Heller, Hirsh & Co. v. Charleston Phosphate Co.

5 S.E. 611, 28 S.C. 224, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 14, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 611 (Heller, Hirsh & Co. v. Charleston Phosphate Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heller, Hirsh & Co. v. Charleston Phosphate Co., 5 S.E. 611, 28 S.C. 224, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 44 (S.C. 1888).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McIver.

On May 21, 1886, plaintiffs and defendant entered into a written contract, whereby plaintiffs agreed to sell to defendant about 400 tons of brimstone upon the following terms, to wit, twenty-two 90-100 dollars per ton, defendant giving its note or notes at 90 days for the amount of the purchase money, “accompanied by warehouse receipts for acid phosphates or South Carolina rock, either or both, stored at buyer’s works, aggregating in value, at the lowest market price, the amount of said note or notes — said material to be held in trust as collateral [226]*226security for the payment of the note or notes given on above contract. It is understood that in the event of any of said notes being unpaid at maturity, sellers are to have the privilege of demanding the merchandise mentioned in the warehouse receipts, and selling same in the market at the best price obtainable.”

On the arrival of the vessel containing the brimstone, in Charleston, plaintiffs tendered the same to defendant, and demanded that defendant should deliver to them its note for the price of the brimstone, together with warehouse receipts for acid phosphate and rock, as specified in the contract. Defendant not being able to furnish warehouse receipts for the articles specified, to an amount sufficient to cover the purchase money of the brimstone, proposed to supply the deficiency by warehouse receipts for other articles. 1 This proposition was declined by plaintiffs, who insisted upon the delivery of warehouse receipts for the articles specified in the contract, and these not being furnished, plaintiffs, upon due notice to defendant, sold the brimstone at a loss of five hundred and eighty-seven 70-100 dollars, for which amount this action was brought by the plaintiffs as damages sustained by them by reason of defendant’s breach of the contract.

The defence was of a twofold character: 1st. That there was no substantial breach of the contract, inasmuch as defendant, though not offering to give the security specified in the contract, did offer good and sufficient security for the payment of the purchase money of the brimstone. 2nd. That all demands which the plaintiffs may once have had against the defendant have been fully dischai’ged by a receipt given by the plaintiffs to the Ashley Phosphate Company for the sum of $1,530.33, declared in said receipt to be in full of all demands against defendant whatsoever.

The testimony tended to show that prior to the time when the contract for the sale of the brimstone above referred to was made, plaintiffs and defendant had been engaged in business transactions for several years, in which defendant consigned to plaintiffs South Carolina ground phosphate rock, to be sold by them on commission, and purchased from plaintiffs various fertilizer materials, [227]*227which, as plaintiffs claimed, resulted in a balance due them by the defendant, at the time the contract for the sale of the brimstone was entered into, of nineteen hundred and seventy dollars and seventy-two cents, but which, as defendant claimed, only amounted to fifteen hundred and thirty dollars and thirty-three cents. After the contract for the sale of the brimstone had been made, and after the brimstone had been resold at defendant’s risk, one of the plaintiffs came out to Charleston for the purpose of obtaining a settlement with the defendant. For that purpose he had an interview with the president of the defendant company, in which he was informed that the assets of the company had been assigned to the Ashley Phosphate Company, with a schedule of defendant’s liabilities, which the last named company had assumed to pay, and that if he would go to Dr. Frost, the president of the Ashley Phosphate Company, he would get his money. He accordingly went to Dr. Frost, who told him that his claim was put down on the schedule furnished him at $1,530.33, and he could only pay that amount. After some discussion between this plaintiff and Dr. Frost, in which the former claimed the $1,970, and the latter declined to pay more than $1,530, it finally terminated in the plaintiffs receiving the $1,530, and executing a receipt, of which the following is a copy :

“Charleston, S. C., 10-2, 1886.
“Received of Ashley Phosphate Company fifteen hundred and thirty 33-100 dollars, being in full of all demands against the Charleston Phosphate Company whatsoever.
“(Signed) Heller, Hirsh & Co.”

There was some conflict of testimony as to what passed between the parties in the interviews between the plaintiff and Dr. Frost— the former asserting that the settlement then made was confined entirely to the claim for $1,970, and had no reference to the claim for damages by reason of the breach of the contract for the sale of brimstone, while the latter seemed to have understood that it was a settlement of all claims which plaintiffs had against the defendant company.

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount of their claim for damages by reason of the breach of the contract [228]*228for the sale of the brimstone, and the defendant appeals upon the' following grounds:

1st. That his honor erred in refusing to charge, as asked by defendant, that the stipulation in the contract, as to the character' of the security to be given, was only incidental and collateral to the purpose, which was to amply and fully secure the debt; and that if the jury find from the testimony that the defendant in good' faith offered ample and sufficient security, in all respects, to secure the same, and that plaintiffs unreasonably declined it, then that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover from defendants any damages for the difference between the contract price and the price {¡it which they sold the goods, which damages they would have been fully protected from by accepting the security offered.

2nd. That his honor erred in refusing to charge, as asked by the defendant, that where a party accepts money or other valuable consideration from a third party, and thereupon gives a receipt in full to his debtor, such receipt operates as a payment and ex-tinguishment of the debt, and the person giving such a receipt' cannot recover.

3rd. That his honor erred in refusing to charge, as requested by defendant, that if the jury found that the receipt held by the Ashley Phosphate Company was signed by Heller, Hirsh & Com-' pany, then the same is binding upon'the latter, apd that no oral testimony can be received to contradict its terms, and that the jury must find in favor of the defendant.

4th. That his honor erred in charging.the jury that no security offered by the defendant, even if double in value that required by the agreement, would suffice, but that the plaintiffs had the right to proceed and sell the brimstone under the contract, and hold-defendants liable for the damages caused by the difference between the contract price and the price of sale; whereas his honor - should have charged that if the defendant offered security amply sufficient to secure the payment of their notes, and to protect plaintiffs from any damage, then that plaintiffs were authorized to rescind the contract and keep the brimstone, but could not hold > the defendant liable for any damage caused by the sale of same.

5th. That his honor erred in charging the jury that a receipt: could always be explained by parol testimony; whereas he should [229]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 611, 28 S.C. 224, 1888 S.C. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heller-hirsh-co-v-charleston-phosphate-co-sc-1888.