Filed Date: 12/22/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
Motion bj defendant to set aside verdict. Plaintiff on November first, 1910, contracted to plant, cultivate, gather and deliver sweet corn in a suitable condition for canning at the defendant’s factory during the following season.- Delivery was to be made at any time when the defendants ordered. Defendants agreed to take the corn in such condition and pay an agreed price therefor. It is not in dispute that during the season of 1911, while corn was being gathered and delivered by the plaintiff, and others having similar contracts with the defendants, an unusually heavy frost occurred in the region of the plaintiff’s farm and, indeed, over quite a portion of the State.
On the other hand the defendant’s field man declared that the corn which was refused had been frost bitten, that the husks were white, and that it was unfit for packing. The foreman of defendant’s factory, a man of nearly forty-eight years’ experience, testified that the ears of corn were wilted and withered, and that the corn was bitter and unfit for canning. A neighbor of the plainift, whose farm was separated from that of the latter only by a driveway, said the leaves on the stocks were quite white and he thought the corn had been hit some by the frost. A man who worked for the last witness described the weather conditions as “more than frost, it was a freeze,” that ice was formed in a tub from a third to a half inch in thickness and that the ground was frozen quite hard. He also stated that the corn which he picked for his employer, after the frost, “was froze quite hard,” and that the plaintiff’s land and the land of his employer where on practically the same level and only just across the road. A grocer who examined the corn after the frost, found it white and frost bitten. A man who picked some of the plaintiff’s corn after the frost sa'id that it looked as though the field had been struck "by frost and that while some of the corn was greener than others yet all was practically white on the outside.
A more detailed and extended analysis of the testimony might be made but after a careful study of all the evidence we are satisfied that either because of sympathy for the plaintiff, or for some