Tobacco Growers Co-Operative Ass'n v. Bissett

121 S.E. 446, 187 N.C. 180, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 257
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 20, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 446 (Tobacco Growers Co-Operative Ass'n v. Bissett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tobacco Growers Co-Operative Ass'n v. Bissett, 121 S.E. 446, 187 N.C. 180, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 257 (N.C. 1924).

Opinion

Clark, C. J.

This was an action by the plaintiff association, a nonprofit cooperative marketing association organized under chapter 7, Laws 1921. The defendant is a member of the association. By the *181 terms of tbe marketing agreement embodied in tbe association agreement, signed by tbe defendant, be agreed to sell and deliver to tbe association all of bis tobacco during tbe term of bis contract. Tbe pertinent features of tbe contract so far as tbis appeal is concerned are as follows:

“2. Tbe association agrees to buy and tbe grower agrees to sell and deliver to tbe association all of tbe tobacco produced by or for bim or acquired by bim as landlord or lessor, during tbe years 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925.”
“3. Tbe grower expressly warrants tbat be has not heretofore contracted to sell, market, or deliver any of bis said tobacco to any person, firm or corporation, except as noted at tbe end of tbis agreement. Any tobacco covered by sucb existing contracts or crop mortgage shall be excluded from tbe terms hereof for tbe period and to tbe extent noted.”
“11. Tbe grower shall have tbe right to stop growing tobacco and to grow anything else at any time at bis free discretion; but if be produce any tobacco, or acquires or Owns any interest in any tobacco, as landlord or lessor, during tbe term hereof, it shall all be included under tbe terms of tbis agreement, and must be sold only to tbe association.”
“12. Nothing in tbis agreement shall be interpreted as compelling tbe grower to deliver any specified quantity of tobacco each year; but be shall deliver all tbe tobacco produced by or for bim.”
“13. (a) Tbis agreement shall be binding upon tbe grower as long as be produces tobacco directly or indirectly, or has tbe legal right to exercise control of any commercial tobacco or any interest, therein as a producer or landlord during their term of tbis contract.”
“18. (a) Tbe grower hereby agrees to pay to tbe association for all tobacco delivered, consigned or marketed or withheld by or for bim, other than in accordance with tbe terms hereof, tbe sum of five cents per pound as liquidated damages, averaged for all types and grades of tobacco for tbe breach of tbis contract.”

Tbe complaint alleges tbat tbe defendant bad violated bis agreement by selling all of bis 1922 crop of tobacco to persons other than to plaintiff, and bad announced tbat be would not. deliver any of bis tobacco of tbe 1923 crop to tbe association, and tbat tbe defendant bad sold 1,500 pounds of bis 1923 crop to persons other than tbe plaintiff, and prayed tbat be be required to perform tbe association agreement, and tbat be be restrained from delivering, selling or otherwise disposing of any tobacco produced by ox for bim or controlled by bim during tbe life of tbe contract to any person or persons other than tbe plaintiff, and asked for an injunction pendente lite.

An order was issued by tbe trial judge tbat tbe defendant appear and show cause why a restraining order should not be issued to tbe *182 bearing, and a temporary restraining order was served upon tbe defendant from disposing of any of bis tobacco pending tbe bearing of tbe order to show cause.

Upon tbe sworn statement of tbe defendant tbat be bad sold no tobacco of tbe 1923 crop to persons other than plaintiff, and in view of bis sworn statement tbat be intended to deliver all of bis tobacco to it, tbe plaintiff consented to a dissolving of tbe restraining order theretofore issued, and did not seek a preliminary injunction. Tbe court then granted an injunction to tbe defendant against tbe plaintiff, as prayed, tbat it be'restrained from withholding from tbe defendant, and from any advancement to be made to tbe defendant, any sum of money on account of tbe sales by bis tenants, wbp were not members of tbe association, of their share of tbe tobacco.

Tbe Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association Act, chapter 87, Laws 1921, was construed and its validity sustained in Cooperative Association v. Jones, 185 N. C., 265. Tbe only point which arises on this appeal is tbe construction of tbe clauses of tbe contract above set out, especially of clause 11, upon tbe following facts:

Philip Bissett, who was not a member of tbe association, rented lands from tbe defendant in 1923 and planted four acres in tobacco, as did also Carey Eincb, who rented four acres from him, and William O’Neal, who rented three acres. All of tbe defendant’s tenants above enumerated pay as rent one-balf of tbe crops produced by them. It is admitted tbat of tbe tobacco produced by said Bissett, Eincb and O’Neal, tbe one-balf has been turned over to tbe defendant as rent, and has been or will be delivered by him to tbe plaintiff association, and all tbe tobacco produced by him upon lands which be cultivated in 1923 has been or will be delivered to tbe association.

It is also admitted tbat of tbe tobacco produced by tbe tenants, Philip Bissett, Eincb and O’Neal, tbe one-balf belonging to them will be by them marketed as they see fit, and as they are not members of tbe association, it is presumed tbat they sold their tobacco on what is known as tbe “open” or “auction” market; and it is admitted tbat as tbe above tenants of tbe defendant have prepared their tobacco for market tbe defendant bad met with them and tbe tobacco was divided, tbe defendant taking bis one-balf and tbe above tenants taking their one-balf.

Tbe question presented on appeal is simply this, as is admitted by tbe plaintiff and tbe defendant: Can tbe plaintiff association, from tbe advancements which it has agreed to make to its various members, upon tbe delivery of tobacco to it, deduct five cents per pound as liquidated damages for each and every pound of tobacco produced upon tbe lands of tbe member by tenants who are not members of tbe association, and *183 wbo called for an actual division with tbe landlord, and wbo declined to have tbeir part of tbe tobacco delivered to tbe plaintiff association?

Tbe plaintiff’s brief admits that it cannot compel tbe delivery by tbe landlord or by tbe nonmember tenant to it of tbe portion of tbe crop produced by tbe nonmember tenant, wbicb is tbe property of the tenant and not of tbe landlord.

Under paragraph 2 of tbe contract tbe defendant agreed “to deliver to tbe association all of tbe tobacco produced by or for him or acquired by him as landlord or lessor.” Paragraph 11 of tbe contract provides: “If be (tbe member) produce any tobacco or acquire or own any interest in tobacco as landlord or lessor during tbe term hereof, it shall be included under tbe terms of this agreement, and must be sold only to tbe association.”

It would seem clear, therefore, that tbe only tobacco covered by this contract is tobacco of tbe member produced on lands either owned or rented by him. Neither tbe plaintiff nor tbe defendant agreed that tbe defendant would be compelled to either deliver tobacco belonging to a nonmember tenant nor to pay five cents a pound penalty for failure to do so.

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Related

Layne v. Tobacco Growers Co-operative Ass'n
133 S.E. 358 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1926)
Dark Tobacco Growers' Co-Operative Ass'n v. Robertson
150 N.E. 106 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 446, 187 N.C. 180, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tobacco-growers-co-operative-assn-v-bissett-nc-1924.