Heinberg Bros. v. F. Cannon & Co.

36 Fla. 601
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 Fla. 601 (Heinberg Bros. v. F. Cannon & 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
Heinberg Bros. v. F. Cannon & Co., 36 Fla. 601 (Fla. 1895).

Opinion

Taylor, J.:

F. Cannon & Co., the appellees, who were merchants, of Gralveston, Texas, sued the appellants, Heinberg Brothers, merchants, of Pensacola, Florida, in the Circuit Court of Escambia county in assumpsit. The declaration contained two counts: (1) indebitatus assumpsit in the sum of $673.47 for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendants at their request; and, (2), for goods, etc., bargained and sold by the plaintiffs to the defendants. The defendants plead to the first count of the declaration, that they never were indebted except in the sum of $35; and, to the second count, that by the terms of their contract with the plaintiffs the plaintiffs were to deliver the goods, wares and merchandise, but deliv[603]*603ered only a part thereof, to-wit: $35. Issue was joined upon those pleas, the cause was submitted to a jury upon the proofs and the result was a.verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $491.61. From this judgment the defendants below appeal here.

A synopsis of the case made by the proofs becomes-necessary to an intelligent understanding of the assignments of error. The defendants, who were dealers in groceries, liquors, produce and provisions at Pensacola, Florida, entered into the following written contract of purchase of oats with the plaintiffs:

“Pensacola, 5, 29, 1889.
We have this day sold Mess. Heinberg Bros, two (2) cars Texas average oats at thirty-two (32) cents, f. o. b. wharves, Pensacola, Fla. Terms cash, payable in Gaveston, Texas, or New York exchange. Above sale-subject to securing transportation. Limit of shipment three weeks.
F. Cannon & Co., per W. R. Hutches, Heinbeg- Bbos.
Signed in duplicate. Cars average 1100 to 1300 bu.”'

The oats, 479 sacks of about four bushels each, called for by this contract, -were shipped by the plaintiffs to the defendants in due time by the schooner “Helene” from Galveston, Texas, together with several other consignments, of nearly equal amounts, to several other consignees in Pensacola; and, besides-being the kind, quality and amount called for by the contract, were in good order and condition when-shipped at Galveston. The schooner Helene in which they were shipped arrived at Pensacola on Saturday,, June 29th, 1889, between 3 and 5 o’clock p. m., and moored at Saunders’ wharf, or Palafox wharf, located [604]*604at the end of the same street on which the defendants’ store was situated, and only some four or five blocks distant from their store. The captain of the schooner, at once on his arrival on Saturday evening, went to the defendants’ store and notified them of his arrival with their consignment of oats, and that he would be ready to discharge and deliver them on the Monday morning following.- On the following Monday morning the vessel began discharging her cargo on the wharf. The defendants on the morning of that day hauled away thirty-eight sacks of their oats, but stopped hauling at noon and refused to accept or receive any more of their consignment, and on the first of July they telegraphed to the plaintiffs at Galveston that the goods were damaged by exposure to rain and that they rejected them. The other parties in Pensacola, to whom oats of the same quality and kind were consigned by the same vessel and from the same plaintiffs, had no difficulty in getting, their oats into their stores without damage from the weather. The proof is somewhat conflicting as to the state of the weather during the discharge of the ship’s cargo of oats. The plaintiffs’ witnesses testifying that with the exception of one or two short light showers the weather continued free of rain until the Thursday following the vessel’s arrival at Pensacola; while the defendants’ witnesses insisted that it rained .continuously the whole time except a few hours on Monday morning after the vessel’s arrival. The oats were in perfect condition until after being discharged from the vessel onto the wharf. There is no proof that any of them were discharged from the vessel while it was raining, but the unloading was done between such showers of rain as there were. One set of witnesses testifying that these were light and at several hours apart until Thursday after the vessel ar[605]*605rived; the others testifying that the weather was continuously stormy and remaining very hard at .times. The captain of the vessel protected the oats on the wharf with sails and tarpaulins during the rain showers, and insisted each day that the defendants should come and take them away. There was no warehouse on the wharf where the oats were discharged. After remaining upon the wharf until the following week the oats were sold at auction for account of all persons concerned by the agent of the consignors, and, after deducting all expenses, netted $142.40.- The testimony of the purchasers at the auction sale is to the-effect- that while the oats, even after their long exposure on the wharf, appeared externally to have been damaged considerably by the rains, were in fact but very slightly damaged. One of these purchasers, a livery stable man, who purchased four hundred sacks at the auction sale, testified that he lost only about one sack from being damaged out. of the four hundred that he bought. The testimony is further conflicting-as to the reasons why the defendants would not receive, their oats. The plaintiffs’ witnesses testifying that the reasons assigned by the defendants, at the time the-captain of the vessel notified them to take them away on Monday were, that it was inconventient for them to haul them on that day, it being the first of the-month and settling day, and that their drays were busy, and that they could not get drays except at twenty-five cents per load, and they could not afford to pay that price, and that they really did not want the oats anyway. These reasons the defendants deny having assigned, but ground their refusal to accept wholly upon the weather in which the oats were discharged from the vessel. The plaintiffs’ witnesses, on the other hand testified that the weather was-such that [606]*606the defendants could easily, with anything like promptness and despatch, have safely stored all of their oats without injury or damage, as did the other consignees of oats in Pensacola out of the same cargo, some of them nearly equal in amount to the defendants’ consignment. The thirty-eight sacks of oats that the defendants received and hauled away they did not offer to return, but appropriated them to their own use.

Upon this state of facts the court, after instructing the jury that they were the sole judges of the evidence, and of its weight and of the credibility of the witnesses, and that it was their duty and province to reconcile conflicts in the evidence if they could, gave them the following charges: (1) “This is a suit instituted by the plaintiffs against the defendants to recover the value of a large quantity of oats that' were sold by the plaintiffs to the defendants under a written contract. It is the province of the court to construe that contract, and the court construes that contract to be this: That the plaintiffs in this case undertook to sell some oats to the defendants to be delivered by a certain time, and they were to be of average Texas quality, and they were sold at a certain price, thirty-two cents a bushel, and were to be delivered at Pensacola upon a wharf in Pensacola.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Fla. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinberg-bros-v-f-cannon-co-fla-1895.