Wooten & Co. v. Bain-Adams Co.

226 S.W. 134, 146 Ark. 462, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 550
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 134 (Wooten & Co. v. Bain-Adams Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wooten & Co. v. Bain-Adams Co., 226 S.W. 134, 146 Ark. 462, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 550 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This appeal comes from a judgment pronounced upon a verdict returned under the direction of the court, after the jury trying the cause had been unable to agree. As the verdict was directed against appellants, we must view the testimony in the light most favorable to their contention, and the case may be stated as -follows: Appellants compose a copartnership engaged in buying <;otton, with their principal office at Helena, Arkansas. Appellees compose a copartnership, and are merchants and cotton buyers, with their place of business at-Portland, Arkansas. J. ft. Woods was the agent of appellants, and bought cotton for them in the territory adjacent to Portland, and on September 28, 1918, bought from appellees two hundred bales of cotton for the account of appellants. Woods bought on orders given him daily by appellants, and made a report in writing at the close of each day, showing what he had bought. Appellants declined to accept certain cotton tendered in discharge of this contract, and appellee brought this suit to recover damages on that account.

At the trial from which this appeal comes Adams, who was one of the partners composing the Bain-Adams Company, testified in behalf of appellees, as did Woods. According to Adams, the sale to Woods included certain specific cotton, and -all of -the cotton tendered conformed to the specifications of the contract. In stating his contract with Woods, Adams testified that there was nothing said about the staple of thé cotton, “only it was to be Portland.” He explained that it was the early part of the season, and that the grade of all the cotton in controversy was practically the same. The testimony shows that Portland cotton classed along with what was called bayou cotton, and that this staple averaged 11-16 inches in length. The staple of other cotton grown in the same county, but away from Bayou Bartholomew, averaged less than that, and was less valuable. Woods gave testimony substantially corroborating that of Adams. He admitted that on September 29th he had wired appellan-ts, " Bought 300 bales of bayous- at price named Friday night,” and he identified a written report made by him on the 28th reciting that he had bought that date from appellees at Portland 200 bales of cotton at 35 cents per pound, to be shipped at once. This report also showed the purchase of 102 bales of cotton, made on the same day, from other persons, some of which had been bought as low as 32% cents per pound.

After .the controversy -arose, which terminated in this lawsuit, Woods gave appellees the following writing:

"Hamburg, Ark, September 28, 1918.
"The Bain-Adams Company, Portland, Ark. Gentlemen : I hereby confirm purchase from you over ’phone of 200- B/C for account of Messrs. C. A. Wooten & Company of Helena, Ark., at 35 cents per lb. As per conversation, we will accept the sixty-four B/C, A; P. McCombs from Thebes, also the sixty B/C from W. L. Blanks at Parkdale, and you are to ship the remainder from Portland, or cotton fully equal Portland cotton in staple and grade.
"Yours truly,'
" J. R. Woods.
"This confirmation given on this November 1, 1918, is as I would have given it on September 28, the date of purchase.
"J. R. Woods.”

Nothing more is claimed for this writing than that it evidences the contract made on September 28th, and Adams testified that Woods had seen the cotton therein mentioned, and had agreed to accept it under the contract, and that he was proceeding in the usual and customary way to deliver the cotton, when appellants refused to receive and pay for it.

The first shipment made consisted of 33 bales. Bills of lading covering this shipment were attachéd to a draft drawn on appellants, and the draft was paid on presentation. Two additional shipments were made in a similar way, but tlie drafts accompanying the bills of .lading were dishonored.

C. A. Wooten, a member of the appellant firm, testified that the first draft was paid prematurely and inadvertently by his cashier, and should not have been paid at all, as the cotton did not meet the requirements of the contract; that these drafts were not payable until samples of the cotton had been received and examined, and this first payment was made before the arrival of the samples. Wooten further testified that he bought this cotton to fill a special order, which required its delivery-in New Orleans by the end of October, and that delivery of the cotton was not made promptly by appellees as required by the ' •contract, and, as we understand his testimony, the first shipment had gone on to New Orleans before the discovery that the cotton did not meet the requirements of the contract. He further testified that the second and third shipments were refused because they were not made in time, and because the shipments were made from points which indicated that the cotton would not be of the required grade. These last shipments covered in part the cotton mentioned in the written confirmation given by Woods on November 1st, but the Blanks cotton there mentioned was never shipped. According to both Woods and Adams, the McCombs cotton, which was embraced in the last shipment, had been inspected and accepted by Woods at the time the contract was made.

After buying the cotton Woods reported the details of the trade to appellants over the telephone, and Wooten offered to testify as to what Woods then told him. This testimony 'was excluded by the court upon the ground that it made no difference what Woods told Wooten, as the only question in the case was what contract was made between Woods and Adams.

It'is insisted, for the reversal of the judgment, that the cotton was not tendered in time to answer the purpose for which it was bought. But it does not appear that Woods advised Adams that the cotton was being bought for delivery a,t any special time, and, in the absence of some stipulation to that effect, it would have been sufficient to have made a delivery, or a tender, of the cotton pursuant to the usual and ordinary custom of the trade.

We think the court should have allowed Wooten to detail the conversation which he had with Woods. The court was correct in the view that appellants were bound by what occurred between Woods and Adams, but Woods had been called by, and had testified in behalf of, appellees, and the proffered testimony was admissible for the purpose of contradicting Woods. The conversatipn with Adams, and the one with Wooten, occurred on the same day, and in regard to the same subject-matter, and the excluded testimony would have tended to contradict ■that offered by Woods at the trial.

We think it can not be said that the undisputed testimony shows an offer to comply on the part of appellees and' a refusal to comply on the part of appellants. According to Wooten, he had bought cotton for many years in the territory in which appellees operated, and he knew the grade of the cotton by the points from which it came, and that the cotton which he received, and other cotton which was tendered to him, did not conform to the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 134, 146 Ark. 462, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooten-co-v-bain-adams-co-ark-1920.