Winter Garden Citrus Growers' Asso. v. Willits

151 So. 509, 113 Fla. 131, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 1693
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 5, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 151 So. 509 (Winter Garden Citrus Growers' Asso. v. Willits) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winter Garden Citrus Growers' Asso. v. Willits, 151 So. 509, 113 Fla. 131, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 1693 (Fla. 1933).

Opinion

Buford, J.

Willits' sued Winter Garden Citrus Growers Association, exhibiting a declaration in three' counts. A' judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff on counts one and two. During the course of the trial the court indicated that it would direct á verdict for defendant on count three. Thereupon, plaintiff took judgment of non-suit.

Plaintiff sued out writ of error from this judgment while defendant sued out writ of error from the judgment entered against it on counts one and two of the declaration.

*132 Count three was' based upon the claim for net profits received by the defendant as shown by certain so-called certificates of shipment.

The record shows that there was an account stated between the parties and a settlement had after the issuance of the certificates by the defendant to the plaintiff. The first and second counts were based on an alleged breach of contract between the parties.

To all counts of the declaration there was a plea of “never was indebted.”

To the third count there was’ a plea that defendant did not promise the plaintiff in the manner and form alleged. The third plea denied the alleged promise to plaintiff as set forth in the first and second counts of the declaration.

• The fourth plea was a plea of accord and satisfaction as to the first and second counts of the declaration.

The fifth plea alleged that defendant did not promise as alleged in the first and second counts of the declaration and set up what defendant alleged its contract to be with the plaintiff.

The sixth plea alleged that the plaintiff ceased to be entitled to participate in the equities and profits of the defendant and had forfeited same by withdrawal of membership from the defendant association.

• The seventh plea alleges in effect that the several items referred to in the third count of plaintiff’s declaration represent proportionate estimated increases in the assets of the defendant due to profits made in the operation of its packing plant and other operations and is reserved for the payment of fixed indebtedness and future losses, and ultimately for the distribution of such amounts to members of the association as board of directors of defendant may from time to time deem prudent, and it further alleges that neither its *133 board of directors nor its membership have ever directed or ordered the distribution of such fund, or any part thereof, to any of its members.

The eighth plea was:

“That after picking, packing, shipping and selling plaintiff’s fruit, described in the declaration, and with full knowledge of all of the facts with reference thereto, plaintiff and defendant stated between them a mutual account and balance struck therein was paid and accepted by the respective parties.”

Under the state of the record as we find it, we cannot say that the court erred in indicating that a verdict would be directed in favor of the defendant on count three of the declaration. All of these certificates mentioned in that count of the declaration were in the hands' of plaintiff at and before the date of the settlement between the plaintiff and the defendant in which settlement plaintiff paid to defendant a certain sum of money then found to be due from plaintiff to defendant on account stated between them, which settlement and account was had because of the determination of the plaintiff to withdraw his membership from the defendant. Therefore, the judgment of non-suit should be and is' affirmed.

The evidence is conflicting as to whether or not the item for breach of contract constituting’ the basis of the claim as set forth in the first and second counts of the declaration was' taken into consideration in that settlement, but the record is clear that there was at that time no discussion between the parties of such claim for breach of contract.

The contract is one in the usual form between a cooperative marketing association of citrus' fruits with a member, a citrus fruit grower.

Pertinent parts of the contract to be construed in this *134 case are contained in Sections 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, and 15, which are as follows:

• “1. That Grower hereby appoints Association his agent, and Association hereby agrees to act as such, for the purpose of picking, hauling, processing, packing, shipping, selling and marketing all the citrus fruits which shall be grown for shipment and sale by Grower or for him, or shall be owned or controlled by him, upon any tract or tracts of land in the County of Orange, State of Florida, at such time or times, and from time to time, and in such quantities as' Grower and Association, or their agents, acting in conjunction, may determine. There shall be excepted herefrom such citrus fruits of Grower, if any, as shall, by reason of their location, be handled by some other Citrus Growers Association affiliated with the Florida Citrus Exchange.”
“3. That Association agrees to pick, pack and market said fruit whenever a market may be found for the same which, in the judgment of Association, and in accordance with its rules and regulations, shall justify said marketing. Association shall nqt be liable for any damage that may be sustained through Act of God or public enemy, or accidents in shipment, or storage, or unavoidable failure to secure suitable storage or markets for the proper handling, storing or marketing of said fruit. Any loss occasioned by Grower shall be borne by him.”
"5. That the marketing shall be done by Association through the Florida Citrus Exchange or with its approval and in accordance with its rules and regulations, now or hereafter adopted and observed by it; it being mutually understood that it is a purpose of this agreement to maintain and to increase to its greatest efficiency the Florida Citrus Exchange and that Association, through the medium of its marketing contract between it and the Citrus Sub-Exchange *135 of which it is a member, and through the contract of said Sub-Exchange with the Florida Citrus Exchange, intends to assign such portion of its rights hereunder as' will give the said Florida Citrus Exchange effective control of the marketing of the fruits of Grower.”
“6. That all fruits of Grower handled hereunder may be marketed in assorted lots' or in pools with other fruits of like variety and grade and if marketed in pools, the proceeds of any or all shipments shall be prorated or pooled with .the proceeds of any other fruit of like variety and grade and marketed by Association, during such period or periods as its' Board of Directors may determine.”
“7. That Association shall pay to Grower the returns from the sale of his fruit, being either the amount received therefor, or in the event that it is pooled with other fruit, the pro rata amount of the receipts of the entire pool, less its regular charges' for picking, hauling, packing, shipping and marketing the same and less authorized reserves for retiring bonds, if any, and for paying interest on the same.

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Bluebook (online)
151 So. 509, 113 Fla. 131, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 1693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winter-garden-citrus-growers-asso-v-willits-fla-1933.