131 P. 38 | Wyo. | 1913
Lead Opinion
- The plaintiffs in error as co-partners brought this action in the corirt below as plaintiffs to recover from the defendant in error as defendant upon an alleged balance on an account for advances made by them as factor upon a consignment of wool, interest on such advances, and commission on the sale. The case was tried to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of the defendant for the sum of $2,000 upon his counter-claim for damages for an alleged failure to sell the wool at the market price and as directed by the defendant. A motion for a new trial was overruled, judgment was rendered upon the verdict, and the plaintiffs bring error'.
“Justice;, Batsman & Co. WOOL
122 South Front Street, Philadelphia.
Sept. 25th, 1907.
Mr. A. L. Brock, Buffalo, Wyoming:
Dear Sir:- — -We will receive and sell your wool for the commission of one and one-quarter cents per pound. Interest on advances at the rate of six per cent per annum; no other charges after arrival of wool in store.
Our Commission includes Fire Insurance, premium, Storage and Labor for any period not exceeding six months after arrival of wool, and also Guarantee of Sales.
While we do not guarantee insurance Companies, we make ourselves responsible to keep your wool insured in first class Foreign and Domestic Companies.
Yours truly,
(Signed) Justice, Bateman & Co.”
On the same day the following letter was written by plaintiffs and sent to defendant by due course of mail:
“Philadelphia, September 25, 1907.
Mr. A. L. Brock, Buffalo, Wyoming:
Dear Sir: — We have received through Mr. Charles T. Lee invoice of your 155 bags of wool, which shall have our*290 best attention on arrival. We note that you wish the 30 bags of the J. O. Motgareidge clip accounted for separately.
The wool market is quiet at present, but we look for a better demand shortly, when we think manufacturers will find it easier to get money to finance wool purchases.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) Justice, Bateman & Co.
Charles S. Haight.”
Thereafter plaintiffs as factor sent to defendant by due course of mail the following letter:
“Philadelphia, October 4, 1907.
Mr: A. L. Brock, Buffalo, Johnson Co., Wyoming:
Dear Sir : — We today paid your draft for $7,535-77.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) Justice, Bateman & Co.
Childs.”
The plaintiffs as factor received the wool, stored, exhibited it- for sale and sent .weekly market quotations on that market to the defendant. The market quotations furnished on' January 28 and February 4, 1908, were the same. On February-8, following, the defendant wrote plaintiffs to close out his wool so he could get his returns by April 1st following, if it could be done without making too much sacrifice. On March 5, 1908, he again wrote plaintiffs as follows': “I wrote you sometime ago in regard to my wool. I wrote you to sell my wool as I will want the money April 1, and I really fail to see any reason why the future market will be any better than it is now. One of my neighbor sheep men recently made a good sale of 25 cents. I am willing to sell on present market quotations I received from you. * * *” The wool was classified by the plaintiffs and of the amount so consigned, 47,996 pounds, was classified, graded and sold as fine and fine medium, and the price for that grade of wool, according to the market quotations furnished from time to fime between the consignment on Sept. 21, the day of shipping, until April 1, 1908, following, was not less than 19 cents per pound. The balance of the
The plaintiffs alleged that after receiving and making the advances on the consignment they were unable to sell the wool at the market quotations or otherwise than at the times and prices received for it, and that their lien for advances could not have been realized had they sold at a greatly reduced price, which would have been necessary. Their evidence tends to support these allegations with the exception that the market was a little firmer in the early part of October, 1907, when the wool was received, up to the time of a financial panic which occurred soon after and during that month, and thence on through the year following the wool market was dull. The defendant gave no positive instructions to sell prior to his letter of February 8, 1908, supplemented by his letter of March 5, 1908, but up to that time had left price and time of sale to the judgment of the plaintiffs. It is the general rule that a factor is not obliged to sell at a price which would be less than his lien for advances, commission and just charges at the request of his principal unless the latter pays or tenders such advances and charges. (Heffner v. Gwynne-Treadwell Cotton Co., 160 Fed. 635, 87 C. C. A. 606.) The evidence, however, tends to show that had the factor here sold as instructed at the market
2. The defendant was permitted, over objection and which is here assigned as error, to introduce evidence as to the price of wool at markets other than that to which he shipped his wool. It was within the purview of the contract that the wool should be sold upon the Philadelphia market. It was shipped to that market and it was the failure to sell upon that market of which defendant complained. He alleges in his amended answer “that the market price obtainable for said wool upon the said market at Philadelphia during the spring and summer of 1908 averaged about 20 cents per pound. That the said plaintiffs wholly neglected and failed and refused to sell the said wool at said market price above mentioned, but disposed of said wool, a part thereof, at 10 cents per pound, and other portions thereof at 16 cents per pound. Defendant alleges that if the said plaintiffs had complied with the terms of said contract and sold said wool at the best market price, or at the average price obtainable on said market in Philadelphia, that this defendant would have received $9,535.00 net.” The issue was thus squarely tendered, (1) that the wool could have been sold by the plaintiffs at the quoted or average market price at Philadelphia by the exercise of ordinary care, skill and diligence, and (2) that their failure to use such ordinary care, skill and diligence to so sell the wool upon that market resulted in damage to the defendant. If upon those issues and the evidence the plaintiffs did exercise ordinary care, skill and diligence to obtain the quoted or average market price for wool at that market, then under the rule announced in Commission Co. v. Union Meat Co., supra, they would be entitled to a verdict even though the jury may have believed from the evidence that the wool was sold for less than the quoted or average market price. The consignment was general and to a specified market and the plaintiffs were not bound to look for any other market than the one to which the wool was consigned (Kingston v. Wilson, 14 Fed. Cas.
3. The court, over plaintiff’s objection, instructed the jury without qualifications that the plaintiffs “were under obligations to carry out any and all positive instructions of 'his (the defendant) with reference to the property consigned to them. If you find that any latitude was given to the said agents in regard to their handling of the property entrusted to them, then, I charge you, you should consider whether they acted in good faith and according to their best judgment in carrying out such instructions so as best to preserve the rights and interests of their principal.” This instruction was erroneous for two reasons; first, it disregarded plaintiff’s lien for advances made on the consignment and their right to be reimbursed out of the proceeds
4. It is urged that the cotfrt erred in permitting the defendant over objection to open and close the argument to the jury. The defense was a counter claim by way of confession and avoidance and the court correctly instructed the jury that there was no dispute in the evidence as to the plaintiff’s right to recover unless the defendant had established his counter claim by a preponderance of the evidence, and that the burden in this case rested upon the defendant. That being the situation, the defendant had the right to open and close the argument to the jury.
Other alleged errors have been presented, but as the judgment must be reversed for the errors hereinbefore discussed we assume that they are not likely to occur upon a new trial. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. Reversed.
Rehearing
on petition eor rehearing.
The defendant in error has filed a petition for rehearing, but takes exception only to certain language in the former opinion used in discussing the sufficiency of the evidence, and does not question the correctness of the conclusions reached upon the other points discussed in the opinion. Exception is taken particularly to the following language of the opinion: “The plaintiffs here were bound under their contract to exercise ordinary care, skill and diligence to obtain the fair market value of the wool. We look in vain to find any evidence 'in this record showing, or tending to show negligence in that respect on the part of the plaintiffs. * * * The undisputed evidence, notwithstanding the market quotations furnished, shows that they used due diligence and were unable to find a purchaser who would pay
In stating that “We look in vain to find any evidence in this record showing, or tending to show negligence in that respect on the part of plaintiffs,” and that “The undisputed evidence * * * shows that they used due diligence,” &c., reference was had to the whole of the evidence, and it was not intended as an assertion that there was no evidence tending to show lack of diligence. If there was evidence in the case which might properly be understood as showing that there had been a long delay during a falling market, or if upon another trial evidence to that effect is introduced, then to that extent the evidence tended, or may tend, to show lack of diligence, and sufficient to justify the submission of the matter to the jury, and if unexplained might be sufficient to justify a finding of negligence. (Field v. Farrington, 10 Wall. 141, 19 L. Ed. 923.) It was not the intention by .the use of the language above quoted to foreclose or embarrass the defendant below, plaintiff in error here, in the proof of his defense upon another trial. It-must be remembered that advances had been made by the factors in this case, and in view of such fact, and the failure, as it seemed to the court, to show that the wool could have been sold at an earlier date for a sufficient amount to reimburse the factors for their advances, and all the evidence