Lewis v. Southern Mills, Inc.

53 F. Supp. 443, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2730
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 14, 1944
DocketNo. 304
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 F. Supp. 443 (Lewis v. Southern Mills, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Southern Mills, Inc., 53 F. Supp. 443, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2730 (W.D.N.C. 1944).

Opinion

TIMMERMAN, District Judge.

This cause was tried by the court without the aid of a jury at the October, 1943, term of this court. Counsel for the parties-were allowed to file briefs and proposed findings of fact and law. These have now been filed and have been considered, but neither of the proposed findings has been-adopted. Hereinafter the plaintiff may be-referred to as “Lewis” or “plaintiff”, the defendant Southern Mills, Inc., as “Southern Mills”, the defendant M. M. Rudisill as“Rudisill”, and the two defendants as “defendants”.

Pleadings

The complaint originally contained five-alleged causes of action, but before the trial the second and third causes of action, were withdrawn. We are now concerned with only the first, fourth and fifth.

The allegations of the first cause of action may be summarized, omitting formal parts, as follows:

Lewis and Southern Mills entered into a, contract on May 5, 1941, whereby Southern Mills agreed to sell and Lewis agreed to buy 85,000 pounds of yarn, at the agreed price of 39^ per pound, to be delivered in lots of from 2500 to 3000 pounds, per week. See plaintiff’s “Exhibit 13,” Contract No. 266, for full details. This-contract may be referred to hereinafter as-the “old contract”, or simply as “Contract 266”.

Lewis and Southern Mills entered into another contract on March 23, 1942, in substitution for and cancellation of Contract 266, whereby Southern Mills agreed [445]*445to sell and Lewis agreed to buy 75,000 pounds of yarn, at the agreed price of 62% cents per pound, to be delivered in lots of 2000 pounds per week, commencing within three to four weeks after execution of contract. Rudisill personally guaranteed the performance of this contract by Southern Mills. See plaintiff’s “Exhibit 14”, Contract No. 2488, for full details. This contract may be referred to hereinafter either as “new contract” or as “Contract 2488”.

Rudisill, acting for himself and Southern Mills, and knowing that Southern Mills would sustain a loss on Contract 266, set about to get relief therefrom, since about 40,000 pounds of the yarn contracted for had not been delivered prior to March 1, 1942. Rudisill approached Lewis about the last mentioned date and offered $12,000 for the cancellation of said contract. Lewis refused the offer, stating that he was more interested in yarn, that he was much in need of it. Rudisill then proposed Contract 2488 and agreed to guarantee the performance thereof by Southern Mills, if Lewis would release his, Rudisill’s, associates in the ownership of the stock of Southern Mills from any moral responsibility for the performance of Contract 266, stating that he was on a trade for the purchase of the stock of his associates in Southern Mills and that their release from such moral responsibility was one of the conditions of the trade to be made by him. That Lewis accepted Rudisill’s last proposal which resulted in the execution of Contract 2488 and the cancellation of Contract 266.

Rudisill, acting for himself and Southern Mills, induced the cancellation of the old contract and the substitution of the new contract by Rudisill’s promise to guarantee Southern Mills’ performance of the new contract and by fraud, in that there existed on the part of the defendants a secret intent not to perform the conditions of the new contract and to so manipulate the affairs of Southern Mills as to make it impossible for Southern Mills to perform said new contract or to respond in damages for a breach thereof, which said secret and fraudulent scheme was carried into effect by the selling of all of Southern Mills’ machinery and equipment immediately after the new contract was executed.

The price of yarn was at all times, after March 1, 1942, 78‡ per pound. Twenty-two thousand pounds of yarn were shipped on account of the new contract between the effective date thereof and May 7, 1942, and none thereafter. Plaintiff did not know of the alleged fraudulent scheme or the execution thereof until after he had agreed to the new contract. The defendants notified the plaintiff by letter on June 25, 1942, that they were cancelling Contract 2488, but at all times plaintiff insisted on full compliance therewith.

The plaintiff claimed the breach of both of said contracts and damages for each breach, $15,600 for the breach of Contract 266 and $2,015 for the breach of contract 2488, or a total of $17,615.

The allegations of the first cause of action are unnecessarily long and repetitious, and replete with epithets, hence the foregoing is intended only as a very brief summary thereof.

The fourth and fifth causes of action, denominated alternate causes of action, are the same, except that in the fourth damages in the sum of $7,950 are asked against Southern Mills for the alleged breach of Contract 2488 and in the fifth a like sum is asked against Rudisill for the same alleged breach. In these alleged causes of action, the allegations of the first cause of action, paragraphs 1 to 11, inclusive, are adopted as a part thereof.

The defendants filed a joint answer. In it they admitted the execution of both contracts, 266 and 2488; also the giving of notice of cancellation of the new contract on June 25, 1942. They alleged that the causes of said cancellation were plaintiff’s representation that he could buy similar yarn to that in question for 2% cents less than the contract price, or for 60 cents per pound, and that he had a ten-day option to purchase such yarn, and further that the plaintiff had failed and refused to pay for yarn already delivered to him as required by said contract.

The defendants specifically denied all allegations of fraud or lack of good faith in the negotiations leading up to' the execution of the new contract or in the performance of the conditions required of them by said contract, as well as the allegations concerning plaintiff’s alleged losses by reason of the cancellation of Contract 2488. They alleged that the plaintiff could have, and was in duty bound to have, minimized his alleged loss and damage. In fact the defendants denied all material allegations essential to a recovery.

[446]*446In addition to answering the complaint, the defendants alleged a counterclaim against the plaintiff for the agreed price of three lots of yarn delivered to plaintiff and not paid for. Their total demand was for $910.43. There being no responsive pleading served or filed, judgment was entered against the plaintiff for said sum.

The foregoing is but a brief, and maybe incomplete summary of the defendants’ answer, but it is thought to be sufficient for the purposes hereof.

The Facts

The following distinct conditions of Contract 2488 'should be noted, viz:

“Agreed terms 2% 10 days.”
“Delivery: 2000 lbs. weekly beginning three to four weeks.”
“Price is adjustment on balance of contract #266 and a new contract of 35,000 pounds. The acceptance of this contract cancels poundage balance on order #266.”
“Any complaint must be made in writing within ten days after, the receipt of the goods by the purchaser and before the same have been used. The mill has the privilege of replacing within a reasonable time any material not complying with this contract.”
“The seller shall not be liable for any special or consequential damages.”

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Bluebook (online)
53 F. Supp. 443, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-southern-mills-inc-ncwd-1944.