Wycoff v. Winona Feed & Grain Co.

353 P.2d 979, 187 Kan. 98, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 2, 1960
Docket41,927
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 353 P.2d 979 (Wycoff v. Winona Feed & Grain Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wycoff v. Winona Feed & Grain Co., 353 P.2d 979, 187 Kan. 98, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 389 (kan 1960).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is an action to recover damages for failure to deliver barley of the quality which the defendant received from the plaintiffs for delivery to the Commodity Credit Corporation.

The defendant’s motions to make definite and certain and to strike allegations of the petition, and its demurrer to the petition, were overruled. The defendant has appealed and specifies such rulings as error.

The only question, under the circumstances, is whether the petition states a cause of action.

The plaintiffs (appellees) are farmers doing business as a partnership and their principal place of business is a farm in the vicinity of Winona, Logan County, Kansas. The defendant (appellant) is a Kansas corporation and its principal place of business is at Winona, Logan County, Kansas.

Sometime prior to the 1959 crop year, plaintiffs produced and stored barley on their farm near Russell Springs, upon which they obtained a Commodity Credit Corporation loan calling for 21,534-bushels of barley grading Number 3.

*99 In 1959 the Commodity Credit Corporation, under its loan agreement with the plaintiffs, became the actual owner of the barley and issued its delivery order directed to the plaintiffs and to the defendant ordering the plaintiffs to deliver the barley to the defendant’s warehouse in Winona, Kansas, where it was graded, weighed, inspected, sampled and accepted by the defendant, as it was delivered, as being the barley of the quantity and quality called for in the delivery order. The defendant charged the fee ■allowed under the public warehouse law, which applies when such public warehouse accepts the responsibility for grade and quantity of the commodity delivered to it.

The defendant then shipped ten cars of barley to the Commodity Credit Corporation at Kansas City, Missouri, to satisfy the ■obligation under the plaintiffs’ loan agreement with the Commodity Credit Corporation. The barley so shipped when graded in Kansas City by the federal grain inspection department was found to be of a grade inferior to Number 3, and the Commodity Credit Corporation charged the plaintiffs for the difference. The plaintiffs made demand upon the defendant for this amount which was refused; consequently this action was brought in the district court of Logan County, Kansas.

It is conceded, under the government’s price support program, the Commodity Credit Corporation has a certain “foreclosure or take-over” date, applying to such grain upon which it has made loans to the producer. After the foreclosure date, the Commodity Credit Corporation becomes the actual owner of the grain and may elect to keep the grain in storage, thereafter paying storage thereon, or it may elect then or at any time thereafter to order the grain shipped and delivered to it. If any deterioration in the quality of the grain has occurred between the date the farmer obtained the loan and the date the farmer delivers the grain after foreclosure on Commodity Credit Corporation’s order, the farmer is surcharged with the difference, if any, in the loan proceeds which he had theretofore obtained and the market value of the deteriorated grain on delivery to the Commodity Credit Corporation. Such surcharge to the farmer is made directly by the Commodity ■Credit Corporation after its receipt of delivery of the grain.

The petition, after identifying the parties and alleging the authority of the defendant as a licensed public warehouse for the reception, storage, handling and shipment of grain under the laws *100 of the State of Kansas and under the laws of the United States and the rules and regulations of the Commodity Credit Corporation, alleges:

“4. That on or about May 22, 1959, the A. S. C. office of Logan County, Kansas, issued its delivery order to the Plaintiffs for the delivery of approximately 21,000 bushels of barley, then under loan to Commodity Credit Corporation, said delivery order specifying delivery to the Winona Feed and Grain Company, Inc., of Winona, Kansas, for handling and shipment by them to Commodity Credit Corporation at Kansas City, Missouri. That under Plaintiffs’ loan agreement with Commodity Credit Corporation, they were to deliver to said Commodity Credit Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri, the barley held by them under loan and this delivery order called for the delivery of Number S Barley, containing not over 10% thin barley. That such delivery order indicated that the same had been inspected by the Logan County, A. S. C. officials and that the same complied with the above grade and was eligible for delivery, all of which facts were well known to the defendant.
“5. That thereafter, the said defendant, by their manager and employees at their Public warehouse at Winona, Kansas, Tested, sampled and inspected the same, checking each truck load as delivered across their scales, accepting each and every load thereof as barley of the same grade and kind as called for in said delivery order, issued by the Logan County A. S. C. office. That they issued their scale tickets therefor. That nothing contained in or on said scale tickets indicated that said grain was of inferior quality and that it was not of the same grade and kind as called for in the delivery order.
“6. That said Defendant, received this grain under said delivery order into their Public Warehouse at Winona, Kansas, and Charged the regular fee set by Commodity Credit Corporation, when a Public Warehouse, receives such grain to be commingled with other grain. That the terms under which grain is so handled and the fee for handling same is required to be posted in the office of such Public Warehouse, by Federal and State Regulations governing such Public Warehouse. Further that it is the usual, regular and well established Custom of the Grain Trade, when grain is received for commingling and in accordance with the regulations of the Commodity Credit Corporation, that when such grain is received on the basis that it will be commingled and handled in that manner, that it then becomes the obligation of the Public Warehouse receiving this grain to do their own grading, sampling and inspecting at the time said grain is received over the scale.
“7. That said Defendant caused to be shipped from its Public Warehouse at Winona, Kansas, to Commodity Credit Corporation at Kansas City, Missouri, Ten (10) cars of barley to satisfy the obligation of Plaintiffs under their loan agreement with Commodity Credit Corporation, or a total of 21,675.85 bushels, said loan agreement, however, calling for only 21,534 bushels, such delivery thus consisting of an overrun of 141.85 bushels.” (Emphasis added.)

The petition then alleges that the Commodity Credit Corporation, upon the delivery to it of the barley from the defendant, inspected, graded and tested the grain which was found to be “sample *101 grade” and not Number 3 barley, thus being of inferior quality, as a result of which the Commodity Credit Corporation credited plaintiffs at the rate of 66/2 cents per bushel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 P.2d 979, 187 Kan. 98, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wycoff-v-winona-feed-grain-co-kan-1960.