasonable time after receiving the same, unless instructed by the defendant not to do so, and if the jury believe from the evidence in the case that the plaintiffs, by reason of negligence or carelessness on their part and without any instructions from defendant not to sell said hay, failed to sell the same within a reasonable time after it was received by them, and further believe that the defendant sustained damage by reason of such delay in the sale of said hay, then plaintiffs became liable to defendant for the amount of such damage, and it is the duty of the jury to take the same into consideration in arriving at a verdict in this case; and if the jury find from the evidence in the case that the amount of such damage was equal to, or in excess of, a sum equal to the difference between fhe price for which such hay was sold bythe plaintiffs and the amount of the several sums advanced by them to and for defendant, including freight, commission and other charges stated in their petition, if reasonable, then the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover in this action and the verdict will be for defendant on the cause of action alleged in the petition. And that although the jury may believe that at the time defendant shipped the hay in question, or soon after, it instructed the plaintiffs to exercise their own judgment and discretion as to the sale of said hay, yet that fact did not authorize said plaintiffs to keep said hay on hand unsold an unreasonable length of time, and if the jury believe that plaintiffs negligently and carelessly failed to sell said hay within a reasonable time after receiving such instructions from defendant, then they are liable to defendant for such damage (if any) as the jury may believe defendant sustained, by reason of such failure to sell said hay within a reasonable time.

The ground of objection urged against the action of the court in giving defendant’s said instruction is that the issue [454]*454of negligence is thereby submitted without any authorizing evidence. It is conceded that the plaintiffs held without sale the defendant’s consignment from the latter part of January, 1896, until the tenth of August, following. The uncontradicted evidence shows that between the date of the receipt of the consignment by plaintiffs and the twenty-third of May following, the defendant received from the plaintiffs, through the mails, weekly prices current, issued by the latter, which showed that there was, during this period, very little fluctuation in the prices of hay in the New Orleans market. • The plaintiffs’ price current of January 26, 1896, was as follows:

“Gentlemen:
We quote you to-day (timothy) fancy, $18; choice, $17, $17.50; strict prime, $16 to $16.50; good prime, $15 to $15.50; ordinary prime, $13 to $14; prairie, $8; Texas, $9; Kansas, $9 tp $10. Tours truly,
“LI. W. Benedict.”

The plaintiffs testified that the board of trade quotations were wholly fictitious; that there were two sets of quotations, one for the west and the other for the city deals, and that there was a difference of about $3 a ton in favor of city dealers. These fictitious and misleading quotations, it would seem, were from time to time sent by the plaintiffs to defendant without explanation. But if the three dollar fiction be deducted from the price per ton, as quoted by plaintiffs, still the price which the defendant’s hay was reported to have brought falls far short of what it ought to have brought, even if only prime quality. The testimony of both the producer of the hay and Box, who purchased it for defendant, was that it was in quality choice. These witnesses were experienced in the production, handling and grading of hay. * The plaintiffs’ witness testified that defendant’s hay was only prime, which in the New Orleans market seems to have been worth less by some $2 per ton than choice hay. It may have been when defendant’s hay was sold that owing to its long detention and exposure [455]*455to the atmospheric influences prevailing at the place of consignment, it did not grade as high as it would have had it been disposed of within a reasonable time after its receipt by plaintiffs.

Notwithstanding that, when the defendant’s hay reached the place of consignment the supply on the market was in excess of the demand, a fact which it appears was well known to plaintiffs, yet plaintiffs continued to hold the same, well knowing, too, that the new crop was about to arrive to still further augment the existing over-supply. The plaintiffs knew, or ought to have known that the new crop would be preferred to the old and that in consequence of that the price of' the old would continue to droop. Yet, as experienced dealers in hay, the plaintiffs held on to the defendant’s consignment until, if their account of sales is to be credited as correct and bona fide, there was practically little or no demand for old hay of any grade.

It appears that the defendant wrote the plaintiffs several letters requesting report of sales, and to one of these the plaintiffs answered giving as an excuse for their failure a dull and drooping market. To this the defendant on February 15, 1896, replied that, “you probably have done the best that could be done with the hay. It is in your hands and you will act on your best judgment as to time to sell and at what price.” The defendant after this wrote plaintiffs one or more letters but received no response. Finally on August 1, the defendant wrote plaintiffs saying, “We certainly think that you have had ample time to make returns and can not understand this method of doing business.” On the twenty-fifth of the same month the plaintiffs responded inclosing account of sales showing result previously stated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Mo. App. 449, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-w-benedict-co-v-inland-grain-co-moctapp-1899.