S. J. Sligh & Co. v. Kuehne Commission Co.
S. J. Sligh & Co. v. Kuehne Commission Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiffs claim to have sold to defendant a carload of tomatoes at its request, and payment therefor being refused, this action for the price resulted. The judgment in the trial court was for the defendant.
Plaintiffs compose a partnership doing business in Jacksonville, Florida, as dealers in fruits and vegetables. Defendant' is a commission company in Kansas City, Missouri, engaged in the same business. The two had had many business dealings' in several years, but the beginning of the transaction resulting in the present controversy Avas on May 2, 1906, when defendant sent to plaintiffs the'following telegram: “Quote tomatoes.” On the same day plaintiff. ansAvered by the follOAving telegram: “S. A. L. 18304, Fancy 562, choice 38, cost $2.50. Will guarantee stock. Shipments light.” This meant that a car, number 18304 of the Seaboard Air Line Kailway contained six hundred crates of tomatoes at the price stated; but did not say it had been shipped to defendant. On the next day plaintiffs Avrote defendant, enclosing bill of lading for the car of tomatoes. This letter Avas received by defendant on May 7th, and stated that “While your market may not justify the price, still we' feel sure that it will by the time the goods arrive, and we have taken the responsibility of buying this car and diverting the-same to you. We had no time to Avire and get your reply. Tf it is not satisfactory vve will make it so and Avill draw on you for actual cost.” They did draw on. defendant as stated.
On May 9th, defendant telegraphed to plaintiffs' as folloAvs: “Car tomatoes just arrived. Cannot ad-
It will be seen, that plaintiffs claim a sale of the tomatoes to defendant outright; while defendant claims there was no sale and that it handled them on commission, as plaintiffs’ agent. We agree with the trial court in finding the facts established were with the defendant.
The introduction of the transaction did not intimate a purchase. It was a mere inquiry for the price
Some complaint is made that the trial court excluded evidence of what “understanding” existed generally between the parties in reference to purchases of fruits or vegetables. There was no harm done by the ruling. Practically the same matter was afterwards admitted. Besides, in this case the correspondence as to this particular transaction leaves no room for inference to be drawn from general understandings. The correspondence shoAvs a mere inquiry for price of tomatoes, and that there could not have been an understanding-that such inquiry authorized plaintiffs to ship a carload plainly appears by their first letter, in which there is, in effect, an apology for shipping them on their own responsibility and offering to make the matter right if it Avas not satisfactory, and conceding that the Kánsas City market might not justify the price, but that they “felt sure it Avould by the time the goods arrived.” To allow plaintiffs to recover Avould permit one to force on
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.