J. T. Faragason Co. v. Pitts

281 S.W. 143, 220 Mo. App. 135, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 64
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 281 S.W. 143 (J. T. Faragason Co. v. Pitts) 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
J. T. Faragason Co. v. Pitts, 281 S.W. 143, 220 Mo. App. 135, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 64 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

— Plaintiff brought suit to recover an alleged balance of $1255.70 due it for money advanced defendant on certain con *137 signments of cotton. Defendant, by bis answer and counterclaim, charged plaintiff with failure to exercise due diligence in the sale of the cotton shipped to it as a cotton factor; that if plaintiff had sold said cotton within a reasonable time after it received same or if plaintiff had sold said cotton when defendant demanded that it do so, that defendant would have due him over and above the amount which he had drawn and all other expenses, the sum of $2,382.50; for which he asked judgment. The reply was a general denial. On trial to a jury the verdict was for plaintiff on its petition in the sum of $1,085.70 and for defendant on his counterclaim in the sum of $1470.90, and on the whole ease in the sum of $385.20. Judgment was entered accordingly and plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence shows that plaintiff, during the year 1919, 1920 and 1921, was located at Memphis, Tenn. Defendant, during that period, was a cotton grower residing in the vicinity of Portageville, Missouri. On January 17, 1920, defendant shipped from Portageville to plaintiff, five bales of cotton; on January 31, 1920, he shipped plaintiff three bales of cotton, and on February 9, 1920, he shipped plaintiff two bales. All shipments were made on consignment and a sight draft for an advancement accompanied each shipment. Plaintiff paid these drafts, amounting in all to the sum of $1288.50. No order for immediate sale was given by defendant at the time the shipments were made or received. The cotton was not sold immediately. Plaintiff offered evidence of a custom in the cotton market at Memphis, whereby samples of all cotton received were placed on display according to grade upon their arrival in the warehouse and that this custom was followed as to plaintiff’s cotton; that there was no market for low grade cotton during the years 1920 and 1921, and that the buyers were scarce; that the Memphis market was flooded with low grade cotton and some 280,000 bales of the 1919 crop were held over until 1921; that defendant’s cotton was low grade; that it was unable to dispose of the cotton at the fair market price on account of the abnormal condition of the market; that it sold defendant’s cotton as soon as possible and for the best price obtainable. None of defendant’s cotton was sold until February, 1921, and the last in September, 1921, the prices ranging from 5 to 8 cents per pound. On the question of the condition of the Memphis market during 1920 and 1921, plaintiff was strongly supported by the testimony of some eight Memphis cotton buyers, each of whom had purchased some of defendant’s cotton through plaintiff. The principal issues thus made relate to the kind and quality of defendant’s cotton and the condition of the Memphis cotton market as to such cotton during the years 1920 and 1921. In regard to the quality and grade of his cotton, defendant offered the testimony of a number of Portageville cotton men. The man who ginned the eotton, said it was “average cotton” for *138 that time of year. (January, 1920). Other witnesses testified defendant’s cotton'“run anywhere from ordinary to low middling.” It seems that “ordinary” is a very low grade cotton and “low middling.” is of higher grade but not the best. The highest and best grade is called “strict middling.” Defendant testified his cotton was “good, average, clean cotton” from which he had saved the seed.

On the issue of the condition of the Memphis market during the year 1920, defendant was permitted, over plaintiff’s objection, to introduce in evidence the testimony of certain Portageville cotton men that they had- been able to sell their cotton through other Memphis cotton factors at prices ranging from 30 cents per pound to 70 cents per pound. In this connection defendant introduced in evidence, over plaintiff’s objection, a great number of sales slips showing sales of cotton on the Memphis market during the early part of 1920. This cotton was sold by the Farmers District Gin Company and the Delisle Supply Company, both of Portageville. There was nothing on the sale slips to indicate the grade of the cotton sold except possibly the price. Plaintiff strenously objected to the introduction of this evidence on the ground that no showing was made that the cotton sold was of the same or similar quality, fiber and grade as that of defendant. S. E. Smith testified in regard to the Farmers District Gin Company’s cotton -sales, above referred to, as follows: “We sold, I suppose, two or three hundred bales. The paper you show me is an account of sales we made through Wilson-Ward Company in the spring of 1920. The cotton was sold on January 5, 1920. That was shipped -on the 31-st of December, 1919. I couldn’t say I was acquainted with the Fred Pitts cotton ginned at Portageville by George Allen, but I knew about the grade of cotton that was being ginned at that time. I saw the cotton that was being ginned at that time by that gin. I know where Fred Pitts lived. I know the character or kind of cotton raised around Potageville in 1919, about the same as come from other parts of the country. In the early part of the season the cotton was a little better. Here’s some that was in 1920, was received on the 3rd day of January, it was about the class, I suppose, as this; it goes about low middling.”

As to the sale of the Delisle cotton, Guy Delisle testified that his company shipped a lot of cotton to Memphis to be sold that year.

“I was not acquainted with the Pitts cotton. I didn’t see it at all.” He further -stated he did not-know the grade of cotton which his company sold January 7, 1920, at forty cents. “It was good cotton. It was ginned early. I suppose it would be about the same grade of cotton as other ginned there at the same time.” We have carefully read the record in this case and find no other evidence tending to show a comparison between the Farmers District Gin Company and Delisle cotton, and that of defendant. There are some general state *139 ments that defendant’s cotton was about the averagé, but the evidence does not go far enough to show the cotton covered by the sales slip was raised under similar conditions, picked at or near the same time, or of like quality as that of defendant.

In the ease of Bailey-Ball-Pumphrey Company v. German, 247 S. W. 484, this court held that evidence of sales of cotton of similar grade to that then in controversy, shipped to the cotton market at about the same time by other parties, was admissible for the purpose of showing that the plaintiff in that case was negligent in failing to sell defendant’s cotton. We adhere to that rule for the reasons there stated, but believe that where such evidence is admitted, there should be substantial proof that the cotton shown to have been sold was of similar grade and sold on the same market. In other words, to afford a reasonable basis for comparison and to guide the jury in determining whether or not plaintiff, as factor, failed to exercise due and proper diligence in representing defendant in the sale of his cotton, all conditions connected with the sale of other cotton, permitted to be shown in evidence, should be reasonably proven to be similar in every respect to the conditions confronting plaintiff when attempting to sell defendant’s cotton. [Fargason & Co. v. Coleman, 272 S. W. 1003.]

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Bluebook (online)
281 S.W. 143, 220 Mo. App. 135, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-t-faragason-co-v-pitts-moctapp-1926.