Three Rivers Growers' Ass'n v. Pacific Fruit & Produce Co.

294 P. 233, 159 Wash. 572, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 733
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1930
DocketNo. 22420. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 294 P. 233 (Three Rivers Growers' Ass'n v. Pacific Fruit & Produce Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Three Rivers Growers' Ass'n v. Pacific Fruit & Produce Co., 294 P. 233, 159 Wash. 572, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 733 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

*573 Fullerton, J.

— In this action the respondent, Three Rivers Growers’ Association, recovered' against the appellant, Pacific Fruit & Produce Company, for a balance claimed to be due on the purchase price of a carload of strawberries.

The respondent is a co-operative marketing association, having its principal place of business at Kennewick, in this state. The appellant is a brokerage concern, dealing in farm and orchard products, having its principal place of business at Portland, in the state of Oregon. In the early part of June, 1927, the appellant ordered from the respondent a carload of strawberries, directing that they be shipped to Calgary, in the Dominion of Canada, consigned to a wholesale dealer at that place. The carload was shipped on July 9, 1927, according to the directions given. The car shipped contained 1,050 crates, and was billed to the consignee at four dollars per crate. By the agreement between • the appellant and the respondent, the appellant was to receive a discount of ten cents per crate.

At the time the order for the berries was given, nothing was said about the size of the carload that was to be shipped. It seems that there were three sizes of cars recognized by the trade as a carload, namely, a minimum car containing 770 crates, a medium car containing 950 crates, and a maximum car containing 1,050 crates. The car shipped, as we have noted, contained the maximum load, and when it reached the consignee, it made complaint to the appellant of an overload. The appellant passed the complaint on to the respondent, and it agreed that one hundred crates might be taken from the car and turned over to its own broker at Calgary, reducing the load to a medium carload. In settlement for the berries the consignee of the car dealt with the appellant, settling with it on a basis which netted the respondent, after deduct *574 ing the agreed discount, the sum of $3,675. This sum the appellant remitted to the respondent by check, which check the respondent received and cashed.

The respondent, contending that the sale of the berries was a sale outright to the appellant, brought this action to recover what it conceived to be the difference between the contract price of the berries and the amount remitted to it. The trial court held that the sale was a sale to the appellant, but allowed a greater discount than the respondent admitted as allowable in its complaint; stating the account between the parties in the following manner:

“V. That by virtue of said sale there became due and owing from the defendant to the plaintiff the total sum of $4,067, as follows:
“Agreed sale price, 1,050 crates at $4 per crate .............................. $4,200
“Less discount of 10c per crate on 1,050 crates ..............................$105
“Less additional discount of 10c per crate on 280 crates ....................... 28
Net balance due.................. $4,067
“VI. That on or about the 21st day of June, 1927, the.defendant paid to the plaintiff on account of said purchase price the total sum of $3,675, and that there is now due and owing from the defendant to the plaintiff the aforesaid sum of $392, together with interest thereon at 6% per annum from and after the 21st day of June, 1927.”

On its appeal, the appellant makes two principal contentions: First, that it acted as a broker for the respondent in the transaction and was not itself a purchaser of the carload of berries; and second, that, conceding that it was a purchaser, there was an accord and satisfaction of the differences between the parties.

On the first of the contentions, there is a con *575 flict in the evidence. The manager of the appellant testified that, early in the year 1927, he called the manager of the respondent by telephone and asked for and obtained leave to sell strawberries for the respondent in the territory of Montana and western Canada at a brokerage commission of ten cents per crate, and that it did, in the ensuing berry season, make a number of such sales* one in particular being to the very purchaser who purchased the strawberries here in question. The respondent’s manager testified directly to the contrary. His version of the agreement is that the respondent declined to permit the appellant to sell as a broker any of its strawberries, but offered to sell such berries to the appellant as it might desire to buy, at a discount of ten cents per crate from the current prices, and that the prior dealings between the parties were on this basis.

A number of telegrams and letters passed between the parties with reference to the transaction, but these, as we read them, do not lend much support to either party. But, in so far as they do bear upon the question, they seem to us to sustain the contention of the respondent. The sale had its origin in a telegram sent by the appellant to the respondent requesting the respondent to “wire quick quotations on a carload of berries prompt shipment.” It contained also a query concerning another car, but nothing to indicate the person to whom or the place at which shipment of the car was desired. The answer of the respondent was evidently made over the telephone. The answer returned is not in the record, and its purport can only be gleaned from the communications between the parties which followed. On June 8, the respondent sent to the appellant two telegrams; the first reads, “Prospects very favorable for strawberry car tonight;” and the second, “Account rain two hundred *576 crates short ship tomorrow night sure.” To these the appellant answered by a telegram dated June 9, saying: “All right ship berries today Plunkett Savage Calgary advise early total number crates.” Under the same date the respondent wired in answer: “Shipping thousand fifty berries car ABE five nine seven.”

These telegrams, manifestly, do not support the contention that the sale of the berries was a sale by the respondent to the dealer at Calgary. Their tendency is to the contrary. Certainly, if the respondent was selling to a party other than the appellant, it would want to know who the party was, so as to have some idea as to his ability to pay for the berries when delivered, yet the telegrams furnish no information as to these matters. Indeed, in so far as they read upon their face, they do not indicate that the respondent knew to whom the berries were to be consigned until after the sale was consummated. To our minds, therefore, they are consistent with the respondent’s contentions; that is to say, consistent with the contention that the sale was to the appellant, but inconsistent with the contention that the appellant was a mere broker, selling the berries for the respondent on a stated commission.

The further evidence also points to the same conclusion. The consignee complained of an overload, and also complained of the condition of the berries on their arrival.- But it made these complaints to the appellant, not the respondent.

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Bluebook (online)
294 P. 233, 159 Wash. 572, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/three-rivers-growers-assn-v-pacific-fruit-produce-co-wash-1930.