Petroutsa v. H. C. Schrader Co.

80 So. 486, 76 Fla. 574, 1918 Fla. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 21, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 80 So. 486 (Petroutsa v. H. C. Schrader Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petroutsa v. H. C. Schrader Co., 80 So. 486, 76 Fla. 574, 1918 Fla. LEXIS 370 (Fla. 1918).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

H. C. Schrader Company, a corporation, hereinafter called the plaintiff, brought an action in the Circuit Court for Manatee County against D. Petroutsa, who will be referred to as the defendant in this opinion, upon eight promissory notes aggregating the sume of seventeen hundred dollars and ranging in dates from August 27, 1914, to May 13,1915. The notes dater August, September and October were payable five months after date, those dated November, December, January, March and May were payable on demand. All the notes bore interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from date. Those payable five months after date aggregated the sum of seven hundred dollars, and those payable on demand one thousand dollars.

The defendant pleaded payment. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant seeks here to reverse the judgment upon writ of error.

There are many assignments of error, seventy-seven in number, involving rulings of the Court upon the admission and rejection of evidence and the giving and refusing of instructions to the jury.

The single question presented by the record as we read it is one of the application of payments.

The evidence consists mainly of documentary evidence composed of the eight promissory notes, a statement of an open account between the plaintiff and defendant, on account sales of celery sold by the plaintiff for the account of defendant, and some correspondence between the plaintiff and brokers or commission merchants to whom the celery was shipped by plaintiff after taking it over from the defendant. The defendant was a truck farmer to whom the plaintiff made certain advances to enable him to mature and harvest a crop of celery.

[576]*576Their transactions began so far as the record discloses with a written contract dated August 27, 1914, and closed according to a statement of account by plaintiff on March 3, 1916, when the defendant was credited with a freight overcharge amounting to four dollars and forty cents. The item next appearing upon the account and preceding the last, was a credit to the- defendant of fifteen dollars and seventy-five cents, and dated September 17, 1915; the items next preceding were in April, 1915. So it may be said that the account was practically closed April 30, 1915, when the defendant was credited with returns upon a car of -celery in the sum of fifty dollars.

The contract between the parties which the defendant introduced in evidence was as follows:

“AGREEMENT
“This agreement made and entered into this 27th day of August, A. D. 1914, by and between H. G. Schrader Company of Jacksonville, Florida, party of the first part, and James Petroutsi of Shell Beach, Manatee County, State of Florida, party of the second part;
“WITNESSETH:
“That for and in consideration of the sum of Three Hundred. advanced to second party by the said first party, said sum being advanced to aid second party in the business of planting, maturing :and harvesting twenty-five acres of celery during fall of 1914, and spring of 1915, on lands of second party at Shell Beach, Florida. It is mutually agreed as follows:
“That first party shall make other and further advances as shall be deemed necessary, the total sum thereby not exceeding the sum of One Thousand Dollars.
[577]*577“That second party shall secure each advance made and to he made by his promissory note.
“That first party shall retain from the proceeds of said crop all sums advanced and to be advanced hereunder, together with a brokerage of ten cents per package for handling same.
“In witness whereof the said parties have hereunto set their hand's and seals the day aforesaid.
“Signed, sealed' and delivered in our presence.
“H. C. Schrader Company, (Seal)
“By J. O. Alsobrook, as agent (Seal)
“D. Petroutsa, (Seal)

The plaintiff contended that under this agreement it carried an open account with the defendant to whom were charged money advances for which notes were not taken, celery crates amounting to three shipments of two hundred and seventy-seven dollars and fifty cents each, telegrams, losses on celery shipments, etc., and that under the agreement it advanced other sums of money to the defend ant for which the notes sued upon were taken. That as the celery produced by the defendant was shipped by the plaintiff and sold to his account it applied the proceeds to the payment of the sums due on the open account and the returns were not sufficient to pay the notes also.

The defendant contended that the moneys advanced for which notes were not taken were advanced under an oral agreement for growing tomatoes which he was to consign to plaintiff for sale; that the crating material was not ordered by him at all, and that the returns from, the celery shipments were to be applied to the payment of the notes and not upon the open account.

The contract limited the amount to be advanced for “planting, maturing and harvesting” the celery to one [578]*578thousand dollars, each advance to he evidenced by the defendant’s promissory note, and the proceeds of the celery crop were to be applied to the sums “advanced and to be advanced” under the written agreement.

We have carefully read the evidence as it is incorporated in this record and given it careful consideration, with the result that we think the judgment should be reversed.

The burden of proof which was upon the defendant under his plea of payment shifted when it appeared from the evidence that the defendant had shipped enough celery that the acknowledged proceeds from the sale of which were sufficient under the contract to pay the notes dated in August, September, October, November, December and January, and aggregating one thousand dollars, and it became the duty of the plaintiff, that is to say the burden then rested upon it to show that there was another indebtedness of the defendant to which the plaintiff had the right to and did apply the proceeds of the celery sales. We think that this burden which the law casts upon the plaintiff was not met, but on the contrary it failed to sustain it by any substantial evidence.

In the first place, the contract between the parties directed the application of the proceeds of the sale of the celery to the payment of the notes given under the agreement. The plaintiff was to retain from the proceeds of the celery crop all sums advanced under the agreement, and each advance was to be. evidenced by the defendant’s note. While it appeared that other moneys were advanced by the plaintiff to the defendant for which notes were not taken, it does not appear that the contract was modified as to the application of the proceeds of the celery crop. A witness for the plaintiff understood that the advances of money made in February, March and April, for which no notes were taken, were made under the agree[579]

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 486, 76 Fla. 574, 1918 Fla. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petroutsa-v-h-c-schrader-co-fla-1918.