Taylor v. Anderson

1914 OK 35, 137 P. 1183, 40 Okla. 316, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 13, 1914
Docket5671
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1914 OK 35 (Taylor v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Anderson, 1914 OK 35, 137 P. 1183, 40 Okla. 316, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 21 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

On October 8, 1913, defendants in error brought suit in the district court of Cleveland- county against J. E. Taylor, plaintiff in error, the object of which is to test the constitutionality, of an Act approved March 7,. 1,913- (Senate .Bill *317 No. 7?, c. 24, Sess. Laws 1913, p. 41). The petition substantially states that one of the plaintiffs, Wm. Morgan, Jr., is a local cotton dealer at Norman and, as such, had, together with other cotton owned by him, twenty bales of cotton stored in the cotton yard operated by defendant at that place; that his coplaintiff, Anderson, Clayton & Co., of Oklahoma City, are dealers in cotton which they buy from local dealers for resale and export; that said Morgan'as the owner of the twenty bales aforesaid theretofore sold the same to said Anderson, Clayton & Co., and agreed to deliver the same to them f. o. b. Norman, with weights guaranteed at the compress at Oklahoma City; that said Taylor, whose yard is the only one in Norman, refused and still refuses to surrender possession of said twenty bales of cotton to plaintiffs on demand and refuses to permit them to remove the same except after the same are reweighed and ten cents per bale paid him therefor as weigher, which plaintiffs refused to pay; that defendant threatens to and will reweigh not only that but all cotton belonging to plaintiffs which may be stored in his said yard from time to time and will claim and charge such fee for reweighing and will not deliver said cotton except upon the payment of the fee aforesaid. It is further charged that defendant is so doing pursuant to said act, which is alleged to be unconstitutional for certain reasons set forth in the petition. The prayer is that the defendant be enjoined from so doing and for general relief. After answer filed, in effect a general admission and a plea of justification under the act, there was judgment for plaintiffs upon the pleadings, the act was.declared unconstitutional, the injunction granted as prayed, and defendant brings the case here.

The act assailed is entitled:

“An act to require the reweighing of baled cotton before removing same from any local cotton yard and fixing the penalty for the violation thereof.” ,

It provides:

■ “Section 1. Every person, 'firm or corporation in the state of Oklahoma, engaged in the business of cotton buying, where lists of baled cotton are purchased from local buyers, and the said cotton stored ih cotton yards or cotton-warehouses owned-or *318 operated by cotton weighers, shall, before removing same, have said cotton reweighed.
“Sec. 2. Every owner or operator of a cotton yard or warehouse in the state of Oklahoma, shall be required, before allowing any cotton to be removed from his yard, or warehouse, to reweigh same in the presence of the owner or purchaser, or some agent of said purchaser, or owner of same; and, with indelible ink, mark on the bale, in figures, the weight of the bale.”

Section 3 provides for testing the scales and a second weighing.

“Sec. 4. Persons, firms, or corporations engaged in the cotton business, coming under the provisions of this act, shall have the right to be present at the reweighing of any cotton they may purchase or desire to purchase, and when any cotton shall be reweighed in their presence they shall accept the weights as being correct and make final settlement on the same.
“Sec. 5. When a list of cotton has been reweighed before leaving the cotton yard, according to the provisions of this act, the transaction between the buyer and seller as to the weights, shall be at an end and neither party shall have any recourse on the other.”

Section 6 provides the penalty for a violation of the act. Which means (section 1) that when Morgan bought this cotton and had it stored in this yard, before he can deliver it to the purchasers, his coplaintiffs, he must have it reweighed by the weigh-master of the yard. Not only that, but section 2 makes it the duty of the weighmaster to reweigh it, before it is removed, in the presence of one of the contracting parties or his agent, and to mark the weight of the bale thereon. After section 3 makes provision for any person in interest not satisfied with the weights to require a reweighing, section 4 provides that the purchasers may be present at the reweighing, and that when they are, and the cotton is reweighed in their presence, “they shall accept the weights as being correct and make final settlement on the same.” Not only that, but whether the purchaser is present or not, section 5 provides that, when the cotton is reweighed as provided, “the transaction between the buyer and seller as to weights, shall be at an end and neither party shall have' any recourse- on the other.” Which means that such finding of' the weights by the weigher is conclusive as to that .fact, and .should either buyer *319 or seller sue the other and base his claim on over or under weights resulting from fraud, accident, mistake or anything else, the other has the right to plead the weights, as found by the weighmaster, in bar of the action, and the same will be conclusive evidence of the weight of the cotton. Whether the act is an attempt to confer upon the weighmaster the exercise of judicial power, or denies to either party to the sale the equal protection of the law, or whether it interferes with plaintiffs’ right to contract, or whether it constitutes a taking of private property for private use (and it seems to be open to objection on any of these grounds), and for any of the reasons stated is uncon- f stitutional, we need not say, for true it is, it was beyond the power of the Legislature to make the finding of the weighmaster conclusive evidence of that fact, and hence the act must fall, as denying to the party sued, whether buyer or seller, due process of law.

Cooley’s Const. Lim. (7th Ed.) p. 526, says:

“ * * * Except in those cases which fall within the familiar doctrine of estoppel at common law, or other cases resting upon like reasons, it would not, we apprehend, be in the power of the Legislature to declare.that a particular item of evidence should preclude a party from establishing his rights .in opposition to it. In judicial investigations the law of the land requires an opportunity for trial; and there can he no trial if only one party is suffered to produce his proofs. The most formal conveyance may be a fraud or forgery; public officers may connive with rogues to’ rob the citizen of his property; witnesses may testify or officers certify falsely, and records may be collusively manufactured for dishonest purposes; and that legislation which would preclude the fraud or wrong being shown, and deprive the party wronged of all remedy, has no justification in the principles of natural justice or of constitutional law”

—citing Blackwell on Tax Titles, p. 100 et seq.

In McCready v. Sexton & Son, 29 Iowa, 356, 4 Am. Rep. 214, the court said:

"Wantlan v. White, 19 Ind. 470, which was a proceeding by habeas corpus in behalf of an enlisted minor, who had taken the usual oath of his age.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 35, 137 P. 1183, 40 Okla. 316, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-anderson-okla-1914.