Woldert v. Arledge

23 S.W. 1052, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 692, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 509
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1893
DocketNo. 339.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 1052 (Woldert v. Arledge) 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
Woldert v. Arledge, 23 S.W. 1052, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 692, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 509 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, AssoOiate Justice.

The appellant brought suit against the appellee for damages on account of breach of contract. Plaintiff was engaged at Tyler, Texas, in the commission and brokerage business, and the defendant, S. C. Arledge, was a grocer at Crockett, Texas.

On the 10th of November, 1890, Arledge addressed Woldert a postal card, asking for prices of bacon for February and March delivery, and on same day Woldert, in reply to the postal, wired Arledge as follows: “ February, short clear bacon, 6 cents; March, 7.5 cents; all loose; f. o. b. Kansas City; margin, cent per pound. Quick reply if want any. Market booming.” On the same day the telegram was confirmed by letter.

On the 13th of November, Arledge wired Woldert as follows: “ Will take one car February and March bacon. Forward contracts and draw for margin.”

On the 13th of November, Woldert wrote to Arledge in these words: “ Your telegram of even date at hand, reading as follows: 1 Will take one car February and March bacon. Forward contracts and draw for margin.’ I have bought same to cover, and will make out and forward to you to-morrow, and draw for margins.” Contracts were sent in accordance with the advice contained in the letter from Woldert, and also a draft for $250 to cover margins. The contracts stipulated for the purchase of 25,000 pounds of bacon by Arledge, to be delivered on board of train at Kansas City, free of charge, in February, and for the like quantity to be delivered in March, at same place and ón same terms. Arledge refused to sign the contracts, and promptly returned the same, together with the draft unhonored; alleging as his reason for not signing, that he had agreed to buy two cars of bacon, and that a car of bacon was 20,000 pounds, and not 25,000 pounds. The plaintiff Woldert upon return of the contracts and the drafts sent contracts for the delivery of 40,000 pounds of bacon, 20,000 in February, and the like quantity in March, and drew for $200 instead of $250, but Arledge declined to honor the draft or to sign the contracts, and refused to have any further communication on the subject.

Bacon declined on the 13th of November, 1890, and continued to decline until after March. In the months of February and March, 1891, the plaintiff, Woldert, sold at public auction in St. Louis, Missouri, the 50,000 pounds of bacon, such as the defendant by his telegram of the 13th of November agreed to take, and afterwards brought his action to *695 recover of the defendant the difference between the amounts for which the bacon sold in February and March, and the prices at which it was ■offered to defendant in the month of November, and upon trial of the cause verdict and judgment were rendered for defendant.

The appellant complains of the charge of the court in several particulars.

If by the usage of the trade in Kansas City a car load of bacon is understood to be 25,000 pounds, then the telegram sent by Arledge to Woldert on the 13th of November, and Woldert’s reply thereto of the same day, constituted a contract between the parties, and a breach of its terms by either would give the other the right to recover damages; and the court should not have instructed the jury, that if the parties contemplated that before the agreement between them, as expressed in the telegram, should be regarded as binding upon them, the terms of their contract should be reduced to writing and signed by them, and the margin be put up, then the telegrams would not be more than negotiations for a contract, and would not constitute a contract or give plaintiff a cause of action.”

Whenever a distinct and definite proposal is made by one'person to another, and the latter accepts the same absolutely, and without qualification or condition, the minds of the parties meet and negotiations close, and the proposal and acceptance constitute a contract, mutually binding, as soon as the acceptance, when negotiations have been conducted by wire or through the mail; is deposited in the postoffice or the telegraph office for transmission to the person making the proposal. It sometimes occurs that when the parties have agreed, their correspondence shows that the agreement is not considered by them as final and binding until contracts referred to in the negotiations have been executed between them; but in this case, the court is of the opinion- that the direction in the defendant’s telegram of the 13th of November, to forward contracts and draw for margins,” does not modify or change the purport of the preceding words of the telegram, “ will take one car February and March.”

Usage comprehends the habits, modes, and course of dealing which are generally observed, either in any particular branch of trade, or in all mercantile transactions. A usage must be established, known, certain, and uniform and reasonable, and not contrary to law. The office of a usage is to interpret the otherwise indeterminate intentions of parties, and to fix and explain the meaning of words and expressions of doubtful or various senses. Usage must be proved by evidence of facts, not by mere speculative opinions; and by witnesses who have had frequent and actual experience of the usage, and who do not speak from report alone; and they must speak as to the course of the particular trade. 2 Greenl. on Ev., pars. 248, 251, 252. It has also been held, that the rules of the chamber of commerce, established for the purpose of maintaining uniformity in com *696 mercial usages of the place, are admissible tó show the existence or nonexistence of a particular usage in that place. Kershaw v. Wright, 115 Mass., 514.

A usage of trade in which all dealers in that line of trade are bound to-take notice, must be known, must be uniform and certain. In this case-the plaintiff insisted, that by the usage of the trade a carload of bacon meant 25,000 pounds; while the defendant insisted that by usage a carload meant 20,000 pounds. The court, under this state of case, should have submitted, under instructions in conformity with the law as outlined above, the issue of the existence or nonexistence of a usage obtaining among those engaged in the bacon trade at Kansas City, which fixed and determined the quantity of bacon contained in a carload; and if the jury-found that such usage did exist, and that it determined the number of pounds of bacon, by the expression “ a carload of bacon,” to be 25,000, their verdict should have been for the plaintiff, if they further found from the evidence that the plaintiff was able and ready to deliver the bacon free of charge on the cars at Kansas City, at the times mentioned in the-correspondence between the parties, for transmission to Crockett, Texas, on defendant’s account. And on the other hand, if the jury found that by the usage of the trade of that city, a carload of bacon meant 20,000-pounds, the verdict should have been for the defendant; and so, if the jury found that there was no established usage obtaining among those engaged in the bacon trade at Kansas City, by which the number of pounds-contained in a carload was fixed and determined, the verdict should have-been for the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W. 1052, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 692, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woldert-v-arledge-texapp-1893.