W. H. Carsey & Co. v. Farmer

79 S.W. 245, 117 Ky. 826, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 9, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 245 (W. H. Carsey & Co. v. Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Carsey & Co. v. Farmer, 79 S.W. 245, 117 Ky. 826, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 251 (Ky. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE HOBSON

Reversing.

W. H. Carsey & Co., are tobacco warehousemen at Clarksville, Tenn. Farmer & Davis are tobacco dealers at Murray, Ky. In the year 1899, Farmer & Davis shipped their tobacco to Carsey & Co., the latter making them advances from time to time thereon, to secure which Davis executed to them a mortgage on a tract of land owned by him. When the tobacco was all sold there was a balance, as shown by the books of Carsey & Co., due them from Farmer & Davis of [829]*829$433, and, it not having been paid, they instituted this suit to recover the money and enforce the mortgage. The defendants filed an answer in three paragraphs, as follows:

“(1) The agreement between the plaintiffs and the defendants was that the defendants were to buy tobacco in the country and ship it to the plaintiffs’ warehouse in Clarksville, Tenn., to be sold by the plaintiffs for thd customary charges, and in consideration of this the plaintiffs agreed that they would from time to time advance to the defendants money with which to pay for the tobacco they so bought, and would keep in their hands a sufficient amount of money to pay for all the tobacco purchased by them which was to be and was shipped to plaintiffs’ warehouse; that plaintiffs failed to keep the contract, and refused - to furnish the defendants the money to pay for the tobacco purchased by them when they had contracted for 42,000 pounds of tobacco in the country; that by reason of this they were unable to buy the tobacco so contracted for, and lost the profits which they would have made on the 42,000 pounds of tobacco, they being unable to get the money elsewhere; that they contracted for the tobacco at five or six dollars a hundred, and could have made a net profit on it of at least one dollar and a half a hundred; that in addition to this they were at trouble and expense to the amount of $50 in making the contracts with the farmers, and to the amount of $75 in rescinding these contracts when the plaintiffs refused to furnish them the money to pay for the tobacco after it ha,d been contracted for, making in all $820.
“(2) The defendants shipped to the plaintiffsi for sale 111,221 pounds of tobacco, of the value of $8,896, which was sold by the plaintiffs for that sum, but the plaintiffs failed to account to the defendants for at least $1,360 of the purchase price.
[830]*830“(3) By reason of the plaintiffs not furnishing the money as agreed, the defendants had been unable to use a barn which they had rented to put the tobacco in, and thus lost, the rent, $100, and they had also been damaged $500 in their reputation as tobacco dealers by their inability to carry out the contracts they had made, by reason of the plaintiffs’ refusal to advance them the money.”

All these sums were pleaded as' a counterclaim. The plaintiffs demurred to the answer,. and, their demurrer being overruled, filed a reply controverting its allegations. Proof was taken, and on final hearing the court allowed the defendants on their counterclaim $499.73, setting off against this the plaintiffs’ debt of $433, and entering judgment in favor of the defendants for $66.73. The plaintiffs appeal.

While the reply of the plaintiffs is not in the usual form, we think it substantially sufficient as a denial of the allegations of the answer. The proof is wholly insufficient to warrant the judgment for the defendants on the second, paragraph of the answer, alleging that the plaintiffs had not accounted for the price received for the tobacco which was sold by them on account of the defendants. The proof by the plaintiffs is unequivocal that all the money received was accounted for, and an itemized statement of the sales is filed, also an itemized statement of the plaintiffs’ account, which is testified to be correct. There is no contrary evidence except the following: The defendants state that they weighed the tobacco bought by them from the farmers, and that their scales were correct. They also show that the weights of the hogsheads as given by the plaintiffs in the reports of their scales were 8,800 pounds less than the weights of the tobacco for which they paid the farmers. They also show, that they shipped to the plaintiffs 61 hogsheads, [831]*831and only 59 hogsheads were reported by the plaintiffs' in their account. But it is shown on the cross-examination of the defendants, and not controverted, that two hogsheads of the tobacco shipped in their name was- ordered to be sold by them in the name of a customer, W. Adams’ and that these hogsheads were reported' in Adams’ name. It is further shown that the defendants shipped three hogsheads of their tobacco to another warehouse which sold it, and while the weight of these hogsheads is not definitely established by the proof, judging .from the weight of the other hogsheads, we think they may be safely put at about 4,800 pounds. This leaves only about 4,000 pounds of deficiency between the weights made by the defendants .to the farmers and those made by the warehousemen when the tobacco was sold in Clarksville. The defendants sold during the season, also, 11 hogsheads at another warehouse, and the deficiency of 4,000 pounds must be considered with reference to these hogsheads, as well as those shipped to the plaintiffs. Some of the tobacco was broken twice, not being sold when first offered. It was sold during the summer, and the loss is greater in dry weather than in damp, as the tobacco dries out. The proof warrants the conclusion that a loss of 25 pounds to the hogshead is not an unreasonable allowance on this tobacco. This would make a loss of nearly 2,000 pounds; and if there was this much loss at the warehouse, it would seem reasonable, there was as much loss in the handling and prizing of the tobacco at the defendants’ barn. But, however this may be, the proof is satisfactory that the plaintiffs accounted for all the money they received for the tobacco, and there is nothing in the evidence to warrant a judgment against them for anything beyond the money they received. ’

[832]*832The other two paragraphs of the answer will be considered together, as they both depend upon the allegation that the plaintiffs agreed to make advances and broke the agreement. The only proof of the agreement is the evidence of the defendant Farmer as to a conversation between him and the plaintiff W. H. Carsey, which is denied by Carsey. Both the conduct of the parties and the circumstances sustain Carsey, and, while we are satisfied it was contemplated and understood between the parties that Carsey & Co., would make advances to the defendants, we are also satisfied that it was understood they were to do this only as long as things were satisfactory. When Carsey & Co., refused to make further advances, the defendants had fallen behind, and their attention was called to the condition of their account. Carsey & Co., can not be held, under the loose evidence in this record, to have agreed to continue to make advances after the defendants fell behind. They were not satisfied with the way things were going. The defendants had the right to terminate the arrangement with Carsey & Co., and it is hard to conceive that the parties contemplated that Carsey & Co., were compelled to furnish money when the defendants did not -keep up their account. There was no writing evidencing the contract. There is nothing in the letters between the parties sustaining in any degree the defendants’ contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 245, 117 Ky. 826, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-carsey-co-v-farmer-kyctapp-1904.