92 So. 711 | La. | 1922
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment refusing its demand for damages aL leged to have been suffered by reason of defendant’s violation of a contract for the sale and delivery of rice.
Plaintiff is domiciled in the city of Philadelphia, and defendants are engaged in rice milling in the city of Crowley, in this state. On October 10,1916, defendants bound themselves to sell and deliver to plaintiff, f. o. b. cars in Crowley, 5,000 pockets of rice at 8% cents per pound, one-half to be shipped during the month of December, 1916, and the rest to be shipped during the month of January, 1917. Defendants shipped 1,771 pockets out of the total amount stipulated in the contract, and, ■ for reasons which, in answer, they allege to be justified, failed to make further shipments.
Plaintiff sues for damages in the sum of $4,231.25, composed of (1) profit which it would have made in the sum of $887.98, (2) damages which it paid to one of its customers on account of nondelivery, $3,148.27, and (3) expenses of its representative to Crowley, $195.
The district court refused to grant its demand, and hence the present appeal.
The reasons advanced by defendants for failure to ship are substantially that plaintiff failed to send sufficient shipping directions, that the shipping directions which plaintiff did give were erroneous, that there was a shortage of railroad cars, and that an embargo on rice shipments by water, from Texas and Louisiana to New York and points beyond, was established by the Southern
On November 3, 1916, plaintiff wrote defendants, informing them that it had sold to the Reeves Parvin Company, New York, the 5,000 bags of rice which it had bought for December and January delivery, and asking defendants the probable dates of shipments. In a postscript plaintiff added:
“Kindly state positively what route you will ship by — Morgan Line or Southern Pacific.”
This letter remained unanswered, so that on December 2, one month later, it again wrote, inquiring about these shipments. Then there were several telegrams and a letter between the parties in regard to the shipment of 1,000 pockets of rice to Europe by way of New Orleans, not having any bearing upon the question at issue. The next communication in regard to deliveries under the contract was from defendants to plaintiff under date of December 26, 1916, wherein defendants announced that they had shipped 1,000 pockets to New York, and in this letter they say:
“Regret it will be impossible for us to ship any more this month,” etc.
Seven hundred and seventy-one pockets additional were shipped in January. About the midfile of February several telegrams and letters were again exchanged between the parties, and1, on February 17, 1917, defendants acknowledged that they still owed plaintiff 3,229 pockets, pleading their inability to deliver on account of embargo by ocean steamers. Finally, on February 27, 1917, defendants wired their inability to comply with the contract unless terms of payment were changed.
The agreement between plaintiff and defendants fixed the time and place for delivery during the months of December and January at Crowley, La., and defendants would therefore under these terms have had until January 31st to make delivery, but the telegrams and letters exchanged between the parties show that plaintiff indulged defendants until February 27, 1917, when defendants declared their inability to comply, and therefore their final failure to perform their obligation took place on that date, February 27, 1917.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be set aside and avoided, that this cause be remanded to the district court for the parish of Acadia, there to be reopened for the purpose of enabling the parties to produce evidence showing the market value of rice of the grade and quality and in the quantity called for in the contract of October 10, 1916, said market value to be of date February 28, 1917, in Crowley, La., or other rice market in close proximity to the rice-growing sections of Louisiana and Texas. It is further ordered that costs of appeal be paid by defendants and appellees; other costs to await final determination of the case.