J. T. Fargason Co. v. Dudley

294 S.W. 6, 173 Ark. 1148, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 2, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 6 (J. T. Fargason Co. v. Dudley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. T. Fargason Co. v. Dudley, 294 S.W. 6, 173 Ark. 1148, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 277 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This action was begun in the chancery court of Poinsett County b}^ J. T. Fargason & Company, a corporation at Memphis, Tennessee, against W. A. Dudley and Robert Dudley, individually, and as a copart-nership under the name of W. A. Dudley & Brother. It was alleged that, in March, 1920, during the existence of the partnership, it shipped to the plaintiff, cotton factors at Memphis, Tennessee, twenty-one bales of cotton to be sold by the plaintiff for the defendant; that the partnership was afterwards dissolved and the business continued in the name of W. A. Dudley. Plaintiff alleged that it advanced to the defendant on such cotton the sum of $1,700 and that certain charges had accrued against the cotton in the way of interest, freight, storage and insurance, amounting in the aggregate to $376.70. It was alleged that the plaintiff sold the cotton during 1921 and received from the sale the sum of $595.41, which amount deducted from the amount due the plaintiff by defendant left a balance of $1,481.29, for which the plaintiff prayed judgment.

The cause, on motion of the defendant, was trans-ferrod to the circuit court, where the defendant, Robert Dudley, answered, disclaiming gny interést in the partnership at the time of the alleged transaction between the plaintiff and W. A. Dudley, defendant. W. A. Dudley answered, denying all the allegations of the icomplaint except that the plaintiff was a corporation. He made his answer a ci'oss-eomplaint, and alleged that he shipped the cotton to the plaintiff under a strict guaranty that the same should be sold by the plaintiff for at least 26 cts. per pound; that he was influenced by this guaranty to ship the cotton to the plaintiff. He alleged that the twenty-one bales of .cotton shipped to the plaintiff contained 8,930 pounds; that, under the terms of the contract by which the cotton was shipped, the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant in the sum of $621.80, being the difference between the amount for which the cotton was actually sold and the guaranteed price. Defendant prayed that plaintiff be required to account to him for the surplus sum which would have been obtained by selling the cotton at the guaranteed price, amounting to $621.80, for which the defendant prayed judgment.

The plaintiff answered the cross-complaint of W. A. Dhclley, denying its allegations. A motion was made by the plaintiff to remand the cause to the chancery court, which was granted. A motion was then made by the defendant to retransfer the cause to the circuit court, which was granted, to which last motion the plaintiff duly excepted.

The testimony of plaintiff’s bookkeeper during the transaction was to the effect that Dudley Brothers shipped to the plaintiff, in 1920, twenty-one bales of cotton. The plaintiff advanced to W. A. Dudley on this cotton $1,700, and the interest on this, together with the freight, storage and insurance charges, amounted to $2,076.70. The plaintiff sold the defendant’s cotton during the year 1921 for the sum of $595.41, leaving a balance due the plaintiff in the sum of $1,481.29. The cotton was shipped to the plaintiff by the defendants to be sold by the plaintiff as a cotton factor; the plaintiff was not buying the cotton, but merely acting as a commission merchant or factor. The witness explained in detail the method of cotton factors in handling cotton, which we deem unnecessary to set forth.

W. A. Dudley testified that one C. C. Deyerle came to his place of business at Truman, Arkansas, in 1920, representing the J. T. Fargason Company. Witness shipped cotton on his solicitation to that company. Witness told Deyerle that he had some cotton that he wished to dispose of, and asked Deyerle what cotton of that grade would bring, and Deyerle stated from thirty cents up. Witness told Deyerle that he could get 26 cents for it, and Deyerle replied, “You ship that cotton to J. T. Fargason & Company and I guarantee that you get 26 cents or better for-it.” The plaintiff moved to exclude this testimony of Deyerle on the ground that there had been no showing that Deyerle had any authority to solicit cotton for the Fargason Company on which to make any price, or to guarantee any'price. The court overruled the motion. The witness identified and introduced in evidence the correspondence between himself and the plaintiff. In a letter of defendant to the plaintiff dated February 24, 1920, the defendant stated, “as per conversation with your Mr. Deyerle, we are shipping you today eight bales of cotton as per the attached bill of lading, and we are drawing on the Bank of Truman for $600. Please sell tills cotton for our account and render statement.” Plaintiff answered this letter on February 27 in which it thanked the defendant for the shipment and stated that the defendant’s draft would be paid on presentation, and that, when the cotton arrived, it would place the samples on plaintiff’s tables and sell the cotton as soon as possible. -Witness further testified that Deyerle had solicited shipments of cotton from witness for the Fargason Company numbers of times before, and again told witness that, if the witness would ship this cotton to the plaintiff, he would guarantee that plaintiff would get 26 cents for the lower grade and more for the other. The plaintiff renewed its objection to the testimony, which objection the court overruled. Witness further testified that he was in Memphis in July, 1920, saw the plaintiff, and informed it that witness did not ship its cotton over there to keep — that he wanted it sold. Witness wrote plaintiff letters to that effect. He did not write th'em objecting to their holding it, but simply told the plaintiff that he shipped it to sell and not to hold. Later, in September, plaintiff sent witness a statement for storage and freight, which witness paid in October, 1920. Witness did not raise any question or say anything about the fact that the cotton was not sold, because witness was relying on his agreement with Deyerle. Witness received several reports of sales, beginning March 24, 1920, showing that plaintiff had sold his cotton at six cents per pound; after receiving several reports, witness wrote plaintiff a letter on June 9,1921, in which he stated that the sales were not satisfactory; that he had advised the plaintiff at the time of shipment of his cotton to sell the same, and that, if plaintiff had sold when notified to do so, the cotton would have brought a much greater price, and he could not accept the sales as reported. In reply to the above the plaintiff wrote to the defendant stating, in effect, that it was impossible for it to sell the cotton at the time defendant wrote for it to sell, and that it had not been able to move it until the present time. It stated that defendant’s letter had reached plaintiff in time to stop the sale of one bale, and that the part of the cotton' of defendant which plaintiff had sold had been delivered and placed to defendant’s credit. The letter concluded as follows: “If yon will send us your check to pay your account, we will hold the cotton as long as you say. We cannot hold cotton indefinitely, and especially so when there is no prospect of immediate advance in the market. Please write.us what you want to do and what you want'us to do. We are always glad to cooperate with you to the best interest of all concerned.’’

The witness further testified that he did not offer to pay the account and take the cotton because he did not have the money.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 6, 173 Ark. 1148, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-t-fargason-co-v-dudley-ark-1927.