95 Vt. 445 | Vt. | 1921
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff seeks to recover the price of two lots of maple sugar which it shipped defendant on orders received from the Vermont Maple Sugar & Syrup Company, a concern. doing business in New York City. The shipments were made August 8 and August 30, 1917. The first shipment was paid for August 30 and the last was paid for September 29, 1917. Both payments were made to the sugar company.
The bill sets up an equitable assignment by the sugar company to plaintiff of the fund representing the purchase price of the sugar. The defendant filed an answer to the bill in which it incorporated a demurrer. The demurrer, after hearing, was overruled, and the benefit thereof reserved to the defendant. The
And, being so altered, the decree is affirmed and cause remanded.
Rehearing
On Motion for Reargument.
After the foregoing opinion was handed down counsel for defendant had leave to file a motion for reargument, pending which final disposition of the case has been withheld.
The reasons assigned in support of the motion are: (a) That the Court failed to consider and determine the authority of Whiting to bind the sugar company by any assignment or attempted assignment of its funds or credits; and (b) failed to allow defendant its costs in this Court after modifying the decree below by deducting therefrom the sugar company’s commission.
The first question was considered, and is disposed of in the opinion. That the arrangement, which we hold constitutes an equitable assignment, was made by correspondence was "admitted by defendant. The opinion states that the correspondence shows that the arrangement was made direct with the sugar company, and not with Whiting. To this we may add that it appears from the findings, “that the letters and telegrams between the plaintiff and the defendant and the sugar company, constituting Plaintiff’s Exhibits 1, 2, 3, etc. which constitute the arrangement), were written, sent, and received by the respective parties,” and this finding was not excepted to.
The sugar company, and not Whiting, made the assignment, and, that being so, his authority to make it is not in issue.
Motion denied. Let full entry order go down at once.