Weld-Neville Cotton Co. v. Elder, Dempster & Co.

204 S.W. 678, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 670
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 1918
DocketNo. 7566.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 678 (Weld-Neville Cotton Co. v. Elder, Dempster & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weld-Neville Cotton Co. v. Elder, Dempster & Co., 204 S.W. 678, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 670 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Appellee sued appellant in the court below for $3,500 damages, alleged to have accrued by reason of 2,000 bales of the latter’s cotton having taken up more space on the former’s steamshipi between Texas City, Tex., and Havre, France, than it should have done under their contract. Judgment for $1,103.45 was entered in favor of appellee, from which this appeal is taken.

A very succinct statement of the contract as declared upon by appellee is taken from its brief, page 20, as follows:

“The plaintiff alleged that the defendant contracted to furnish for transportation 2,000 bales of ‘high density Webb compressed cotton,’ and the defendant failed to keep and perform its contracts, in that it did not deliver to plaintiff 2,000 hales of high density Wehh compressed cotton, hut delivered to plaintiff 2,000 hales of Wehh compressed cotton which were not of high density as contracted for; that the density of said cotton so delivered fell far below the density contracted for, to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,500.00; that high density Webb compressed cotton has a minimum density of about twelve pounds per cubic foot greater than the minimum density of standard compi-essed cotton; that the average density of the cotton furnished by defendant was about ten per cent, less than the density contracted for in the use of the words in the contract ‘high density Webb compressed cotton,’ to the damage of the plaintiff in said sum of $3,500.00.”

The italics appearing are our own, inserted to specially point out in what particular the Dempster Company charged the Ne-ville Company with having breached the contract between them; thus by its own statement, which is an accurate digest of its pleadings, the only respect in which it claimed the contract to have been violated was in the failure of the Neville Company to furnish it cotton of as high density as contracted for; it is true thlat no fixed high density ■is specifically alleged, as appellant erroneously, we think, contends; but the inevitable effect of the averments made is that at least some certain high density per cubic foot as a minimum was contemplated in using the term, “high density Webb compressed” cotton; that is, in putting those woids into their agreement, the parties mutually understood and intended that the 2,000 bales to be furnished by the one and carried across the ocean by the other should not fall below some fixed density.per cubic foot, and consequently, being just so compact, should only take up so much definitely determinable room within the ship, and no more. Indeed, that is not only the plainly conceded effect of its pleading as made by appellee in the statement already quoted from its. brief, but likewise follows from the nature of the sole recovery it sought, to wit, compensation for the wrongful taking up by appellant of more room in the ship than it was entitled to.

Nor is the net result of this analysis of its position changed in the least by the contention of appellee that it did not allege the existence of such a trade usage or custom as required the cotton to be of a minimum density of 34 pounds per cubic foot in order to comply with the terms of this contract. Concession may be freely made that such was not done; that the only custom it alleged had reference to the rate per 100 pounds for ocean transportation, and, further, that its detailed allegation, “that high density Webb compressed cotton has a .minimum density of to wit: about twelve pounds per cubic foot greater than the minimum density of standard compressed cotton,” gave appel-lee a play in density of several pounds per cubic foot, within the limits of which might be found -the precise weight necessary to make it “high density Webb compressed” cotton, yet still such a minimum was necessarily asserted to exist; otherwise there could have been no possible way disclosed, under the case made by the pleadings, of arriving at how much or how little room in the ship the 2,000 bales contracted for either should have, or in fact did take up.

So that it is quite beyond controversy that appellee, having first pleaded that the freight rate for transporting the cotton was based upon its density, grounded its case upon the contention that the cotton it here carried, on account of not having at least the minimum density required by the contract, occupied more room upon its- ship than it would have occupied had it been of the proper density, and the damages sought were for the additional room used.

Such being the nature of the right claimed, on turning to the findings of fact it is disclosed that the court, having tried the case without a jury, found there was at that time no trade usage fixing the specific number of pounds to the cubic foot as the minimum den *679 sity of the cotton contracted for; the relevant parts of its findings of both fact and law being these:

“(4) There was in January, 1916, no trade usage at Houston, Galveston, or Texas Oity fixing a specific number of pounds to the cubic foot as the minimum ‘density’ of the cotton contracted for. * * *
“(5) The ship agents had endeavored to fix a minimum density of 34 pounds, but did not live up to it themselves, and the attempt even was not generally known to cotton exporters, such as the defendant in this case, who had neither knowledge or notice of it. Exporters generally at the time regarded any cotton turned out ~by ’WeVb high density presses in shipshape, or in workmanlike manner, as compliance with oontracts such as sited on, and Imew of no different contention.
“(6) Ship agents, more or less generally, stipulated in contracts such as those sued on, the minimum density required in the particular transaction varying from 32 to 34 pounds, some would have accepted cotton as low as 30 pounds density as in compliance with such contracts.
“(7) My conclusion is that cotton turned out by a Webb high density press in a workmanlike manner should have had a minimum average density of 32 pounds to the cubic foot.
“(8) The cotton furnished by the defendant had gone through a Webb high density press, but it had not all been compressed in a workmanlike manner. Its average density was 31 pounds.
“Law.
“In the absence of a usage of trade as to what constituted Webb high density cotton at the time of the making of these contracts, the true measure of plaintiffs right and of the. defendant’s liability is for cotton turned out by Webb high density presses in a workmanlike manner.”

[1] If, as is strongly indicated both in the portion of the fifth finding we have italicized and in the succeeding conclusion of law, the court meant to find, and upon that as a ba-< sis to so adjudge, that cotton turned out by Webb high density presses in shipshape, or in workmanlike manner, without any reference to density, was then generally regarded as a compliance with a contract calling for “high density Webb compressed” cotton, it follows from the preceding deductions that the judgment was founded on a state of case not declared upon by the appellee. In such circumstances no recovery could stand. Krohn v. Heyn, 77 Tex. 319, 14 S. W. 130; Plow Works v. Morris, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 6, 42 S. W. 652.

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Related

Elder, Dempster & Co. v. Weld-Neville Cotton Co.
231 S.W. 102 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 678, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weld-neville-cotton-co-v-elder-dempster-co-texapp-1918.