Ralston Purina Co. v. Como Feed & Milling Co.

256 F. Supp. 5, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6505
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedJune 30, 1966
DocketNo. D-C-21-60
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 256 F. Supp. 5 (Ralston Purina Co. v. Como Feed & Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ralston Purina Co. v. Como Feed & Milling Co., 256 F. Supp. 5, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6505 (N.D. Miss. 1966).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CLAYTON, Chief Judge.

On judgment heretofore obtained by Ralston Purina Company ,in this court against Como Feed & Milling Company, writs of garnishment were issued against many who plaintiff claims were indebted to Como on accounts receivable. As responsive pleadings came in, these garnishees, all of whom denied the claimed indebtedness, were classified for consideration of consolidation of those within each class for separate trials for each such class. The cases as to twenty-eight such garnishees, which were thought to be in the same posture as to pleadings and issues, were consolidated for trial at the same time to one [6]*6jury. During the course of this trial, the case of one such garnishee (R. E. Spier) was eliminated from the consolidation when it developed that his case was different from those of the other twenty-seven.

. . ., , „ „ .. ., „ i x At the close of all the evidence, Ralston , . ,, ,. , ’ , ,, moved for a directed verdict, but the , . xt. • court submitted the issues to the jury. „ xt. . , .Yerdicts were for the garnishees and judgment was entered thereon.

Now Ralston’s timely filed motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, alternatively for new trial, is for disposition on briefs of the parties. Rule 50, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

Severely abbreviated, the facts' follow. Open accounts against garnishees appear in a separate or special accounts receivable ledger of Como for feed and other such supplies received from Como, by garnishees and used by them in the production of eggs (from breeder hens) which were delivered to Como by garnishees for sale by Como for credit to be given garnishees on said accounts for the proceeds of such sales. When such credits exceeded such an account, the excess was payable to the garnishee. Another “regular” accounts receivable ledger was kept by Como. Entries were regularly made of items affecting both the “regular” accounts receivable ledger and the special or separate accounts receivable ledger, before posting, in the same journal.

Como is a Mississippi corporation with an authorized capital of $60,000. No bylaws of the corporation are in evidence, Como was engaged in selling (perhaps processing to some extent) at what is considered a retail level, feed and related products for cattle, livestock and poultry.

Ralston’s theory is that the merchandise represented by the accounts receivable against garnishees was sold to garnishees by Como in the regular course of business and that these accounts are therefore unequivocally debts owed by garnishees. Its evidence in chief on trial consisted of the Como corporate charter and certain written documents, some re- „ , , , fleeting dealings between Ralston and „ „ . Como and the testimony of an account-x u ,x xt. t. n • x ™ ant about the bookkeeping system employed by Como and the accounts in ques. ti(m here. The accountant) who did not work for Como but posted and balanced Como’s books, personally knew nothing about the various transactions involved in this controversy. He worked from invoices' and other such data furnished to by Com°' No officer, director or full.Jirae exmPloyee of Como was called as a W1 ness.1

Ralston called two witnesses on rebuttal who had been employees of Ralston during the time with which we are concerned and who knew of the Como breeder hen program and were concerned with and working on it. Each of them had conferred with some of the garnishees, but neither one testified about any damaging admission or statement by any garnishee. One of them testified that when the breeder hen program first began, the Como accounts receivable arising therefrom were kept, along with Como’s other such regular accounts, in Como’s regular accounts receivable ledger, but that Como began keeping the breeder hen accounts receivable in a sepurate ledger at Ralston s request to facilitute identification thereof for assignnient to Ralston as a part of the financin£ Como’s part in this program by Ralston.

Garnishees’ theory is that these acCOunts came into being during the life of a “breeder hen” program, promoted by Ralston through Como with garnishees [7]*7under which, so far as pertinent here,2 garnishees were to build and maintain a specially designed chicken house for each 1000 chickens, pay the cost of water and utilities, furnish their own time and labor and such other labor as might be necessary to feed, water and care for the chickens, keep the chicken houses clean and gather the eggs, pack them in special cartons and deliver or pay the expense of delivery of the eggs to Como. And, say garnishees, Como was to furnish hens, feed and other materials to garnishees and sell the eggs produced, with the proceeds of such sales to be used to pay for the feed and other materials furnished by Como, after which all excess would be used to reimburse garnishees for their labor and expense and to retire the loans for the construction of the chicken houses.

To this point there is little material disagreement. But here, as has been said, Ralston says the merchandise went to garnishees from Como on the usual open account basis with the accounts to be paid by garnishees without regard to whether the sale of eggs produced enough money for that purpose or not, while all garnishees testified (or were stipulated to testify) that if the proceeds of the sale of the eggs was inadequate to pay the full amount of the garnishee’s special “breeder hen” account with Como, then Como would absorb the difference and it would not be a debt owed by a garnishee.

Factually the jury decided this issue for garnishees.

The main thrust of Ralston’s argument is that all negotiations and agreements on behalf of Como were by its president and general manager and that, if even in fact he agreed for Como in the way garnishees say, such agreements, as a matter of law, were not binding on Como since they were outside the ordinary course of this corporation’s business and no special authorization was given by the board of directors for these undertakings.

A short, over-simplified answer to the contention that the directors did not give such special authorization is to say that the evidence by stipulation shows only that the corporate records of Como do not show that such specific authorization was given. Thus, the evidence here leaves this question open, i. e., the directors could have considered the question without making any written record, and could have declined to give such special authorization because (1) they did not want to go into a “breeder hen” program at such a risk, or (2) they did want to go into the “breeder hen” program on the proposed basis but felt that the president and general manager had authority to act for the company without any special authorization. Or, they could have given all necessary authority. Moreover, the directors could have considered the question and could have followed any of the foregoing courses of action, making a formal written record of their action and this record could thereafter have been lost or destroyed.

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Bluebook (online)
256 F. Supp. 5, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ralston-purina-co-v-como-feed-milling-co-msnd-1966.