Wynne, Love & Co. v. Bunch

248 S.W. 286, 157 Ark. 395, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 286 (Wynne, Love & Co. v. Bunch) 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
Wynne, Love & Co. v. Bunch, 248 S.W. 286, 157 Ark. 395, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 168 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellant is a corporation doing business as a cotton factor in Memphis, Tennessee, and appellee is a farmer residing in Mississippi County, Arkansas. During the season of 1920-1921 appellee shipped to appellant fourteen bales of cotton to be sold for appellee’s account. There were three consignments of this cotton. There were nine bales in the first shipment, two in the second, and three-in the third. Appellee and one Martin shipped a few bales of cotton later for their joint account, but that cotton is not involved in this litigation.

Appellee testified that at the time of the first shipment he visited the office of appellant, and talked with Mr. Wynne, its president, and explained to him that he had taken the cotton over in settlement with his sharecroppers, with whom lie must settle for their interest, and that he explained to Wynne that, while he wanted the largest advance that could be made on the consignment, he- did not want an advance which would exceed the price the cotton would bring. In other words, after settling with his share-croppers, he did not want to be put in position where he would have to call on the -sharecroppers to return money he had paid them for their interest in the cotton.

Appellee testified that Wynne told him that advances of $125 per bale were being made on cotton at that time, and would be made on the nine bales appellee had ready for shipment, and that Wynne also stated he would guarantee to sell the cotton for a sum not less than the amount advanced, and that there would be money coming to appellee after the cotton was sold. He further testified that, in reliance upon this guaranty, the nine bales were shipped, and an advance of $125 was made on each bale. When the next two bales were shipped an advance of $100 per bale was made; and-when the last three were shipped an advance amounting to $250 was made, and appellee testified that he was told by Wynne that the same guaranty -would apply to the remaining shipments. Appellee is substantially corroborated by the testimony of one Kinmann, who accompained him to appellant’s office before the first shipment was made.

The cotton was finally sold by appellant, and lacked $1,104.(87 of bringing the amount of the advances, and appellee was sued for this difference.

Two defenses were set up: the first that the cotton had been shipped under the guaranty stated; and the second that appellant had negligently failed to sell the cotton when it could have been advantageously sold, and the loss incurred was a result of this negligence;

Both of these defenses were submitted to the jury in a single instruction, and there was a verdict for appellee — the defendant. It does not appear upon which defense the jury found for the defendant; hut it does not appear to us that either defense was established, for the reasons hereinafter stated.

Upon the defense of the guaranty, that appellant could, and would, sell the cotton for a sum not less than the advances made thereon, it may be said that if, in fact, the cotton was shipped under the guaranty that it could, and would, be sold for a sum equaling the advance then to be made, as a consideration for the shipment, we know of no reason why that agreement should not be enforced. Pugh v. Porter Bros. Co., 118 Cal. 628. But appellee’s own testimony shows that he did not rely on this guaranty contract, and that he abrogated it.

Appellant insists, however, that the testimony, in its entirety, shows that no such agreement was made, and that the cotton was shipped to it, to be sold by it as a cotton factor, in the usual and ordinary course of business; and it may be said that the correspondence between the parties strongly supports that view.

It is insisted that a particular letter from appellee is an admission of the indebtedness, sued on, and constitutes an account stated. Appellant had sold, on May 18, 1920, six bales of the cotton for sixteen cents a pound, and five bales for twenty cents. Appellee was notified of this sale in the usual manner, and declined to accept that price for his cotton. Appellant canceled the sale except as to one bale, which had brought twenty cents and had been prematurely delivered to the purchaser through error. After appellee repudiated the sale, appellant wrote to appellee advising that it could not continue to carry this advance, and if the sale was not to be confirmed a deposit of $500 would be required to cover the decline in price, and an anticipated future decline. In reply, appellee wrote appellant the following letter dated May 27, 1920: “I received your letter of 24th. I am not able to send you any money. I am expecting my cotton to pay itself out of debt. I saw in paper the Memphis market where blue stained cotton was all the way from eighteen to thirty-five cents, and you sold mine for sixteen and twenty cents, and it is not satisfactory at all, so hold my cotton for better price. Now, I would love to send you check to cover all I owe you but I am not able, and I am expecting the cotton to pay itself out of debt.”

Appellee explained this letter by saying that what he meant was that he would have been glad to have returned the advance and have taken possession of his cotton, but he was not able to return the advance, and he was not therefore in position to demand that appellant surrender the cotton to be sold by some other cotton factor. The letter admits the amount advanced; but this was not in dispute.

The letter was not, however, a part of the contract; but was merely evidentiary of it, and its interpretation was therefore for the jury in connection with appellee’s explanation of it. The rule in such cases is stated by Mr. Thompson as follows: “Where a writing thus put in evidence is-not a dispositive instrument, but is merely offered for the purpose of showing an extrinsic fact, it will be for the jury to say what inference of fact is to be drawn from it.” Thompson on Trials, § 1098, and cases cited; Barker v. Lewis Pub. Co. (Mo. App.), 131 S. W. 929.

It appears, however, that, even though the testimony is legally sufficient to support a finding that there was a guaranty on appellant’s part as to the price for which the cotton would be sold, appellee could not hold appellant liable as a guarantor unless appellant had authority to sell in g’ood faith at the best price obtainable. The rights and duties of a factor in regard to the sale of cotton consigned for that purpose are fully discussed by Judge Battle in the case of Wynne v. Schnabaum, 78 Ark. 402, the appellant there being the appellant here. And when we speak of the rights and duties of a factor we mean as there defined, and they need not be restated here.

It is obvious that appellee seeks to hold appellant liable as occupying the .dual relation towards him of factor and guarantor, and, this being true, appellee would have had no right.to speculate at appellant’s expense by holding the cotton for a higher price than the sum advanced if appellant believed the price would not go higher, and that the best price obtainable had been offered. If appellant, acting with due diligence, in good faith, and with the ordinary discretion required of a factor, believed, at the time the first sale was made, that the best obtainable price had been offered, then it had the right to accept that price and account to appellee for the difference between that price and the guaranteed price.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 286, 157 Ark. 395, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wynne-love-co-v-bunch-ark-1923.