Pittman & Harrison Co. v. Hayes

157 P. 1193, 98 Kan. 273, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 10, 1916
DocketNo. 20,200
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 157 P. 1193 (Pittman & Harrison Co. v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pittman & Harrison Co. v. Hayes, 157 P. 1193, 98 Kan. 273, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 67 (kan 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The petition in this action alleged that in October, 1911, the plaintiff, Pittman & Harrison Company, a Texas corporation, entered into a contract to purchase seed corn from the defendant, to be shipped from Topeka to Sherman, Tex., in December, 1911, to supply the plaintiff’s seed trade for the following spring. The contract provided for one carload of “Squaw” corn (720 bushels), at $1.25 per bushel; 500 bushels of “Bloody Butcher” corn at $1.25 per bushel; and 700 bushels of “Calico” corn at $1.10 per bushel. The agreement also provided that the plaintiff should furnish sacks for use in shipping the corn and that an allowance should be made by defendant therefor. The plaintiff furnished the sacks and these were never returned. Neither did the defendant fulfill his contract; but in January, 1912, he shipped to plaintiff 60 bushels of “Squaw” corn, 60 bushels of “Bloody Butcher” corn and 182 bushels of . “Calico” corn, for which plaintiff paid him the agreed price per bushel. Defendant repeatedly promised to forward the remainder, but he never did; and plaintiff alleged damages for which it prayed judgment.

The contract was one of integration, composed of letters and telegrams between the parties.

Defendant answered pleading a compromise and settlement between the parties on account of finfavorable crop conditions which had made it impossible for him to comply with his contract. The answer in part reads:

“And as a final compromise and in full satisfaction thereof it was agreed .that said defendant would ship said plaintiff all the seed corn he then had of the varieties set forth in said correspondence, and that in addition thereto he was to furnish enough more produce of other varieties such as popcorn, cane seed, etc., to make up the balance of a car load. That he did this, as per said agreement, shipped the same to said plaintiffs and that they accepted and received the same as a full compromise and settlement of all matters that existed between them and in lieu of the different varieties of seed corn mentioned in said correspondence.”

[275]*275The answer also pleaded a custom among seed dealers well known to the trade that their contracts for seed delivery were not absolute but dependent on crop conditions; and it further alleged that on the letterheads of the defendant was a printed recital to wit:

“While we exercise the greatest care to have all seeds, plants and bulbs pure and reliable, we sell none with warranty, express or implied, in any respect, and will not in any way be responsible for the crop. All contracts made by us are subject to crop conditions and prices subject to change and further confirmation. If purchaser does not accept seeds on these terms they must be returned at once.”

It was also pleaded that the contract was subject to the terms of this recital, and that owing to poor crops and weather conditions in the country around Topeka, where he expected to procure the seed to fill plaintiff’s order, no seed of suitable quality was raised.

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $24.72, which was the value of the sacks furnished by plaintiff and which defendant had not returned — defendant having pleaded his willingness to confess judgment thereon.

A special question was submitted and answered by the jury:

“1. At the time of the conversation between the defendant and O’Bannon, the president of the plaintiff corporation, in Topeka, in December, 1911, was it understood and agreed between the parties that defendant should ship plaintiff the seed corn he then had and in addition certain other products, and was it understood and agreed that this should be a settlement and adjustment of the claims and demands of plaintiff under its existing contract or contracts, and was this car so received and accepted by plaintiff in such settlement? State facts. Ans. Yes; and it was agreed that the seed corn he had on hand with whatever additional corn fit for seed he would be able to procure should be accepted in full settlement, and same was so received by plaintiff.”

The plaintiff appeals.

1. The first error urged relates to the allowance of an amendment to defendant’s answer in the midst of the trial setting up the recital in defendant’s letterheads quoted above. Unless there is a clear case of abuse of discretion, the allowance of belated amendments is seldom considered so prejudicial as to require a reversal. (Bank v. Badders, 96 Kan. 533, 536, 152 Pac. 651.) Furthermore, the special finding of the jury shows a full compromise and settlement of plaintiff’s. [276]*276claims against defendant, so it can be of no consequence that this belated and superfluous defense was permitted.

2. The same reasoning disposes of the complaint that irrelevant testimony was introduced over objection on the question whether the seed corn which defendant was to furnish was to be from crops raised near Topeka or whether the contract was an absolute bargain to furnish the seed corn, and intended to bind the defendant regardless of local crop conditions.

3. So, too, the objection to the instruction relating to the custom of seed dealers that all their contracts were subject to crop conditions. In view of the compromise and settlement, the correctness of the instruction as to the custom and also the one pertaining to the measure of damages were immaterial.

4. The only serious point in this appeal is the error, assigned in "overruling plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. The ground assigned was based on subdivision 6 of section 305 of the civil code, which reads:

“That the verdict, report or decision was procured by the corruption of the party obtaining it. In this case the new trial shall be granted as matter of right; and all the costs made in the case up to the time of granting the new trial shall be charged to the party obtaining the decision, report or verdict.”

This is a new provision of the code prescribing statutory grounds for a new trial, but it is practically a reiteration of subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 306 of the old code (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 4754). They read:

“First, Irregularity in the proceedings of the . . . prevailing party ... by which the [defeated] party was prevented from having a fair trial.
“Second, Misconduct of the . . . prevailing party.”

The corruption of the prevailing party consisted of the alleged perjured testimony of defendant and his wife, who swore that the correspondence constituting the contract, and which had been lost, was on defendant’s stationery which contained the recital of nonliability under adverse crop conditions. The showing made in support of the motion for a new trial impels us to say that it did not contain anything of the sort. The plaintiff had no opportunity to procure sufficient. [277]*277evidence to show conclusively the falsity of such testimony because the amendment alleging that recital was made during the trial. Some evidence to that effect was hastily collected and introduced. On the motion for the new trial, however, plaintiff produced successive series of the defendant’s stationery under later dates, and showed beyond cavil that this defense was untrue, and that the stationery containing that recital was not printed until long after this contract for seed corn was made'.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P. 1193, 98 Kan. 273, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittman-harrison-co-v-hayes-kan-1916.