Turpin v. Branaman

58 S.E.2d 63, 190 Va. 818, 1950 Va. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 13, 1950
DocketRecord 3613
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 S.E.2d 63 (Turpin v. Branaman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turpin v. Branaman, 58 S.E.2d 63, 190 Va. 818, 1950 Va. LEXIS 171 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ralph E. Turpin, defendant in the court below and here so designated, seeks reversal of a judgment in favor of G. H. Branaman, E. W. Barger and C. M. Lambert, partners trading as Alta Vista Orchards, and hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs.

This partnership operates an orchard in Augusta county and is engaged in growing and selling apples. Defendant is likewise an owner of orchards, and is also a licensed commission merchant. He grows, buys and sells fruit, and acts as broker for others in the sale of their orchard and farm products.

The chief factual controversy is Whether or not a transaction between these parties, which culminated in a verdict and judgment against defendant for $2,196.34, was a sale of apples by plaintiffs to defendant, or was defendant, as he contends, merely acting as broker in the sale of the apples to another party?

The testimony is highly conflicting. Plaintiffs contend that through an oral contract and agreement they made sale of fifteen truckloads of apples to defendant and as directed by him, delivery was to be made to Zigler Canning Cooperative, Inc., Timberville, Virginia. This company will be hereinafter referred to as the Co-op.

*822 Defendant insists that the oral contract between him and plaintiffs was not a sale of the apples to him, but that he merely acted as a broker in the transaction whereby sale and delivery by plaintiffs was actually made to the Co-op. In short, defendant insists that he was not the buyer of the apples and thus incurred no personal liability to pay for them.

The proof offered by plaintiffs establishes that their orchard manager, E. T. Almarode, talked on the phone with defendant relative to the sale of York apples from their Alta Vista Orchard. Defendant suggested that he be allowed to act as broker and sell the apples to the Co-op. To that suggestion, Almarode replied that his principals did not own any stock in the Co-op and therefore he did not think they could sell to it. He further testified that defendant thereupon said, “Sell them to me.” Almarode then reported back to Mr. Branaman, who instructed him not to sell to the Co-op, but authorized him to sell the apples to defendant. Following out that instruction, he immediately went to defendant’s office and advised his 'employee and office manager, Mr. Mehler, that they would sell the apples to Mr. Turpin. He says their conversation was, “I told Mr. Mehler, ‘We are going to sell you those apples and how do you want to put them in Timberville.’ He said, ‘Put them through Ralph Turpin to Alta Vista’ and we started hauling them the next morning, fifteen loads.”

Other evidence given by tins witness strongly indicates that the sale was to defendant and not to the Co-op. Typical in this respect are the following extracts from his testimony:

“Q. What do you mean by his ‘instructions were to sell them direct.’
“A. He meant sell them to Mr. Turpin. He wouldn’t sell them through a co-operative.
*******
“A. We didn’t sell them to the co-operative. I sold them to Mr. Turpin.
#######
*823 “Q. Whenever you had the conversation you claim you had with Mr. Turpin, you say Mr. Turpin told you to sell to this by-product plant?
“A. No, sir, said sell them to him—1 'will buy them. Sell them to me.’ ”

Other evidence sufficiently establishes the fact that the weight, grade and sales price of the apples were to be determined by inspection and classification when delivered, the price being that prevailing at the Co-op for the particular quality of apples, less fifteen cents per hundred pounds as compensation or profit to defendant.

The total price of the fifteen truckloads of apples amounted to $4,196.34. By check of Ralph E. Turpin drawn to Alta Vista Orchards under date of January 3, 1948, $2,000 of this amount was paid. Accompanying that check was a memorandum which might indicate that he acted as broker in the sale to the Co-op, but is far from conclusive of that construction.

The oral testimony of defendant and his office manager and employed, M. L. Mehler, is definitely to the effect that defendant never purchased the apples but acted solely as broker.

The documentary evidence, consisting of what are called “Shed Receipts”, which are the several receipts given by the Co-op when the apples were delivered to that company, the cancelled check for $2,000, paid plaintiffs by Ralph E. Turpin with the memorandum attached, and several statements of accounts, is in some particulars helpful to each litigant; yet, taken as a whole, it is not conclusive to establish the character of the transaction. In the final analysis, it may be justly said that the evidence, both oral and documentary, is conflicting and presents a factual issue as to whether the contract was one of sale or brokerage. Under such circumstances, the finding of the jury has resolved all conflicts in favor of plaintiffs and is binding upon us. .

The next. questions presented are: Did the court err in *824 the exclusion of certain testimony offered by defendant, and in. the giving and refusal of instructions?

To maintain his contention that the agreement that he: had entered into was not to buy the apples but to act as broker, defendant offered the testimony of two strangers to the transaction. This evidence was to the effect that he had entered into oral agreements and acted as broker for one of these witnesses and for other parties in the sale of their apples, and that when he bought apples himself, he always entered into a written contract. It was for the avowed purpose of proving by two persons who were strangers to this contract that in verbal transactions defendant had acted as broker, but when he bought for himself, he executed written contracts. It was attempted to thus establish by similar transactions that it was his course of conduct, habit and custom to act only as a broker in transactions similar to the one in question,—?, <?., where no written contract was executed.

This testimony was rejected by the court and we think, rightly so.

There was no ambiguity in the contract relied upon by plaintiffs or in that contended for by defendant. No question of construction was involved. Whichever contract had been entered into, its terms were fixed, certain and plain. The prevailing litigants asserted that the contract was one of sale and purchase—the other litigant insisted that he had made no purchase but that the agreement was definitely one in which he was to act as a broker. The testimony was highly contradictory as to which one of the two alleged' contracts, each definite in its character and terms, had been entered into.

Upon that issue, the evidential worth of proof of other and former transactions of similar character entered into by a party to this contract with strangers was remote, irrelevant aiid of no probative value in determining which of the two alleged contracts was actually entered into on this occasion.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E.2d 63, 190 Va. 818, 1950 Va. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turpin-v-branaman-va-1950.