13 S.D. 512 | S.D. | 1900
This action to recover damages arising from the conduct of defendants with reference to a consignment of wheat was tried to a jury, and some of the facts pertinent to the points presented on this appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff are these: Respondent, a grain buyer resid-' ing at Eureka, in this state, shipped a car load of wheat from that point to appellants, who are engaged in the business of selling grain on commission in the city of Minneapolis, Minn. Although the car, containing 625 bushels, reached appellants promptly on the 5th day of June, they made no final disposition of the grain until the 18th day of July, when they disposed of 565 bushels at 98i cents per bushel, and on the 8th day of August following sold the balance at 52-J- cents per bushel. At the time the car reached its destination, and for a day or two thereafter, No. 2 Northern spring wheat was worth $1.23 per bushel, and upon the evidence offered in support of the charge of negligence on the part of appellants in the management and sale of the wheat the jury gave plaintiff a yerdict for $178.28, being the difference between what the grain actually brought
The wheat was bought by respondent from producers, and all except a few bushels, loaded into the car from wagons, was run through a fanning mill before the shipment was made. Respondent testified that it was all nice, clean-looking wheat, and was bought of the farmers for No. 1 Northern grade, which was worth in Minneapolis at the time 10 cents per bushel more than No. 2 Northern. With the exception of an odor something like that of brown paper, which pervaded one load of about 35 bushels, the entire carload of wheat was of fine quality and uniform grade. From appellants’ testimony it appears that on arrival at Mnneapolis the car load was graded No. 2 Northern, and sold by them on' the 7th day of June for $1.23 per bushel, but, on account of the odor and other alleged dam