Stuttgart Rice Mill Co. v. Lockridge

47 S.W.2d 596, 185 Ark. 340, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 7, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 S.W.2d 596 (Stuttgart Rice Mill Co. v. Lockridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stuttgart Rice Mill Co. v. Lockridge, 47 S.W.2d 596, 185 Ark. 340, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 113 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

Butler, J.

On the 15th day of December, 1923, Lozier Lockridge, appellee, instituted this suit against the appellant, Stuttgart Rice Mill Company. In his complaint the appellee declared on a verbal contract alleged to have been entered into between himself and the appellant, acting through its president, J. C. Lloyd, by which he was to deliver to the appellant rice grown in the year 1920, the same to be milled and sold by the appellant for his account. For this service appellant was to receive $1 per barrel and the by-products consisting of bran and polish; that appellant undertook to mill said rice immediately and to sell the milled product at once; that, as an inducement for appellee to enter into the agreement with the appellant, appellant represented that it could mill and sell the rice without delay, and that appellee would thereby be enabled to realize net more-for his product than if he should sell it in the rough; that at that time there was an active market for rough rice; that he entered into this contract on or before the 15th day of November and began to deliver the appellant rice completing delivery on or before the 29th day of November, 1920; that on the date of his agreement and during the time of the delivery of the rice and for a considerable time subsequent thereto there was an active market for clean rice of the kind and grade of that which he had delivered to the appellant, and, if the appellant had performed its agreement, it would have been able to realize for appellee’s account a net sum of $1.27 per bushel.

Appellee further alleged that, after the appellant had milled the rice, he demanded an accounting, which was not made until on or about the 29th day of March, 1921, at which time appellant accounted to appellee for $2,495.92, representing to him that this was all that appellant had realized from the sale of his product; that the appellant sold appellee’s rice at a much higher figure than the price which it rendered on an accounting and fraudulently concealed the fact that it had sold rice at a higher figure, which, after all proper charges had been deducted, would have returned to appellee a net sum of $1.27 per bushel.

Appellee further alleged that, if the rice had not been sold at a figure sufficient to yield him the return aforesaid, appellant breached its agreement in failing to market the rice with reasonable promptness after the same had been milled, to appellee’s damage in the sum of $5,000.80, the difference between what he should have received had the appellant performed its contract with him and what it actually accounted for. Appellee further alleged that, until the appellant rendered him an accounting in March, 1921, he did not know that it had not sold his rice at the time it had agreed to sell it and did not know what actual disposition was made of the rice, but alleged that the appellant either sold it at a figure to yield him $1.27 per bushel net, fraudulently accounting to him for a different lot of rice, or that appellant fraudulently failed and neglected to sell his rice with reasonable promptness after same had been milled in accordance with the agreement, to his damage in the sum aforesaid.

The first testimony taken in the case was the deposition of the appellee given on the. 19th day of May, 1927. From time to time thereafter testimony was taken in the form of depositions down to 1930 or 1931. After all the testimony was in, the appellee filed his motion to amend the complaint to conform to the proof, and on the 7th day of April, 1931, filed an amended complaint in which the allegations of the original complaint were reiterated and the further allegation was made that appellant fraudulently failed to account for 900 bushels of rice, failed to account for the complete proceeds resulting from the sale of the rice, and failed to report the correct amount of mill product, and unlawfully converted a portion of the rice delivered by the appellee to its own use; that, by reason of this unlawful misconduct and fraud, the appellant forfeited its right to compensation of $1 a barrel and the by-products for milling the rice.

To this amended complaint answer was made by the appellant and objections filed to the testimony of the deposition of witnesses B. E. Chaney, George E. Carlson, ■Oak H. Rhodes, and to parts of the testimony of the appellee. The case was thereupon submitted to the court, and a decree was rendered on May 11, 1931. The court found, first, “that the rice in controversy was of superior quality for which appellee had been offered $1.10 per bushel prior to delivery to defendant; that J. C. Lloyd was president of the Stuttgart Rice Mill Company; that, as an inducement to plaintiff to deliver rice to defendant, plaintiff was guaranteed a minimum of $1.25 per bushel, and that the president was authorized to negotiate contracts of this kind. Second, the court found that the evidence shows that irregularities and mismanagément on the part of those in charge of defendant mill amount to a fraudulent transaction against, the plaintiff; third, that the defendant received from the plaintiff 5',401 bushels of rice; that the rice was delivered upon verbal toll milling agreement with no specific milling charge agreed upon; that the customary milling! charge for milling rice was $1 per barrel and by-products; that the defendant retained the by-products and is therefore only entitled to milling charge aforesaid as a credit upon the judgment hereinbefore rendered; that plaintiff is entitled to interest from the 29th day of March, 1921, at the rate of six per cent, per annum from date until paid ; fourth, that defendant is entitled to a credit upon the amount guaranteed plaintiff of $2,495.22 for moneys paid him by defendant on or before March 29, 1931, and $1,500.50 toll milling charges on the amount of rice delivered by plaintiff to defendant.

Judgment was rendered for $2,755.53, principal, with interest from the date aforesaid, from which decree both the appellant and the appellee have appealed.

The complaint alleged, and the testimony on the part of the appellee tended to show, that he and one Finch his tenant, each owned a one-half interest in the rice delivered to appellant, the total amount of which was 11,806 bushels, half of which was appellee’s part amounting to 5,903 bushels. Both appellee and Finch testified that they weighed and loaded on the cars at Goldman this amount of rice which was shipped to appellant’s mill at Stuttgart. The original memorandum of the weights was asked for and not produced. The explanation given by the appellee for his failure to do so was that he had given them to his lawyer. It was shown on behalf of the appellant that the statement of the rice accounted for was obtained from the records made by the receiving clerk, and that the rice was weighed on the city scales. By the fourth finding of fact the chancellor found against the contention made by the appellee as to shortage in weights, finding the amount of rice received to be 5,401 bushels as shown by the books of the appellant. We are of the opinion that this finding was supported by the evidence.

The first finding of fact made by the chancellor is the one upon which the decree was based. Appellee testified to a certain conversation between himself and J. C. Lloyd, president of the appellant company, occurring 6y2 years before, and not in the presence of any other person and after Lloyd, the only one who could testify directly to the contrary, had died.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W.2d 596, 185 Ark. 340, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuttgart-rice-mill-co-v-lockridge-ark-1932.