Cefalu v. Fitzsimmons-Derrig Co.
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Cefalu v. Fitzsimmons-Derrig Co.
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs were wholesale fruit dealers at New Orleans. The defendant, on June 5, 1894, sent them the following telegram, viz.: “Jno. B. Cefalu & Bro.: Ship car of good Honduras bananas to-day or to-morrow to us, at St. Paul, care of St. Paul & Duluth Railroad. Advise.” In response to this order, the plaintiffs the next day shipped a car load of bananas, as directed. At St. Paul the railroad company received the bananas, and carried them to Duluth, pursuant to a prior arrangement between the railroad company and defendant. When the bananas arrived at Duluth, the defendant immediately claimed that the bananas were of an inferior quality, and not according to the kind ordered, and forthwith telegraphed plaintiff as follows: “Car bananas here, subject to your order. Not a first-class bunch in the car;” and the respondent answered as follows: “New Orleans, La., June 13, 1894. Fitzsimmons-D. Co., Duluth: Take fruit. Will write.” Thereupon the appellant had the car unloaded, putting the fruit in the banana rooms, and handled it in the usual way to ripen it, and fit the same for market, as it contended.
Appellant claims that it understood respondents’ telegram to mean that it should receive the fruit, not as its own, to handle for respondents; that it did sell the fruit at the best advantage, and account to respondents for the proceeds, less a reasonable commission. Respondents’ contention is that appellant handled the fruit as its own, and brought an action for the difference between what appellant accounted for and paid, and the invoice price, amounting to $207.90. Evidence having been given in support of the respective claims, the court directed a verdict in favor of the respondents for $207.90 and accrued interest. There was no contention but what the bananas were billed at the market price if they had been of the kind and quality represented by plaintiffs, and the defendant admitted that if there was a complete sale, and no other arrangements made, it would be bound by the price at which they were billed.
The principal controversy is over the question of the place of de
We have examined the other questions discussed, but do not think that they are necessarily involved in the disposition of the case.
Our conclusion is that the order appealed from should be reversed. So ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOHN B. CEFALU and Another v. FITZSIMMONS-DERRIG COMPANY
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published