Singletary v. Humphrey-Coker Seed Co.

143 S.E. 269, 145 S.C. 539, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 16, 1928
Docket12450
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 143 S.E. 269 (Singletary v. Humphrey-Coker Seed Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singletary v. Humphrey-Coker Seed Co., 143 S.E. 269, 145 S.C. 539, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 96 (S.C. 1928).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Carter.

This is an appeal from an order of his Honor, Judge John S. Wilson, refusing a motion of the defendant to vacate the summons and dismiss the complaint in an action instituted by the plaintiff, R. H. Singletary, against the defendant, Humphrey-Coker Seed Company, in the Court of Common Pleas for Lee County, in connection with the sale of ten bushels of cotton seed to the plaintiff for planting purposes; it being alleged that the seed were not as represented, and that the plaintiff thereby sustained damages.

The summons and complaint were, on the 25th day of September, 1926, served on one J. W. Thames, resident of the said County of Lee, and an alleged agent of the defendant, a domestic corporation with its principal place of business in Darlington County, but alleged to be conducting business through the alleged agency of the said J. W. Thames in the said County of Lee, which agency, the plaintiff alleged, was maintained by the defendant in said County for the purpose of the transaction of its business.

The defendant based its motion on the affidavit of S. Pressly Coker, manager of the defendant corporation, and on the affidavit of J. W. Thames, on whom service was made. So much of Mr. Coker’s affidavit as is pertinent to the questions involved herein is as follows:

“Personally comes S. Pressly Coker, who, being duly sworn, says that he is the manager of the defendant, a corporation chartered and existing under and by the laws of this State, having its principal and only place of business at Hartsville, in Darlington County, this State; that the defendant has no office or agent in Lee County, and has no agent there upon whom summons and complaint may be served, and that J. W. Thames is not now, and never has been, an agent of defendant; that Mr. Thames’ sole con *544 nection with the transaction in litigation herein was to receive from Mr. Singletary and transmit to defendant an order for seed, for which he received a commission; that no representations were made, and nothing whatsoever was done by the said Thames except as herein stated, and Mr. Thames had no authority to do more than to take the order, quote prices, and transmit the order to the defendant. * * * Deponent further says that the defendant appears in this action for the sole purpose of moving to set aside the service of the summons and for no other purpose.”

The affidavit of J. W. Thames is as follows:

“Personally comes J. W. Thames, who, being duly sworn, says that he resides at Bishopville, S. C., having lived there since about 1915. Deponent further says that he has not now, and never had, any business connection whatever with the Humphrey-Coker Seed Company, except that he has taken some orders for seed on a commission basis; that he has never otherwise represented said Company nor undertaken to do so; that he has never made any representations to anybody about the seed for which, as stated, orders have been taken, and that he made none to Mr. R. H. Singletary — I simply took Mr. Singletary’s order for the seed in question, and transmitted it to the Company at Hartsville, S. C.”

In reply to these affidavits, the plaintiff, R. H. Singletary, made the following affidavit:

“That he is the plaintiff in the above-stated case. That he knows of his own knowledge that J. W. Thames is a resident of the town of Bishopville, Dee County, S. C., and that for the past two years at least J. W. Thames has been selling seed in Dee County for planting purposes, for the defendant. That he has sold said seed to a large number of customers in Dee County, the exact number, of course, deponent cannot state. That the said J. W. Thames sold the cotton seed to the plaintiff about which this suit is brought. That, in case of the order for the cotton seed referred to in that suit, deponent discussed with Mr. Thames the matter *545 of the purchase of these cotton seed, stating to him the character of seed that he desired and stating the kind of land they were to be planted upon; and the said Thames solicited his order for the defendant’s seed, made the recommendations and statements relative to them, and as a result thereof, deponent gave to Mr. Thames his oral order for ten bushels at the sum of $30, and that within a reasonable time for shipment in due course, .the cotton seed arrived at Bishopville, consigned to deponent, shipped by the defendant. That, prior to the shipment of the cotton seed, the defendant notified the plaintiff that they would allow him a certain per cent, discount for cash, for December shipment; and that plaintiff accepted that proposition, and the seed were shipped in December, and were paid for by him. That deponent purchased cotton seed for planting purposes for the year of 1925 from the defendant through Mr. Thames, and that the transaction was handled in a similar way; that is, he gave Mr. Thames his oral order for the cotton seed, and in due course they were shipped to him. That, knowing that Mr. Thames was representative of the defendant in this Cpunty, he went to him concerning the shipment in suit, and took up with Mr. Thames the matter of his wants of blight-proof seed referred to in the complaint, with the result that has been above stated. That Mr. Thames is known in this community as the representative of the defendant, in the sale of high-grade pedigreed cotton seed for the defendant. That, when deponent discovered the condition of his cotton his year that was grown from the seed in question, he wrote the defendant a letter about it, and received no reply. That thereafter he took the matter up with Mr. Thames, and Mr. Thames stated that he would call the defendants upon the telephone and take it up with them, and that within a very short time, probably twenty-four hours after the conversation with Mr. Thames, he received a letter from the defendant stating that they would send a representative over to look into it, and within two *546 or three days a representative of the defendant did come and look over deponent’s crop'. That deponent states on information and belief, which information was derived from statements made to him by Mr. Thames, himself, since the service of this motion, that two or three years ago the defendant approached him and asked him if he would not sell seed for them in Lee County, and deponent (error — meaning Thames) agreed to do so; and that ever since that time he has been from time to time in connection with other business, selling their pedigreed seed in this County. That there has been no change in that relationship, and that he will now make sales for them just as he has been doing for the past two or three years. That during the fall of 1925 and the spring of 1926, for planting purposes for the year of 1926, Mr. Thames sold for the defendant seed to the following named persons, all residents of Lee County: C. E. Johnson, J. S. Watkins, G. P. Eord, H. W. Woodward, J. L. Scarborough, F. J. Davis, L. R. Dixon, C. B. Pate, H. V. Stricklin, W. G. Tisdale, R. L. Hearon, W. P. Baskin, J. M. Hearon, R. R. Shaw, Mrs. Fannie Davis, J. B. Lane, Lawton Beasley, and J. PI. Des Champs. That the said J. W. Thames has in his possession an order book of the defendant, and that during last fair in Lee County the defendant took some orders direct'at the fair from citizens of Lee County, and they gave Mr. Thames credit for these orders, and put them in his order book.

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.E. 269, 145 S.C. 539, 1928 S.C. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singletary-v-humphrey-coker-seed-co-sc-1928.