Shreveport Cotton Oil Co. v. Friedlander

36 So. 853, 112 La. 1059, 1904 La. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 23, 1904
DocketNo. 15,090
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 36 So. 853 (Shreveport Cotton Oil Co. v. Friedlander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shreveport Cotton Oil Co. v. Friedlander, 36 So. 853, 112 La. 1059, 1904 La. LEXIS 511 (La. 1904).

Opinion

BREAUX, J.

Plaintiff, the Shreveport Cotton Oil Company, brought suit against Friedlander, the defendant, an absentee, for damages in the sum of $7,264.83, and alleged that defendant Friedlander had broken his contract, in which he had bound himself to buy the output of linters, grabbots, and flues of the mill of the plaintiff company for the season of 1900-1901.

[1061]*1061Through the process of attachment, and the seizure thereunder of property of one of the defendants, plaintiff obtained judgment.

The defendants answered, and, in addition, pleaded in reconvention. Judgment went against plaintiff on the main demand, and, in effect, disposed of defendants’ reconventional demand against his demand.

The contracts sued on are in the form of letters or memoranda written on December 14, 1900, in which plaintiff states that the letter or memorandum “serves as an acceptance of your offer of three and three-quarter cents per pound f. o. b. mill for output of linters at the close of the present season of 1900 and 1901, mill run, making the entire output, shipments in car-load lots as made, draft attached to bill of lading on the above address.

“We hereby acknowledge receipt of check for three hundred dollars on contract, same to be credited on invoices, as linters are shipped. This contract applies to the linters made after completing a contract of four hundred bales that are being shipped at the present time.”

The letter or memorandum is signed by plaintiff, and the acceptance of its terms, which is subjoined to the letter, is signed by defendants. Plaintiff says that the paper in question is a letter, while defendants say that it is a mere memorandum.

In a second letter or memorandum of the same date, defendants are informed by plaintiff that it accepts defendants’ offer of six cents for its (plaintiff’s) output of grabbots, f. o. b. mill. To quote from the letter:

“Shipment as we get car-load lots, or at the close of the season whatever we have, to be shipped along with the linters in order to obtain the best rates possible.”
“We also accept your offer of the two cents per pound for our season’s output of mill-run flues, shipment in carload lots or with linters as above. Draft against bill of lading as usual on above address.”

This letter or memorandum is signed by the plaintiff and defendants.

Plaintiff avers in its petition, substantially, that defendants notified it that they (defendants) would not comply with their contracts; that thereupon plaintiff made a tender of its mill products, and offered to ship and deliver them according to contract, which was refused, and that after the refusal it sold the linters, flues, and grabbots that it had sold to defendants, in the market, for the best price obtainable; and that it all resulted in a loss, in difference in prices between what same was sold to defendants and what was obtained for it in the market. Plaintiff now claims this difference.

Defendants charge that plaintiff acted in fraudem legis; that it sought an undue advantage.

The defendants’ further contention is that they bought by samples which were produced by plaintiff to show the grades of the output of the mill, and that at the same time plaintiff said that the entire output would be between 800 and 900 bales, and that 400 bales were already sold, and, upon inspection of samples furnished by plaintiff to defendants, the latter offered 3% cents per pound for the output of linters made, and it was accepted by the general manager of plaintiff’s company, and that the written memorandum (or letter, according to plaintiff) was afterward prepared and signed as before stated, and that subsequently, on the same day, the general manager of plaintiff proposed to sell to defendants grabbots and mill flues, and that, after stating that he had none of these products in bales, he sent out and obtained loose samples, and submitted to one- of the defendants (O. O. Friedlander) for inspection, and that after having been assured that the output would be about 50 bales of the one, and 25 bales of the other, and that the samples represented the true product of the mill, a deal was closed for these outputs at 6 cents per pound for one, and 2 cents for the other, and then the second letter or memorandum above mentioned was signed, and [1063]*1063the samples, or a portion of them, were mailed by plaintiff to the New York office of defendants.

We will not take space by narrating at length the averments of plaintiff and defendants. It suffices to state, in addition to that which has been said regarding this cause, that defendants charge that plaintiff violated its contract by diverting part of the products which it had sold to them.

On cross-examination the general manager of the plaintiff company testified that he had sold 775 bales. That was 355 bales over the number he reserved the right not to sell to defendants from the products of the season of 1900 and 1901.

In examination in chief he testified that no bales were sold by him after the contract had been signed.

The contract called for all the output of the season of 1900 and 1901. He also delivered, as we read the testimony, linters to the Shreveport Manufacturing Company:

“Mr. Harmon, you delivered to the Shreveport Manufacturing Company ten bales on January 1, 1901?
.“Ans. We delivered to them linters of date of January 1, 1901. In all, about ten bales.”

Plaintiff shipped 100 bales of linters to defendants, and, on presentation of the bill of lading, the draft of plaintiff was paid, and very soon thereafter samples were received. That, not a great while after, plaintiff shipped 50 bales of linters and 18 bales of flues and 11 bales of grabbots to defendants. The draft of plaintiff was paid by defendants the day before the samples were received by' defendants. The linters and other products were consigned to defendants in Bremen, Germany.

From about the date these last samples were received, began the differences between plaintiff and defendants.

A member of defendants’ firm, present in Shreveport on the day of the contracts to which we have referred, examined bales of linters in plaintiff’s yard which were ready for shipment, from which he says he was furnished the samples before mentioned, which he himself brought back to plaintiff’s office.

In this, this witness was corroborated by his brother, who was with him at the time. He further says that Harmon, plaintiff’s manager, stated that they were fair samples of the quality of the linters. Harmon and his two clerks, witnesses for plaintiff, deny what these witnesses for defendants testified to in regard to samples.

They say that no samples were produced. They deny that any samples were ever sent to New York by plaintiff.

The foregoing summary of facts we deem sufficient for a decision of the ease.

The following are the issues:

Plaintiff claims to have sold the output of its mill for the season of 1900 and 1901 without reference to quality. Defendants deny plaintiff’s right, and aver that they (defendants) bought according to sample, and 'that the products sent them were not according to samples, and were of a very inferior kind.

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Bluebook (online)
36 So. 853, 112 La. 1059, 1904 La. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shreveport-cotton-oil-co-v-friedlander-la-1904.