Tallahatchie Compress & Storage Co. v. Hartshorn

88 So. 278, 125 Miss. 662
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1921
DocketNo. 21652
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 88 So. 278 (Tallahatchie Compress & Storage Co. v. Hartshorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tallahatchie Compress & Storage Co. v. Hartshorn, 88 So. 278, 125 Miss. 662 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Sykes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the'court.

The appellee, Mrs. Hartshorn, plaintiff in the circuit court, sued the appellant compress company for the value [672]*672of seventy-four bales of cotton destroyed by fire. Tbe declaration contained three counts. The first count alleged that the defendant had agreed with plaintiff to store her cotton in the brick compartment of the defendant’s warehouse, and breached this agreement and stored the cotton in the wooden compartment, and that while the cotton was in the wooden compartment it was totally destroyed by fire. The second count alleged that plaintiff had been a customer of the defendant for several years, and was in the habit of storing her cotton in the defendant’s warehouse. The plaintiff realized the danger of storing cotton in the wooden compartment, and had instructed the defendant to store her cotton in the brick compartment, where it would be safe from fire, and that the defendant, in recognition of this request, had stored plaintiff’s cotton in the brick compartment, whereby a custom had arisen between plaintiff and defendant, in consideration of her patronage, and that it had therefore become the duty of the defendant to store all of plaintiff’s cotton in the brick compartment,, and that in violation of this custom defendant had stored the cotton which was destroyed in the wooden compartment. These two counts were for breach of contract. The third count was based in tort. It is unnecessary to state it because a nonsuit was taken as to this count by plaintiff. Because of this non suit it is also unnecessary to notice the demurrer of defendant to the declaration, which demurrer had been overruled by the court, because the taking of the nonsuit as to the count in tort left the declaration only stating a cause of action for breach of contract. There was a recovery by plaintiff in the circuit court in acordance with the declaration, and the appeal is here prosecuted by the defendant in the lower court.

The testimony for the plaintiff is to the effect that some time in August, 1917, about the time the plaintiff began picking cotton, her husband had a conversation with the superintendent of the defendant company, in which conversation plaintiff’s husband stated to the superintendent [673]*673that plaintiff desired Her cotton stored in tbe brick compartment of tbe compress; that the reason he stated to tbe superintendent why be wished it placed in tbe brick compartment was because tbe insurance rate was cheaper there than in tbe wooden compartment. He states also as a further reason why be wished it placed there was because it was safer from fire in the brick compartment.

Tbe son of tbe plaintiff also testified that before any cotton was brought to tbe compress that year be bad a conversation with tbe superintendent of tbe compress company in which he told the superintendent to put his mother’s cotton in tbe brick compartment, and that tbe superintendent agreed to do so, and that it was because of this agreement that be stored the cotton with tbe defendant company; that the reason they wished tbe cottop. stored in tbe brick compartment was because they did not expect to sell it as fast as it was gathered and they thought it was safer in tbe brick compartment.

This oral agreement to store plaintiff’s cotton in tbe brick compartment is denied by tbe defendant’s witnesses.

Tbe plaintiff’s testimony is to tbe effect that because of tbe promise to store their cotton in tbe brick compartment they delivered it to tbe defendant company. Upon receipt of a bale of cotton this company issued to plaintiff a warehouse receipt for each bale of cotton. These receipts are all similar, and are as follows:

“Tallahatchie Compress & Storage Company,
Tag No. -.
“Greenwood, Miss.-.
“Have received from-one bale of cotton.
Weight.marked as per margin hereof which they agree to deliver upon the return of this
Marks.receipt and payment of all charges. Acts of Providence, fire and old damages ex-
Numbers.cepted. Posession of this receipt evidences title of property.
Condition.
“-, Superintendent.”

[674]*674The testimony shows the plaintiff’s cotton was actually stored in a wooden compartment, and while in a wooden compartment was destroyed by fire of an unknown origin; that, if the cotton had been stored in the brick compartment, it would not have been destroyed by this fire.

There are two principal contentions of the , appellant which deserve our notice. The first is that the warehouse receipt in this case is the written contract and the sole evidence of the contract, and affirmatively exempts the defendant from liabilities for fire. As will be noted this warehouse receipt does not embody all of the terms of the contract of bailment. The amount of charges per month are not stated on this receipt, and it is also silent as to the place of storage. There is a clause contained therein which is evidently meant to exempt the compress company from loss by “acts of providence, fire and old damage excepted.” It is the contention of the appellant that all testimony relating to the verbal agreement to store the cotton in the brick compartment of the warehouse was inadmissible because the receipt itself was the written contract. This receipt does not attempt to state all of the terms of the bailment. As a contract it is incomplete upon its face. That being true, it is competent to prove by oral testimony agreements relating to this bailment which did not vary, alter, or contradict the contractual parts of the warehouse receipts.

This rule is aptly stated in vol. 27, R. C. L. p. 964, par. 19, as follows:

“So a warehouse receipt may recite so little of the agreement between the parties that it does not rise to the dignity of a contract, and in such a case evidence may. be received as to the terms of the contract, and when a warehouse receipt specifies no particular place for the storage of the goods, evidence is admissible to show7 a prior parol agreement which does so specify.”

In the case of Baum v. Lynn, 72 Miss. 932, 18 So. 428. 30 L. R. A. 441, this court quoted with approval the rule laid dovm in Stephens on Evidence, wrhen parol testimony could be introduced to prove w7hat are called collateral [675]*675contracts; that is, contracts not evidenced by the written one, but which constitute the consideration upon which the written one in turn rests. In this rule Mr. Stephens states that parol evidence may be introduced to show:

“(2) The existence of any separate oral agreement as. to any matter on which a document is silent and which is not inconsistent with its terms, if, from the circumstances of the case, the court infers that the parties did not intend the document to be a complete and final statement of the whole of the transaction between them.”

This identical question is so decided in the case of McCurdy v. Wallblom Furniture & Carpet Co., 94 Minn. 326, 102 N. W. 873, also reported in 3 Ann. Cas. 468.

The court was correct in permitting this oral testimony as to the agreement to store the cotton in the brick compartment.

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Bluebook (online)
88 So. 278, 125 Miss. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tallahatchie-compress-storage-co-v-hartshorn-miss-1921.