Redbird Farm, Inc. v. Providence Live Poultry Co.

12 A.2d 730, 64 R.I. 430, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 29, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 730 (Redbird Farm, Inc. v. Providence Live Poultry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redbird Farm, Inc. v. Providence Live Poultry Co., 12 A.2d 730, 64 R.I. 430, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 57 (R.I. 1940).

Opinion

Condon, J.

This action of the case in assumpsit was tried before a justice of the superior court and a jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff.

The case is here on the defendant’s bill of exceptions which contains the following exceptions: First: To the *431 denial by the trial justice of its motion for a new trial; second, to his refusal of certain requests to charge; third, to his denial of its motion for a directed verdict; and fourth, to his refusal to strike out the testimony of George Hagopian.

The plaintiff is a Massachusetts corporation, engaged in the business of raising fowl for the poultry market, and is located in the town of Wrentham in that state. George Hagopian started this business in 1910 and is now president and treasurer of the corporation. Under his management plaintiff’s business has grown to great proportions, and he claims that it is now the largest of its kind in the world.

The defendant is a Rhode Island corporation, in the city of Providence in this state, engaged in buying and selling live poultry. The defendant, up to the time of trial, had done business with the plaintiff for the preceding twenty-five years, often buying from the plaintiff large consignments of fowl. Until 1936, defendant acted through Abraham Awerman, but after his death in that year, his son, Gustave Awerman, took over the management of the defendant’s business.

On September 19, 1938, at plaintiff’s farm in Wrentham, George Hagopian and Gustave Awerman discussed the sale of plaintiff’s entire stock of one-year old Rhode Island Red fowl, amounting in all to about eighteen thousand. It is in the course of this discussion that Hagopian claims an oral contract was entered into on behalf of the plaintiff and defendant for the sale to the defendant of this entire stock. Hagopian’s testimony as to what was agreed upon in that discussion was admitted over the objection of the defendant, who claimed that it was inadmissible under the parol evidence rule. Defendant also requested the court to instruct the jury to disregard this testimony.

*432 According to Hagopian, it was then and there orally agreed that the defendant would take the entire stock during the Jewish holidays, a three or four weeks period beginning shortly after the date of the agreement, at a price of three and one half cents under the top New York quotation for the date of delivery or for the following date at plaintiff’s option, providing such quotation was twenty-one cents or less; and, if the New York top quotation were more, defendant was to pay four cents under such top quotation. It was also agreed that defendant was to be permitted to select birds and to throw out any “not suitable for market”; and plaintiff was to be permitted to hold out, but not beyond the time of the contract, such birds as were still laying.

Gustave Awerman testified for the defendant that the discussion on the 19th was not as Hagopian related it, but was merely as to the outright purchase of a load of fowl at a cash price, and that the purchase which was discussed was made on the next day and on terms as appears from a written slip delivered to plaintiff’s representative at the farm and signed by him and also by defendant’s representative, who took delivery of the fowl purchased. This slip was admitted in evidence as an exhibit and is as follows.

“Keep this slip. It is the only itemized bill you will receive.
Providence Live Poultry Co., Inc.
Providence, R. I. Sept. 20, 1938.
Bought of...................Red Bird Farm
Address ....................Wrentham, Mass.
Fowl. . . .8425. . . .@17%. . . .$1474.38
If market does 21c. . . ,3-%c below top if 22c or more 4c below top Wednesday.
Paid Check
Received Payment......M. Hagopian
Buyer......Tony”

*433 Awerman also testified that another purchase of fowl was made in the same way, delivery of which was taken on September 23, 1938 and evidenced by another written slip that is in evidence as an exhibit as follows.

“Keep this slip. It is the only itemized bill you will receive.
Providence Live Poultry Co., Inc.
Providence, R. I. Sept. 23, 1938.
Bought of................. Red Bird Farm
Address.....................
Chickens. . . .8,000 @ 17% . . .11400.00
Paid by Check
Received Payment..... M. Hagopian
Buyer......Tony Zoglio.”

Although Awerman denied that there was any agreement to take plaintiff's entire stock under the terms and conditions as testified by George Hagopian, he did not give a satisfactory explanation as to when the price of the load thus delivered and paid for on September 23, 1938 was agreed upon, if it was not part of the oral understanding of September 19, 1938, as thus testified to by Hagopian. To corroborate his denial he produced Joseph Billincoff, a friend, who accompanied him to the Redbird Farm on the 19th and who testified that he heard the conversation which took place. On the other hand, the plaintiff produced his wife, Beatrice Hagopian, and his brother, Marcus Hagopian, who both testified that there was no one else with Awerman when he was talking with George Hagopian at Redbird Farm on September 19, 1938.

The evidence for the plaintiff further shows that it called upon the defendant to take delivery of the remainder of the stock in accordance with the oral agreement and that defendant refused to do so without giving any reason, except *434 the general assertion unaccompanied by any proof, that “those birds are not good enough.” Thereafter, in seeking to minimize the damages, the plaintiff, because of a fall in the market due to the hurricane of September 21, 1938, was compelled to sell the remaining fowl at a much lower price than that which it would have obtained under its contract with the defendant had the latter not broken its promise.

Defendant’s exceptions were not briefed in the separate and distinct manner in which they are set out in its bill of exceptions, but they were all argued more or less together under the following points as stated in its brief: (1) The alleged oral agreement of September 19, 1938 did not constitute a binding contract; (2) If it did, defendant has performed all he promised to do. (3) The slips of September 20, 1938 and September 23, 1938 were written contracts which could not be varied by parol evidence and which, excluding such evidence, entitled defendant to a directed verdict. (4) The slip of September 20, 1938 is an integrated contract and cannot be varied by parol evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 730, 64 R.I. 430, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redbird-farm-inc-v-providence-live-poultry-co-ri-1940.