Smith v. Wilson Mercantile Co.
This text of 60 So. 484 (Smith v. Wilson Mercantile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The second count of the complaint, (which the reporter will set out) was not subject to the demurrer which was interposed to it by the defendant in the court below. — Elmore, Quillian & Co. v. Parrish Bros., 170 Ala. 499, 54 South. 203; Davis v. Adams, 18 Ala. 264; Berry v. Nall & Duxberry, 54 Ala. 446.
•As the contract, if made, did not specify the weight of the bales, we think, under the averments of the complaint, the plaintiff had a right to show by evidence, if he could do so, that the bales contemplated by the plaintiff and the defendant, when the contract was made, if it was made, were bales of the usual and customary weight, and also what the usual and customary weight of a bale of cotton is.' — Davis v. Adams, supra; Elmore, Quillian & Co. v. Parrish Bros., supra.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that, if the contract set up in the complaint was in fact made, it was made in the following way: The defendant, in May, 1909, walked into the office of the plaintiff and saw the bookkeeper, Malone, and, according to the testimony of Malone, said “he wanted to put down six bales on a cotton contract, to put in six bales. He did not sign it, but authorized me to sign it. I do not remember whether [177]*177I made any explanations to him as to the conditions under which we were buying cotton. There was no agreement between the defendant and witness as to the weight or grade of the cotton.” Malone further testified that he did not know whether anything was said between the witness and defendant as to the price of the cotton or the time when it was to be delivered. The above book was not introduced in evidence, and we do not know what light, if any, that book will shed on the question as to whether, on the occasion named, a valid contract between the parties was or was not made. The above conversation, without more, does not show a contract. If the plaintiff in the spring of the year was offering to buy cotton from the people in defendant’s neighborhood, to be delivered in the fall not later than December 15th, at a fixed price of 10 cents per pound, the cotton to be delivered in bales, and if the defendant, when he had the alleged conversation with Malone, knew those facts, then we think that there are circumstances from which a jury may infer that, by virtue of the conversation, the plaintiff contracted to buy and the defendant contracted to sell to .the plaintiff six bales of cotton of customary Aveight and of the average grade of cotton groAvn in his neighborhood and gathered prior to December 15th. — Davis v. Adams, supra.
If it be true that, at the time of the alleged conversation with Malone, the plaintiff Avas making a fixed offer for cotton upon the terms above stated, that fact can be shoAvn by legitimate evidence. For the purpose of adducing evidence tending to' show that the defendant kneio that the offer Avas being made and the terms of the offer, it may be shoAvn by evidence to have been a matter of common- repute in the-defendant’s neighborhood that such offer was being made and the terms [178]*178of such offer. — Martin v. State, 2 Ala. App. 175, 56 South. 64.
The mere fact, however, that other people made contracts to sell their cotton to the plaintiff at 10 cents per pound, the cotton to be delivered not later than December 15, 1909., had no tendency to show that defendant made such a contract, was irrelevant, and the court committed a reversible error in permitting that evidence to go before the jury. — Langworthy v. Goodall, McLester & Co., 76 Ala. 325.
Reversed and remanded.
Note. — The foregoing opinion was prepared by Judge de Graffbnkied, while he was a judge of this court, and is adopted by the court.
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60 So. 484, 6 Ala. App. 171, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-wilson-mercantile-co-alactapp-1912.