Standard Rice Co. v. William M. Garic & Co.

274 S.W. 652, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 634
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 17, 1925
DocketNo. 8672.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 652 (Standard Rice Co. v. William M. Garic & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Rice Co. v. William M. Garic & Co., 274 S.W. 652, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 634 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This statement, conceded by the opposing litigant to be substantially correct, is taken from appellant’s brief:

“This is a suit brought in the district court of Harris county, Texas, by William M. Garie & Co. v.- Standard Rice Company for damages sustained by reason of failure on the part of appellant to make delivery of certain rice ordered by said appellee from appellant in which plhintiff in the court below alleged: That on or about October 30, 1919, through the medium of letters, cablegrams, and oral and written confirmations dated on and during the several days preceding the last above date, all of whicli documents to be introduced in evidence upon the trial of this cause, the defendant in the court below sold and contracted to deliver, and the plaintiff bought and contracted to pay for, 1,000 pockets of its No. 906 rice at $8.50 per pocket c. i. f. San Juan, Porto Rico, shipment from Houston mill of said defendant to be during the month of November 1919, and c. i. f. meaning that the cost of the rice, the insurance and freight to San Juan were included in the price quoted on rice to be, delivered to plaintiff at San 'Juan, Porto Rico. The transactions connected with and resulting in said contract being conducted through M. Barrios & Co., agents of defendant in San Juan with expressed or implied authority to negotiate such contract, which authority defendant is estopped to deny and which contract was ratified by defendant; that when plaintiff failed to receive said rice during the month of December, 1919, or during the early part of January, 1920, at which time its arrival would' be expected, if shipped from the Houston mill of defendant during the month of November, plaintiff made several inquiries as to the delays and repeatedly requested delivery of the said rice, notwithstanding which said rice was not delivered and was never shipped by defendant.
“The plaintiff was first notified of defendant’s intention not to ship said rice on or about January 21, 1920, all the time prior to that time being under the impression and expectation that the rice might arrive at almost any time; but on or about that date plaintiff was definitely notified by the defendant’s agent that defendant had not shipped and would not ship the said rice under said contract; that on or about January 21, 1920, and several days prior thereto the market value at San Juan, Porto Rico, of rice of the kind and quality contracted' to be delivered to plaintiff was $11.25 per pocket; that by reason of the failure and refusal of the defendant to carry out the terms of said contract, etc,, plaintiff has been damaged in the *653 sum of the difference between the contract price and the market price of the rice of the kind and quality in question at the time and place of delivery, to wit, $2,750 with 6 per cent, interest from said January 21, 1920.
“To which pleading of the plaintiff the defendant answered and set up the following defenses: First. By a general esception, and second, by special demurrer, because plaintiff’s pleadings are vague and indefinite and the letters, cablegrams, and confirmations and conditions thereof are not set forth to enable defendant to properly answer thereto, third, by general denial, and fourth, by special answer, setting out as follows, to wit: That on or about October 28, 1919, defendant received certaih tentative propositions for purchase of rice from its brokers, M. Barrios & Co. at Porto Eico, by cablegram offering to purchase certain pockets of rice of defendant, being No. 906 rice at $8.50 per pocket, c. i. f. San Juan, Porto Eico, for account of plaintiff, to which propositions defendant replied on the 28th day of October that he could furnish the rice to fill such orders for November shipment, from the mill, which said offer it was agreed and understood, in order to be binding on this defendant was to be confirmed by cablegram within 24 hours from the time said message was delivered for transmission at Houston, Texas, and that defendant received no answer confirming said proposition until October 31, 1919, and that not having its offer accepted and confirmed within 24 hours from the time of transmission of cablegram continuing the offer that the defendant was under no obligation to fill said offer after said time, and that when cablegram was received on 31st of October attempting to confirm defendant’s proposition, this defendant was not in position to fill the said order, but that he was in position and would have filled same had transmission reached him within the 24 hours above specified.
“And defendant further sets out that all the transactions alleged in plaintiff’s petition were done by and through brokers, M. Barrios & Co., and says that the said M. Barrios & Co. were not at any time general agents of this defendant, but acted for this defendant and many other business concerns in the capacity of general brokers, and that if the said M. Barrios & Co. attempted to confirm any sale for the rice with the plaintiff herein at the time and manner alleged in plaintiff’s petition, that they did so without authority from the defendant to bind it in any manner under the terms of employment, by-the defendant as defendant’s general brokers in Porto Eico; that under the terms of the employment of said M. Barrios & Co. by defendant, among other things, it was stipu^ lated as follows:' ‘That all quotations and prices transmitted by the Standard Eice Company are to be valid for acceptance reaching the mill within the next 24 hours after the time of the dispatch of the cable containing such prices or quotations, from its office.’ And the defendant alleged that if said Barrios & Co. made any contract for the shipment of rice, as set forth in plaintiff’s petition, with plaintiff, that they did so without power or authority to bind this defendant, because the defendant’s offer, sent on the 28th of October, was not accepted or confirmed within said 24 hours and no attempted confirmation or acceptance of said defendant’s offer was received by defendant until the 31st day of October, two days after the time for such acceptance and confirmation had expired, all of which conditions were known to plaintiff or by reasonable diligence could have been so known to him.
“Defendant by trial amendment to original answer further pleaded in the alternative as follows: That if for any reason the plaintiff is not bound by the provisions for acceptance of an offer within 24 hours after the date of the dispatch of the cable, containing prices and quotations, that then defendant says that it is and was the general custom in October, 1919, of merchants and dealers at San Juan, Porto Eico, and well known to the trade, that no offer made by a broker is binding on the seller until the same has been confirmed by the seller.
“Wherefore, defendant denied that he had ever entered into any contract with plaintiff for the shipment of said rice, or that he had ever authorized said Barrios and Company or any one else to bind it by any contract, and defendant prays that he have judgment in his favor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 652, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-rice-co-v-william-m-garic-co-texapp-1925.