Smith v. Bloom

141 N.W. 32, 159 Iowa 592
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 141 N.W. 32 (Smith v. Bloom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Bloom, 141 N.W. 32, 159 Iowa 592 (iowa 1913).

Opinions

Preston, J.

The evidence tends to show that on September 6, 1911, plaintiff, a copartnership, was engaged in the business of sheep commission merchants at the Union Stockyards, South Omaha, Neb., and were handling sheep exclusively on commission; that plaintiff has pens allotted to it for [594]*594use by the Stockyards Company. They are not lessees of the pens, but have use of them by virtue of doing business at the yards. The yards and pens are owned and controlled by the Stockyards Company. The scales at the yards over which all stock is weighed are owned and controlled by the Stockyards Company, which employs a weighmaster. The commission man has no authority or control over the scales or weigh-master, After the stock is weighed out to the purchaser, it is taken by the employees of the Stockyards Company, and placed in pens through the yards, which are under the control of said company, and over which the commission man has no control. The Stockyards Company also owns and controls all the trackage in the limits of the yards. On said date the plaintiff had for sale certain lambs in the pens allotted to it at the stockyards, which had been consigned to them to sell by a party in Idaho. About 10 o’clock in the •morning-of that date, the defendant came to the pens of plaintiff, and, after looking at the lambs, priced a ear load of them, and when told by plaintiff’s salesman that they were five cents per pound said: “All right, I will take them. Get them out, and weigh them.” Defendant asked the salesman if he would bill them out for him if he purchased a load, and was informed by the salesman that he would, but defendant did not tell the salesman where to bill them, and gave no billing directions. The salesman then turned to a yardman and, in the presence of defendant, directed the yardman to count out a load of the lambs for defendant. The yardman immediately counted out a load of 334 of said lambs in the presence of defendant. The lambs were counted out of the flock in the pens, and let into an alley leading to the scales, which were distant about one hundred and twenty-five feet. The yardman then drove the lambs up the alley to the scales. At the scales another employee of plaintiff was stationed to receive the lambs and place them on the scales as they were driven up. Defendant followed the lambs to the sealehouse, and was present at the time of, and saw, the weighing, and [595]*595saw them driven from the scales, and gave in his name as the purchaser of said lambs. The lambs were put on the scales and weighed by the Stockyards Company’s weighmaster. The defendant’s name appears on the scale tickets as purchaser. After the lambs were weighed they were driven from the scales by employees of the Stockyards Company, and placed in the pens of the said company.

The plaintiff offered to show that in case of a sale, as in this particular instance, plaintiff has nothing to do with the billing or shipping out of the animals after they are weighed out, and that, if they do so, it is only a matter of courtesy to the purchaser and after request is made by him. There is evidence in the record, however, tending to show that, after the lambs were weighed and placed in the pens of the Stockyards Company, the plaintiff had nothing further to do with them. It was the duty of plaintiff’s employee, who was stationed at the scale-house, to give the name of the commission firm and the purchaser to the weighmaster, which he did. At about 10:30 o’clock in the same forenoon, and after the lambs had been weighed, defendant went to plaintiff’s office, and told the bookkeeper that he had bought a load of sheep that morning, and asked if his bill was ready; he was informed that the official scale ticket had not been sent up, so that he could not make up the statement. Defendant produced a card on which he said he had taken the weights and the number of head and price, and that he had a check on his country bank to pay for the lambs. The bookkeeper told defendant to wait until he could get the scale ticket from the yards, and he would make up his bill. About 2 o’clock in the afternoon of that day defendant met a party and told him he had bought some lambs of Smith, and that they were the same lambs he had looked at' with the witness in the forenoon. About 3 o ’clock defendant went to the pens of plaintiff again, and asked the salesman if they could sell the lambs for him. The salesman replied he thought he could, but that defendant would have to wait a minute before [596]*596■he could talk to him about it, as he was busy with another customer. A few minutes later defendant came up to the salesman, and said, “I do not know that I want those lambs,” and the salesman told him if he would wait a minute he would talk to him about it. That was the last seen of defendant. He failed to take the lambs from the stockyards, and failed to pay the purchase pric'e.

The next day, September 7th, plaintiff caused a telegram to be sent to defendant, notifying him that the lambs would be resold on his account unless he advised to the contrary; and, if resold, they would charge him with any loss between purchase price and amount realized on resale, together with feed, commission, and other expenses. The record does not show the receipt of this telegram by defendant.

On September 8th the lambs were brought back to the pens of plaintiff to be resold. In the interval between the time of the alleged sale to defendant on the 6th and September 8th the lambs had been in the pens of the Stockyards Company. On September 8th they were offered for sale in plaintiff’s pens, and were sold in, the market at the best price obtainable, which was less than the price it is alleged defendant agreed to pay. The lambs were resold at a loss of $107.38, and plaintiff paid out $1.76 for the telegram, and a charge was made for feed consumed by the lambs between the date of the first sale and the resale and a commission.

As bearing on the question of delivery and acceptance, plaintiff offered to show by different witnesses what the usual and ordinary course of business is, and was, at the stockyards in question in reference to how the transactions are handled from the time a bid is made on stock until it is taken from the scales, and where placed after being weighed, and that, after being weighed, it is placed in the pens of the Stockyards Company to be held for the purchaser until he takes it away, or otherwise disposes of the same, and that the delivery in the transaction with defendant was handled in the ordinary and usual way. This evidence was objected to by defendant as [597]*597seeking to establish a fact by custom, and that it is not shown that defendant had any knowledge or information of the particular custom in question. The court sustained the objections. The court did, permit plaintiff to read from the deposition of one witness that, after sheep are weighed, the Stockyards Company has charge and takes care of them after that, and that the sheep are locked up, and nobody can get in and touch them unless an order is given. This witness was an employee of plaintiff, and he said that he might give an order to somebody to go and get the sheep, but that they were under bond to protect the yard company. "We have considered it necessary to set out the evidence somewhat in detail, in order that the questions involved may be better understood.

1. Commission Merchants: sales: breach of contract: right to sue. I. Counsel for appellee contends that plaintiff cannot maintain this action for. the reason that it was acting for another, and is not the real party in interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 N.W. 32, 159 Iowa 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-bloom-iowa-1913.