Robertson v. Louisiana Fruit Growers Ass'n

80 So. 2d 190, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 797
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 1955
DocketNo. 8297
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 So. 2d 190 (Robertson v. Louisiana Fruit Growers Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Louisiana Fruit Growers Ass'n, 80 So. 2d 190, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 797 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

Defendant contracted with plaintiff to transport for a price of $253.76 a truck load of peaches from Hilly and Spearsville, Louisiana, to St. Louis, Missouri, which produce it allegedly had sold through its broker to Sherman Produce Company. The price for the transportation not. having been paid, plaintiff instituted this action therefor, plus $50 additional for loss of the use of his truck and loss of service of his driver for two days caused by the unnecessary delay in unloading the shipment at its destination.

, In reconvention, defendant prayed for judgment against plaintiff in the sum of $1019.23 as an amount allegedly lost by it on the aforesaid shipment by spoilage of the produce allegedly due to the negligence of plaintiff and its driver in not reaching the St, Louis market before closing time on Saturday morning, thus requiring the shipment to be held over until the market opened on the following Monday morning, and in not keeping the produce properly iced or refrigerated in the meantime.

After trial, judgment was rendered rejecting plaintiff’s demands and in favor of defendant on its reconventional demand in the sum of $969.23, representing what the court accepted as the value of the peaches, less freight and other charges. From the judgment thus rendered and signed, plaintiff appealed.

The facts are very much in dispute and whatever confusion has arisen is due not only to" the lack of understanding among all parties concerned, including-the produce company, but to the contradictory character of the'"evidence introduced as well as to the want of evidence which might have been introduced. However, from’ a consideration óf the entire record, after carefully weighing each and every portion thereof, it appears "that the&e pertinent and material ■facts were "'fairly established:

Through a telephone conversation or conversations 'on the afternoon of July. 23, ■1953, between J. B. .Colvin, President of the Louisiana Fruit Growers Association, and B. W./Robertson, a verbal agreement was entered into whereby plaintiff agreed to furnish a refrigerated truck and trailer and driver to transport the load of peaches to St. Louis and deliver it to Sherman Prod.uce Company. As to the time of delivery, the testimony is most contradictory and inconclusive. Defendant contends that the delivery was to be made by or before 6:00 o’clock A.M. Saturday, July 25, 1953. Plaintiff, his wife and his 20 year old son, the driver of the truck, are as positive no m'ention or agreement was made as to the [192]*192time -the shipment was to reach St. Louis other than on Saturday morning. The wholesale produce market in St. Louis is shown to have opened at midnight and remained open until 6:00 o’clock A.M. for 6 nights a week.

Plaintiff is an employee of the paper mill at Bastrop, Louisiana, where he, his wife and son own and operate a produce market of their own. They are not common carriers but principally transport their own produce from such points as New Orleans to their place of business, but on occasions solicited shipments to those points from which they received their produce.

During 1953, Charles Abbate Company of Hammond, Louisiana, was the exclusive broker for the Louisiana Fruit Growers Association and negotiated what defendant understood to be a sale óf 538 boxes or crates óf peaches to Sherman Produce Company, information of which was communicated to, defendant, whose president thereupon telephoned Robertson for. a truck to make the; delivery in St. Louis,, This truck Robertson reluctantly agreed to furnish. The, truck, -with bunkers of a ton ice capacity, was iced at Ruston, Louisiana, with 1,800 pounds at about 9:00 o’clock P.M. and arrived at Hilly about - 10:00 P.M., July 23, where 96 crates of pre-cooled peaches were loaded. The truck then proceeded some 30 or 40 miles to Spearsville, Louisiana, arriving there about, midnight, for the purpose of completing the load. 442 crates of tree-ripened peaches, not pre-cooled, were loaded from the sheds there. This ■ operation was completed by • 4:00 o’clock A.M., July 24, 1953, and the truck proceeded on its route. A check of the ice in the-bunkers wa's made at El Dorado and then again at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, where 1,500 pounds of ice were added about 2:00 o’clock P.M. A check was again made at West Memphis and later at Osceola, Arkansas, where 600 pounds of additional ice were added about 9:00 o’clock P.M. ' -

Upon arriving at the market of the Sherman Produce Company in St. Louis at 8:45 o’clock A.M. July 25, 1953, where Sherman accepted the delivery tickets as furnished him by the defendant, showing the weights and other data concerning the peaches, Sherman told young Robertson to re-ice the truck, which he did with 1,000 pounds of ice, and then to park the truck on a lot adjacent to his place of business as it would be early Monday morning before the shipment could be unloaded due to the fact that he was 12 hours late and should have been at the market when it opened at midnight. Upon being informed also that the truck could not be unloaded because the workers were getting off from work, young Robertson proposed that he -hire laborers from the street to unload the truck, which, however, 'was refused, Sherman claiming that he had no refrigerated space in which to put the peaches.

‘ Sherman testified that he instructed the driver to keep the truck re-iced. This the driver denies, saying that Sherman only instructed him 'to have it re-iced and then to park -it on-:the- lot. • Nevertheless, young Robertson remained around the* truck all day and at 8:00 o’clock P.M. on that Saturday night again re-iced the truck by adding 600 pounds. Not having slept for - two nights- and a’day, he' then retired to a hotel room, and did not return to the truck -until about 12:30 P.M. the following day, when he found that the truck had been re-iced and the ventilating fan running as he had left it.

Sherman testified that upon arriving at the place of business on Sunday morning, he found the bunkers empty of ice and that he placed 2,000 pounds therein. Shortly after midnight the truck doors were opened, whereupon the peaches were found to have deteriorated. Sherman then phoned the broker and informed him of the condition of the produce and obtained authority to sell the peaches and salvage whatever possible. Sherman Produce Company then unloaded the truck.

The case presents primarily the following questions:

(1) Did Robertson guarantee to deliver the peaches to Sherman- Produce Company [193]*193prior to 6:00 o’clock A.M. on Saturday, July 25?

(2). Was there any negligence of the carrier prior to the time the shipment arrived in St. Louis? ■

(3) When was actual delivery made to Sherman Produce Company?

(4) What was the responsibility of plain tiff after delivery had been made or tendered in St. Louis?

We shall discuss these questions in the order given:

Colvin’s testimony indicates' there was nc firm understanding that the carrier would be responsible if the peaches were not delivered by 6:00 A.M. He testified that he informed Robertson in their telephone con-’ versations that the peach market closed in St. Louis at 6:00 A.M. on Saturday and that the shipment should arrive there by that time. The record is not clear as tó whether Cólvin conversed by telephone with Robert-1 son only or with Robertson and his wife. However, both deny that Colvin made such a statement.

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 2d 190, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-louisiana-fruit-growers-assn-lactapp-1955.