Patterson v. Orangeburg Fertilizer Co.

108 S.E. 401, 117 S.C. 140, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 1, 1921
Docket10681
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 108 S.E. 401 (Patterson v. Orangeburg Fertilizer 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
Patterson v. Orangeburg Fertilizer Co., 108 S.E. 401, 117 S.C. 140, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 145 (S.C. 1921).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice

Cothran.

This is a double action against a fertilizer company and its agent, on the one part, and a bank, on the other. The alleged cause of action against the fertilizer company and its agent is' for $27,000 damages growing out of the fact that certain fertilizers sold by the company to the plaintiff, and used by him in the cultivation of his crop in the year 1919, contained a deleterious ingredient, which, instead of being a benefit to the crop, poisoned the vegetation and ■caused serious loss of production. The character of the action is a matter of controversy and will be considered hereinafter.

The alleged cause of action against the bank is based upon the fact that the notes given by the plaintiff to the fertilizer company for the fertilizer have been assigned by the company to the bank, and that the notes are void, the consideration therefor having failed by reason of the facts, which are made the basis of the alleged cause of action against the fertilizer company and its agent; and the prayer for relief against the bank is that the notes be surrendered for cancellation, and that the bank be enjoined from attempting to enforce the collection of them.

At the close of the testimony, the Circuit Judge, on. motion, directed a verdict in favor of the defendants the fertilizer company and its agent upon the cause of action for damages, and also directed a verdict in favor of the defend *144 ant bank against the plaintiff for the amount due upon the several notes.

The plaintiff has appealed from the judgments entered in conformity with the directed verdicts.

We may first dispose of the exceptions assuming error in directing a verdict in favor of the bank upon the notes which the plaintiff gave for the fertilizer, and which were assigned before maturity to the bank. It is questionable whether the bank, not having set up the notes as a counterclaim, and not having demanded judgment thereon, was entitled to a judgment in this action; but no question is raised in reference thereto, and we pass it by. The notes were negotiable promissory notes transferred to the bank for value before maturity in good faith. The bank, so far as the evidence shows, had no notice of any infirmity in the notes, or of any defense thereto which the plaintiff may have had growing out of the facts alleged in the complaint or otherwise. Suspicious circumstances, if they existed, are not sufficient to charge the assignee of such commercial paper with notice. A long line of decisions sustain the action of the Circuit Judge. They are cited in the case of Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. Smith, 110 S. C. 462, 96 S. E. 690, 11 A. L. R. 1274. These exceptions are accordingly overruled.

1 We may also dispose of the exceptions assigning error in directing a verdict in favor of the defendant Cave, agent of the fertilizer company. There is nothing in the evidence that would connect him with the alleged conduct of the fertilizer company. These exceptions are accordingly overruled.

This leaves for consideration only the alleged cause of action against the fertilizer company, which will require a somewhat extended statement of the facts of this case and of the principles of law applicable thereto.

*145 The facts of the case fairly deducible from the evidence, and with all inferences taken most favorably to the plaintiff, as the rule requires that we take them, in reviewing the direction of a verdict against him, are as follows:

In February, 1919, the Orangeburg Fertilizer Company entered into a contract with the plaintiff, to sell and deliver to him for the 1919 crop 100 tons of ammoniated fertilizer (with the privilege of increasing or decreasing that quantity). at a certain price per ton, the guaranteed elements of which were 8 per cent, phosphoric acid, 3 per cent, ammonia, and 3 per cent, potash, usually designated 8-3-3. Seventy-five tons were delivered under this contract, the price being $4,858.79, which was closed by three notes of $1,619.59, $1,619.60, and $1,619.60, dated May 22, 1919, and due, respectively, October 1; 1919, October 15, 1919,' and November 1, 1919, with interest from date at 6 per cent, per annum.

On April 25, 1919, -before the account was closed by notes, the plaintiff procured samples of the fertilizer to be drawn at his place'by a representative of Clemson College - for analysis. The analysis was dated June 27, 1919, and • showed: Phosphoric acid, 8.45 per cent.; ammonia, 3 per cent.; and potash, 2.82 per cent. A subsequent analysis made on September 30, 1919, showed , anhydrous borax, 1.46 per cent., though by more accurate methods developed later this result was shown to have been “much too high” in the opinion of Dr. Brachett, chief chemist of the college, and should be reduced about one-third, -leaving it ,98 per cent.

During the war with Germany the supply of potash from - that country, which was the main source of supply,-was not available, and other sources of supply were sought. One of them was Searles Take, in California. The potash from Germany contained very little, if any, borax, while that from California contained that element in considerable *146 quantity. It was known as Trona potash, and was distributed largely over this section in 1919, and used extensively by all manufacturers of fertilizers.. It was the only source of supply, practically, and was used in the manufacture of the fertilizer sold to the plaintiff.

The plaintiff applied the fertilizer to his crops with disastrous results: “A short timé after I put down that application, the cotton began to wilt, and it shed off everything in the shape of fruit except that that had developed into bolls, and it continued to do that from then on.” On 64'acres of his best land-, which usually produced from'100 to 125 bales -of cotton, .he gathered- 24 bales. On' 90 acres of land cultivated by share croppers upon which they had gathered 135 bales, they gathered 26.

There was abundant evidence tending to show that anhydrous borax was a poisonous and destructive agency to vegetation; that it was1 present in an appreciable degree in the fertilizer manufactured by the defendant and sold to the plaintiff; the analysis showed 1.46-per cent., which, possibly reducible by later methods, would amount to nearly 10 pounds per acre in an application of 1,00Q pounds of fertilizer; that the maximum amount of this .poisonous substance without danger to- plant life would be 2 pounds per acre. ■ ' '

The evidence therefore tended to show: (1) ‘ That the plaintiff purchased fertilizer guaranteed to conform to the formula 8-3-3; (2) that hé applied it to his land in the cultivation of the crop of 1919; (3) that the fertilizer so bought and used contained an appreciable quantity of borax; (4) that the fertilizer containing the quantity of borax which an analysis of the fertilizer- so bought and used showed that it contained was' deleterious, if not destructive of plant life; (5) that his crops in the year 1919 were seriously injured, resulting in a- considerable loss of production.

*147

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 401, 117 S.C. 140, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-orangeburg-fertilizer-co-sc-1921.