Victor v. Adams

106 So. 433, 140 Miss. 643, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 301
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1925
DocketNo. 25132.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 106 So. 433 (Victor v. Adams) 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
Victor v. Adams, 106 So. 433, 140 Miss. 643, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 301 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

*649 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Adams, the appellee, exhibited his bill in the chancery court of Jackson county against the Pascagoula Produce Association as a copartnership, and against more than fifty defendants, including the two appellants here, alleging that these persons composed an organization created among themselves for the purpose of buying and selling farm produce for profit, and for the purpose of purchasing seed and containers for shipment of produce. The complainant alleged that he was in the mercantile business at Long Beach, and delivered to the Pascagoula Produce Association on the order of its representatives certain articles of merchandise, the main feature of which were hampers, containers for the shipment of produce, and alleged a balance due thereon to the amount of one thousand twenty dollars and sixty cents. He further alleged that he could not obtain a list of the members *650 of the copartnership, but that each and all of them having obtained these items were liable collectively and individually for the whole of this indebtedness to him, and prayed a judgment against the association and each and every member for the entire amount of the indebtedness.

Demurrer was filed and withdrawn by the defendants, and Delmas and Victor, together with about a dozen other defendants, filed their separate answers as members of said association. They denied that the organization was formed for the purpose of purchasing farm produce or the seed or containers for profit. They denied owing anything for seed; and denied that they owed any part of the account sued on; denied that hampers were received or accepted by the association as such; denied that the association sold the same or any part at a profit; asserted in effect that Adams had shipped a carload of the hampers to his own agent at Pascagoula, and that his agent had sold the hampers to individuals. They denied any necessity for an accounting, and set up that the association is an agricultural association formed by parties in the county in the truck growing business, for the purpose of providing a co-operative organization ; that it owned no property; had no income; engaged in no business. They further set up that an initiation fee was charged; that the association had no officer who drew a salary; that the only paid employee of said association was one E. Gr. Hays, who was jointly hired by the association and the complainant; that the association had a written contract with Adams, the complainant, by which the complainant was to handle and sell all the vegetables produced in Jackson county for a commission of fifteen per cent, on the gross sales; named about a dozen parties who were members of the association; and denied that the other parties defendant were members of the association.

They further alleged that the hampers were shipped by the complainant to Pascagoula with a distinct agree *651 ment that the same might be used by the vegetable growers who desired to ship through this association, the hampers to be distributed by Hays, the agent of Adams, and that theretofore it had been the custom of Adams to take from the proceeds of sale his charges for hampers, etc. They charged certain negligence on the part of Adams, which we do not think it necessary to recount here. They named many men who were members of the association and who were not sued or served "with process. They made this answer a cross-bill, and prayed for a decree over ogainst Adams for the sum of three hundred fifty-four dollars and seventy-two cents.

Adams answered the cross-bill; denied the negligence and liability set out in the cross-bill as against him; set up specifically that a number of hampers were sold by the association to divers persons without consultation with him; denied all of the allegations of negligence or any indebtedness; and set up that Hays was not a joint employee, but was representing him only in the matter of proper packing and supervision of the packing of the association’s products.

Proof was taken, and the chancellor held that Delmas and Victor, two of the three members of the committee appointed by the association to secure hampers, bought the hampers to be shipped by him, charged to the account of the association, and when the association was in funds it was to pay for same. In other words, the chancellor held that the agreement verbally entered into by those two committeemen and the members of the association was a sale on credit.

Pate, the county demonstration agent, was present at this interview, and insisted that much dissatisfaction would ensue if Adams took pay for the hampers from the proceeds of the sale of the products, but stated that Adams agreed to ship the hampers and look to the individual members for pay therefor.

After this agreement was entered into, the minutes of the association show that it was approved by the as *652 sociation, and the price paid for the hampers singly was sixteen cents, and they immediately ordered that a profit of one and two cents should be put upon the price of a hamper delivered out to its members. The* records show that many members of the association dealt with it and settled with it as to the hampers. In other words, while they contended that it was an individual matter between each individual member of the association and Adams, they did not so act, and the complainant’s testimony was to the effect that it was a sale negotiated by these two defendants to the association on credit.

Much proof was taken, and the chancellor, found that the Pascagoula Produce Association was not a copartnership nor a corporation, nor such legal entity as to be liable as such association to a decree for the indebtedness; but did hold that Definas and Victor were individually liable for the sum sued for, one thousand twenty dollars and sixty cents, less certain offsets allowed, which taken from that sum left a balance of six hundred fifty-three dollars and fifty cents, for which he entered a decree in ’favor of the complainant against these two defendants.

Appellant contends, first, that the chancellor erred in holding that there was a contract of sale through the committeemen to the association, and contends that on the proof adduced that complainant failed to show a sale to the association.

This is a voluminous record, and we cannot set out the testimony in this opinion, but content ourselves by saying that there was a sharp issue of facts between the complainant and these committeemen, and especially Pate, as to what was said when the hampers were ordered to be shipped. Adams finally testified positively as above indicated, and in accordance with the chancellor’s finding, and all of the testimony shows clearly that the association handled the hampers as their own by entering on its minutes that they would be sold to the members and to individuals at a profit, by receiving and claiming settlements, so that we cannot find satisfactory testi *653 mony upon which to reverse the chancellor upon his finding of fact. Adams did say, however, that Victor’s statement was substantially correct, with the added statement that he sold on credit to the association.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 433, 140 Miss. 643, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-v-adams-miss-1925.