Mathieu v. George A. Moore & Co.

4 F.2d 251, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 928
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedFebruary 13, 1925
DocketNo. 16643
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 F.2d 251 (Mathieu v. George A. Moore & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathieu v. George A. Moore & Co., 4 F.2d 251, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 928 (N.D. Cal. 1925).

Opinion

PARTRIDGE, District Judge.

This is an action for breach of contract to accept and pay for 200 tons of Indo-Chinese sugar, and also for the sum of 15,000 piastres ($19,500), money expended by plaintiff for defendant’s account. . The defendant has filed a cross-complaint, seeking to recover $75,000 damages for the breach of another sugar contract, and for $1,456,33 money advanced. The contract upon which the suit was brought consisted of certain cablegrams between the plaintiff in .Saigon and the defendant in San Francisco. Those cables refer to the subject-matter as “sucre indigene brun,” the meaning of which was the subject of much controversy at the trial,; plaintiff contending that the words meant the rough brown sugar produced ordinarily in Indo-China,-and defendant insisting that it meant the kind of sugar shown by certain samples alleged to have been exhibited to it.

Previous to April 24, 1920, there had been certain negotiations with regard to In-do-Chinese trade, through the medium of one Schroder, and which will be referred to hereafter. But on April 24th plaintiff sent a cable in cipher to defendant, with reference to these preceding transactions,. and ending with these words: “Should you wish to buy sugar in the future, kindly give instructions on new basis.” On April 28th plaintiff again cabled defendant: “Response votre cable vingtdeux Aril, confirme mon precedent due vingtquatre Marche aetuel sucre .bausse considerable dernieres transactions avee Chine sur base troiscents piastres tonne sucre indigene brun pourrais aetuellement. vous assurer deuxcents tonnes .en double sac prix deuxcentvingt piastres fob Saigon. Si acceptez eablez fonds.”

The cable from defendant referred to was one of April 27th, in cipher, ending thus: “What can you offer sugar, quantity, date of shipment, loading port? Quote price f. o. b. shipping points.-' Can you arrange tonnage, or shall we arrange?” On May 3d plaintiff cabled: “Sugar 200 ' tons, double bags, shipment May-June f. o. b. Saigon, 220 local currency per ton. Loading here. Am trying hard to supply tonnage. Can supply large quantity sugar shipment June-July at the rate of 220-260 local currency at the end of crop.”

On May 3d, defendarlt answered: .“Replying to your 200 tons brown native sugar, we accept at 220 piastres per ton f. o. b. Saigon. We have opened credit by cable Chartered Bank for $50,000. When can you ship? Confirm this. Make further offer.” May 17th, the plaintiff confirmed, as follows: “I confirm order for 200 tons. Letter of credit transferred to the Chartered Bank by cable. Does not state name of bankers through whom credit is opened. Please remedy immediately, and cable. Urgent. Probably can supply next month or earlier 200 tons more about at the same conditions 220 to 260. Open new credit 50,000 gold' dollars. Do utmost to obtain 1,000 tons additional in Annam at the same prices. If you could, give me more liberal credit permitting advances, as the purchases must be paid in cash in Annam and forwarded here for shipment. To facilitate, willing to endeavor secure freight and insurance your risk.”

On May 31st plaintiff shipped 115.05 long tons on the steamer Santa Cruz, arriving in San Francisco on June 29th, and on July 28th shipped 63.67 long tons, arriving here per the West Niger on September 24th. On July 19th defendant cabled plaintiff: “We’ reject shipment account, quality and single bags. Cannot accept further shipment.” On the trial, however, it was admitted that the sugar was in double bags; so that, so far as this phase of the case is concerned, the defense is one of quality only.

The first question, therefore, is the subject-matter of the contract. It was for “sucre indigene brun”; that is, “native [253]*253brown sugar.” Tbo defendant claims that these words had a meaning defined and limited by certain samples exhibited by one Schroder in San Francisco. It is, of course, elementary that there must be a meeting of minds upon this subject, as well as any other part of the contract. It would not be sufficient that defendant, when he contracted for “native brown sugar,” had in mind the sugar indicated by the samples shown him by Schroder, unless the plaintiff! also knew that that was the intent. In other words, there must he a showing that Schroder acted for plaintiff in exhibiting samples to defendant, and that both parties understood that, when the phrase “native brown sugar” was used, it meant sugar of the kind indicated by the samples.

Schroder, however, left San Francisco fully five months before this contract was made. There is no real evidence that he acted for plaintiff in any way; and, indeed, defendant cabled to plaintiff: “New business on account do not know quality. Cannot buy more until you send sample.” The record, and the correspondence are full of expressions by defendant showing that it had really contracted for a quality of sugar of which it had no knowledge whatsoever. The record, also, is full of evidence to the effect that the year 1920 was a time of frenzied speculation in sugar (as well as other commodities), and that there was a mad scramble for sugar everywhere.

It is, of course, a fact that toward the end of that year there was the greatest fall in the prices of staples in the history of civilization. And on the whole I cannot avoid the conclusion that this contract, on the part of the defendant was a mere “leap in the dark”—or at least, if they relied upon the samples shown by Mr. Schroder, they did so without the knowledge of the plaintiff. And not only does the state of the sugar markets of the world in 1920 bear out this conclusion. The price of the goods in this contract shows clearly that it was for an extremely low grado of sugar. Defendant wrote plaintiff on July 29th: “On sampling the sugar, we were very much surprised to find such extremely poor quality, which could not in any way be classified as fair average. In the one shipment, there were throe different lots: No. 1, polarizing 77.8; No. 2, 72.1; and the mixed, 74.5 or an average of 75⅜, which is lower than the poorest Philippine sugar, known as Muscavados, ever received here, polarizing about 82 or 83 degrees.”

But the price of Philippine “muscavados” in New York in May was 16% to 19% cents e. i. f. The contract price between plaintiff and defendant, c. i. f. San Francisco, was loss than 10 cents a pound. It could scarcely be said, therefore, that the contract was for anything except an exceedingly low grade of sugar.

The evidence shows that the natives in Indo-China produce the cane on small plantations. They have crude crushing plants, operated by cattle, for crushing the cane. The juice is then boiled and run into large molds, where it hardens into cakes. One witness, a young man whose father was in business in Saigon, testified that, after this sugar was gathered up by the “compradors,” it was again boiled in Saigon and other centers, and a certain amount of the impurities removed. This witness said that he saw the sugar which arrived here on the Santa Cruz, and it was “first run” sugar. The validity of his judgment on, this point, however, is seriously affected by the fact that this sugar was in small cakes, tending at least to show that' it had been subjected to the second process.

Moreover, a sample taken by defendant, and produced by it in court, appeared to the witness to be “second run,” and was in fact quite clean. In any event, the evidence of those who saw the sugar in Saigon before shipment is quite conclusive to the effect that it was f. a. q. of tho season, and of the kind ordinarily exported from Indochina.

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4 F.2d 251, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathieu-v-george-a-moore-co-cand-1925.