272 F. 37 | 5th Cir. | 1921
October 3, 1919, the parties to this suit executed the following memorandum contract:
■ “Bought of J. N. Pharr & Sons, Ltd, Berwick, La., for the C. D. Kenny Co., Baltimore, Md., 1,000 barrels of La. plantation granulated sugar at 12e. net per pound, f. o. b. cars at factory. Shipment as soon as possible during November, 1919. All shipments to be made — S/D attached to B/L payable on arrival of goods at destination.
“This purchase to be invoiced and paid for at contract price. No allowances will be made for declines in market.
“This contract contingent upon strikes, accidents, fire, or other causes beyond seller’s control.”
October 6, 1919, they entered into another contract similar in all respects, except that it provided for the purchase and sale of 300 barrels of sugar at the price of 11.76 cents per pound.
-Defendant in error (herein called plaintiff), alleging that plaintiff in error (herein called defendant) refused to sell and deliver the sugar contracted for, sued to recover damages. Defendant first filed an exception of no right or cause of action, which was overruled, and then pleaded that at the times the contracts were entered into it was known to the.parties that the sugar was not in existence, but would have to be manufacured,. and that weather conditions became such that the cane did not mature early enough for the sugar to be manufactured as agreed, and thereupon averred that these weather conditions constituted a cause beyond the defendant’s control within the meaning of the contracts, and also that before deliveries became due the United States Food Administration fixed the price of sugar at 18 cents per pound.
Defendant owned and operated two sugar factories, and manufactured 3,781 barrels of sugar in November, and 6,236 barrels of sugar
There was evidence that the Food Administration allowed wholesalers to make a profit of one cent per pound, and retailers to make a profit of two cents per pound, on sugar during these months of November and December. There was also evidence that the plaintiff had 84 stores at which it sold sugar, and that it was abiding by the scale of profits approved by the Food Administration, and that plaintiff was able to procure only about half of the quantity of sugar it needed to supply its customers. Defendant’s secretary and treasurer gave as one of the reasons for failure to deliver the sugar that he thought the producer, and not the middleman, whether wholesaler or retailer, should have the benefit of the advance in price, especially in view of the limitation by the Food Administration of profit to the middlemen of one and two cents per pound, and further testified that he was willing for plaintiff to have the entire output of the sugar manufactured by defendant, if by doing that plaintiff would surrender its contracts and claims thereunder.
The court charged the jury that, if defendant was prevented from manufacturing sugar by weather conditions, or the unripe condition of the cane, or the shortness of the sugar crop, it would be excused from making delivery; that it was the duty of the plaintiff to minimize the damages as much as possible by buying other sugar to take the place of that contracted for; and also that the government, through the Food Administration, had fixed the margin of profit for dealers as already stated, and instructed them to consider this fact in arriving at the measure of damages. It was shown by the evidence that a barrel of sugar contains 350'pounds or more, from which it is apparent that, if plaintiff had recovered the difference between the contract price and that fixed by the Pood Administration, the damages would have been at least $27,552. Plaintiff recovered a verdiefof $18,200.
At the time the contracts were entered into the Food Administration had not undertaken to control the price of the sugar crop of 1919, and when this was done no attempt was made to cancel the contracts already made, if indeed, that was within the power of the Food Administration. It is not necessary to decide whether it was or not, or whether the recent decision by the Supreme Court in United States v. L. Cohen Grocery Co., delivered February 28, 1921, 255 U. S. -, 41 Sup. Ct. 298, 65 L. Ed. -, has any effect upon civil suits.
Defendant produced enough sugar to fulfill its contracts. There were not sufficient weather or other conditions beyond defendant’s control to prevent fulfillment, and there was no action of the Food Administration which operated to relieve defendant of its obligations.
The assignments of error are very numerous, but they only raise in various ways the questions which have been considered, and no error prejudicial to the defendant is made to appear by any of them.
The judgment is affirmed.