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L. J. CRAWFORD vs. DALE M. SWAIN, D/B/A PALM FRUIT SHOP AND HARTFORD INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE SOUTHEAST, 85-003557 (1985)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 85-003557 Latest Update: Feb. 28, 1986

Findings Of Fact Upon consideration of the oral and documentary evidence adduced at the hearing, the following facts are found: At all times pertinent to this proceeding, Petitioner was a producer of agricultural products in the State of Florida as defined in Section 604.15(5), Florida Statutes (1983) . At all times pertinent to this proceeding, Respondent Swaiff was a licensed dealer in agricultural products as defined by Section 604.15(1); Florida Statutes (1983), issued license No. 1630 by the Department, and bonded by Hartford Insurance Company of the Southeast (Hartford) in the sum of $25,000.00 Bond No. RN 4528454. At all times pertinent to this proceeding, Respondent Hartford was authorized to do business in the State of Florida. The complaint filed by Petitioner was timely filed in accordance with Section 604.21(1), Florida Statutes (1983). The record is clear that Respondent Swain agreed to purchase a load of watermelons from Petitioner at an agreed upon price of $0.03 per pound, with payment "due on date of sale", to be loaded on a truck furnished by Respondent Swain through Elton Stone, Inc., a truck broker. Petitioner agreed to harvest and load the truck with a "good quality" or U.S. No. 1 grade watermelons subject to rejection on arrival at their destination if the watermelons were nonconforming for reasons attributable to the Petitioner. No evidence was presented with regard as to what Respondent Swain or Petitioner understood watermelons of "good quality" to mean and, likewise, no evidence was presented to show what standards a load of watermelons had to meet in order to be graded U.S. No. 1. Although Respondent Swain contends that he acted only as a sales agent, that is, he arranged the sale of the watermelons and made arrangements for a truck to deliver the watermelons; the evidence shows that the agreement between Petitioner and Respondent Swain was that title and risk of loss passed to Respondent Swain on shipment, with all remedies and rights for Petitioner's breach reserved to Respondent Swain. Petitioner sold other loads of watermelons to Respondent Swain during the 1985 watermelon season but only one (1) load is in dispute which is a load of watermelons weighing 4,8760 pounds at $0.03 per pound for a total amount of $1;462.80 which Respondent Swain has refused to pay. From June 19, 1985 through June 30, 1985, Petitioner harvested and sold nine t9) other loads of watermelons from the same field as the watermelons in dispute were harvested without any loss due to anthractnose rot or otherwise on arrival at their destination. The watermelons in dispute were loaded June 26, 1985 on a trailer with license number KY-T37-131 and billed to Charley Brothers Company; New Stanton; Pennsylvania by Respondent Swain's on his Invoice Number 061843 and delivered on June 28, 1985. Charley Brothers Company rejected the load and Respondent Swain called for an inspection which showed some anthractnose rot in the early stages in the front ten (10) feet of trailer with the remaining load showing no decay. The percentage of rot or decay is not-evident from the report since it is somewhat illegible and the inspector who prepared the report did not testify. 10 The evidence was insufficient to prove whether the trailer was vented or not vented. The testimony of those persons present during the loading of the watermelons in dispute was credible and shows that the watermelons were in good condition on June 26; 1985 when they were loaded and that if anthractnose rot was present on the watermelons it was not visible at the time of loading. Neither Respondent Swain nor his representative were present during the harvesting and loading of the watermelons. The evidence shows that Respondent Swain made numerous telephone calls in regard to this load of watermelons, some of those calls to Petitioner, but the evidence is insufficient to prove the content of those telephone conversations with Petitioner. The load was put on consignment to Felix and Sons Wholesale by Respondent Swain and he received a check in the sum of $500.00 as payment for the load of watermelons. Respondent Swain paid Elton Stone, Inc. $1,820.94 for freight resulting in a loss of $1,320.94 on the load of watermelons.

Recommendation Based upon the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law recited herein; it is RECOMMENDED that Respondent Swain be ordered to pay to the Petitioner the sum of $t,494.30. It is further RECOMMENDED that if Respondent Swain fails to timely pay the Petitioner as ordered, then Respondent Hartford be ordered to pay the Department as required by Section 604.21; Florida Statutes (1983) and that the Department reimburse the Petitioner in accordance with Section 604.21, Florida Statutes (1983). Respectfully submitted and entered this 28th day of February, 1986, in Tallahassee; Leon County; Florida. WILLIAM R. CAVE, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 28th day of February, 1986. COPIES FURNISHED: Doyle Conner, Commissioner Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Robert Chastain, General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Mayo Building, Room 513 Tallahassee, F1orida 32301 L. J. Crawford Route 3, Box 269 Lake Butler, Florida 32059 Ron Weaver, Esquire Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Mayo Building Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Joe W. Kight; Chief License and Bond Room 418, Mayo Building Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Hartford Insurance Company of the Southeast 200 East Robinson Street Orlando, Florida 32801 Dale M. Swain d/b/a Palm Fruit Shop 313 West Seminole Avenue Bushnell, Florida 33513

Florida Laws (5) 120.57604.15604.17604.20604.21
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RONALD BASS vs KELLY MARINARO, D/B/A SUNNY FRESH CITRUS EXPORT AND SALES COMPANY AND UNITED PACIFIC INSURANCE COMPANY, 96-005172 (1996)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Leesburg, Florida Nov. 05, 1996 Number: 96-005172 Latest Update: May 19, 1997

The Issue Is Petitioner entitled to all or part of $12,732.61 he claims as a result of eight loads of watermelons brokered by Respondent Sunny Fresh Citrus Export & Sales Company between June 17, 1996 and June 21, 1996?

Findings Of Fact Petitioner is a grower of watermelons and qualifies as a "producer" under Section 604.15(5), Florida Statutes. Respondent Kelly Marinaro d/b/a Sunny Fresh Citrus Export & Sales Company is a broker-shipper of watermelons and qualifies as a "dealer" under Section 604.15(1), Florida Statutes. Respondent American Bankers Insurance Company of Florida is surety for Respondent Sunny Fresh. Petitioner's father had long done business with Kelly Marinaro's father, Frank Marinaro, before each father's retirement. Upon what basis the fathers traded is not clear on the record. Petitioner approached Kelly Marinaro d/b/a Sunny Fresh on three occasions with written proposals, two of which involved some front money being put up by Kelly Marinaro to help Petitioner grow and sell watermelons. One proposal suggested a standard broker's fee to be taken off loads. In each instance, Kelly Marinaro rejected the proposals, explaining that he was not a grower or a buyer but only "brokered" melons other people grew. On or about June 15, 1996, Petitioner telephoned and requested that Kelly Marinaro d/b/a Sunny Fresh assist him in the sale of watermelons he had already grown on a 40 acre field near Wildwood, Florida. Earlier in the 1996 watermelon season, Carr Hussey had taken two loads of melons from Petitioner's field. Hussey had advanced Petitioner $3,000 for harvesting of the melons. Although Petitioner claimed that Mr. Hussey bought his melons in the field, he also conceded that the melons he sold Mr. Hussey did not net that amount when sold to the ultimate purchaser, and therefore, neither Mr. Hussey nor Petitioner made any profit on those two loads. Mr. Hussey did not require reimbursement of the $3,000 he had advanced and proposed that Petitioner and he "work it out" the following season. However, Mr. Hussey took no more loads of Petitioner's melons and "went off to Georgia." This left Petitioner in need of some immediate help in selling his remaining melons. In the June 15, 1996 phone call, Kelly Marinaro d/b/a Sunny Fresh agreed to "broker" Petitioner's remaining watermelons to ultimate buyers in the north and northeast United States whom Marinaro lined up by telephone before shipping the melons. That is, he agreed to use his best efforts to sell the watermelons on Petitioner's behalf to ultimate consumers, charging Petitioner one cent per pound or $1.00 per hundred weight sales charge. The parties' arrangement depended upon the sale of the watermelons and the price actually paid at the ultimate destination, rather than the price the watermelons ideally could be sold for on the day they left Petitioner's field. The parties' agreement by telephone was not reduced to writing, but Findings of Fact 8 and 9 are made contrary to Petitioner's assertion that "they (Sunny Fresh) inspected; they bought the melons as is" for the following reasons. Kelly Marinaro had previously rejected any different risk for his company than selling the melons at the ultimate destination. He produced a written notation he had made contemporaneously with his telephone negotiation with Petitioner. Despite Petitioner's vague testimony to the contrary, it appears that Petitioner had had arrangements with other brokers in the past whereby he knew no profit would be made if the melons did not arrive in good condition, and he should have been aware that the actual sale price received at the point of delivery was the standard of doing business. Petitioner did not dispute that the sales charge was to be deducted by Kelly Marinaro from the ultimate price obtained. This is consistent with a dealer selling on behalf of a grower at the ultimate destination. Petitioner relied on prices given in the standard "Watermelon Reports" as F.O.B. (F.O.B. usually signifies delivery at a certain price at the seller's expense to some location.) I also find that the parties agreed to the price of the melons being based upon the amount they netted at the melons' ultimate destination for the reasons set out in Findings of Fact 13 and 16-21. Frank Marinaro, the father of Kelly Marinaro, is retired and regularly resides outside the State of Florida. He is unable to drive himself due to age and infirmity. He has a hired driver named James Hensley. The senior Mr. Marinaro is not a principal or employee of Sunny Fresh, but he likes to visit his son and his old cronies in Florida's watermelon belt during the growing season, for old times' sake. He was visiting his son in June, 1996. Kelly Marinaro arranged for Frank Marinaro to be driven by Mr. Hensley to Wildwood. Kelly Marinaro then transferred $6,300 of Sunny Fresh's money to a Wildwood bank where it was withdrawn in cash by Frank Marinaro. Frank Marinaro, driven by Mr. Hensley, then delivered the cash in three incremental payments authorized by Kelly Marinaro to Petitioner to pre-pay Petitioner's harvesting costs. The senior Mr. Marinaro also helped with the incidental duties of meeting trucks at the Wildwood weighing station or local truck stops and directing them to Petitioner's farm. He was not paid by Sunny Fresh or by Petitioner for these services. Petitioner testified that Frank Marinaro was present in his field for the loading of several truckloads of melons on different days, that he cut open some melons in the field and pronounced them "good" after sampling them, and that Frank Marinaro asked Petitioner to pay Mr. Hensley $50.00 for helping around the field and with physically loading some melons while they were there. This testimony is not evidence of Frank Marinaro's "apparent agency" to engage in the more complicated and technical process of "grading" watermelons on behalf of Sunny Fresh. These activities of Frank Marinaro did not alter Petitioner's agreement with Kelly Marinaro on behalf of Sunny Fresh so that Frank Marinaro's and James Hensley's actions constituted a direct sale to Sunny Fresh of all the melons loaded at Petitioner's farm (the point of embarkation) because both Petitioner and Kelly Marinaro clearly testified that the $6,300 cash harvesting costs constituted advances against receipts of the sale of watermelons when sold by Sunny Fresh at the ultimate destination. Further, the request that Petitioner pay Mr. Hensley for helping load the watermelons is in the nature of Petitioner paying a casual laborer for harvesting rather than it is evidence that any Sunny Fresh authority resided in Mr. Hensley. Between June 17, 1996 and June 21, 1996, Petitioner loaded eight truckloads of watermelons onto trucks for sale to various customers in the north and northeast United States. Of the eight truckloads loaded, the breakdown of actual costs and expenses worked out as follows: ACCOUNTING OF R. BASS LOADS Sunny Fresh #93775 Sold to: Frankie Boy Produce Frankie Boys #96095 New York, NY Weight shipped: 41,250 Unloaded weight: 40,400 Initial price at shipment to grower for good watermelon: 5 - ½ cents/lb Net return $1,212.00 Sales charge: (404.00) Watermelon promotion board tax: (8.08) Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 2 cents/lb $ 799.92 Sunny Fresh #93791 Sold to: Fruitco Corp. Fruitco #1880 Bronx, NY Weight shipped: 40.800 Unloaded weight: 39,180 Initial price at shipment to grower for good watermelon: 5 - ½ cents/lb Net return $ 974.71 Sales charge: (391.81) Watermelon promotion board tax: (7.84) Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 2.49 cents/lb $ 575.06 Sunny Fresh #81312 Crosset Co. #67012 Sold to: Crosset Co. Cincinnati, OH Weight shipped: 45,860 Unloaded weight: Initial price at shipment to 41,762 grower for good watermelon: 5 cents/lb Gross return $4,134.42 Shipping charges (freight): (1,712.63) Net return: 2,421.79 Sales charge: (438.48) Watermelon promotion board tax: Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 4.75 cents/lb (8.35) $1,974.96 Sunny Fresh #93804 Sold to: Tom Lange Co. Lange #3344 St. Louis, MO Weight shipped: 44,550 Unloaded weight: Initial price at shipment to grower for good watermelon: 39,760 5 cents/lb Gross return $2,584.40 Shipping charges (freight): (1,455.96) Net return: 1,128.44 Sales charge: (445.50) Watermelon promotion board tax: Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 1.72 cents/lb (7.95) $ 674.99 Sunny Fresh #93802 M.A. Fruit #N/G Sold to: M.A. Fruit Trading Corp New York, NY Weight shipped: 40,130 Unloaded weight: 36,720 Initial price at shipment to grower for good watermelon: 5 cents/lb Gross return $3,797.40 Shipping charges (freight): (1,758.55) Net return: 2,038.85 Sales charge: (401.30) Watermelon promotion board tax: (7.34) Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 4.46 cents/lb $1,630.21 Sunny Fresh #93817 Sold to: C. H. Robinson Company C.H. Robinson #379035 Cleveland, OH Weight shipped: 43,300 Unloaded weight: Initial price at shipment to 42,147 grower for good watermelon: 5 cents/lb Gross return $4,440.21 Shipping charges (freight): (1,930.27) Net return: 2,509.94 Sales charge: (411.02) Watermelon promotion board tax: Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 5 cents/lb (8.43) $2,090.49 Sunny Fresh #93819 Sold to: Isenberg #N/G Joseph Isenberg, Inc. Buffalo, NY Weight shipped: Unloaded weight: Initial price at shipment to grower for good watermelon: 45,100 5 cents/lb Gross return $ 500.00 Shipping charges (freight): (1,877.98) Net return: (1,377.98) Sales charge: Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 4.06 cents/lb (451.00) $(1,828.98) Sunny Fresh #81334 Sold to: Palazzola . Palazzola #N/G Memphis, TN Weight shipped: 47,700 Unloaded weight: Initial price at shipment to grower for good watermelon: 5 cents/lb Gross return $ 0.00 Shipping charges (freight): (1,553.30) Net return: (1,553.30) Inspection: (65.00) Bins: (30.00) Sales charge: Return to R. Bass due to bad melons: 4.46 cents/lb (477.00) $(2,125.90) Kelly Marinaro testified credibly that the resultant low prices paid by the ultimate purchasers was the result of the poor quality of Petitioner's melons upon their arrival at their ultimate destination. Exhibits admitted in evidence without objection verified the poor condition of five of the loads. In those instances in which there were United States Department of Agriculture Inspection Reports, I accept those reports as clearly dispositive of the issue of the melons' poor condition upon arrival. Petitioner's more vague testimony that he doubted any load could ever pass such an inspection as "A-1," does not refute them. Kelly Marinaro testified credibly and without contradiction that each time he was informed by a potential buyer that a load of melons was in poor condition upon arrival at their destination, he faxed, mailed, or telephoned Petitioner with the "trouble report" information as soon as feasible and tried to involve him in the decision as to what should be done. This is consistent with a sale at the ultimate destination. Kelly Marinaro further testified credibly and without contradiction that for two loads he recommended to Petitioner that they not obtain a federal inspection because it was not cost efficient. He made this recommendation for one of these two loads because it reached its destination on a Friday and the fruit would have to stand and deteriorate further in quality and price over the weekend if they waited on an inspection. Petitioner agreed to waive at least one inspection. Petitioner and Kelly Marinaro did not agree as to the number of times they spoke on the phone about "trouble reports", but Petitioner acknowledged at least four such phone conversations. Petitioner and Kelly Marinaro did agree that in each phone call, Petitioner told Kelly Marinaro to "do the best you can," and stated he did not want to pay any freight. This type of conversation is not indicative of a relationship in which the melons have been purchased outright at the site of embarkation, Petitioner's field. I have considered the testimony of Petitioner and of Kelly Marinaro, respectively, on the issue of whether or not Petitioner was required to pay the freight on the watermelons from their first oral contract by telephone call on June 15, 1996. Without attributing any ill-motive to either party- witness, I find they did not initially have a meeting of the minds as to how the cost of freight was to be handled, and that Petitioner assumed at some point he would not have to pay freight. However, it is clear from the evidence as a whole that Kelly Marinaro did everything possible to avoid freight charges to Petitioner and would not have meticulously informed and received oral waivers of inspections from Petitioner if there had been any clear agreement either that Sunny Fresh was purchasing the watermelons "as is" in Petitioner's field or that Sunny Fresh Produce was paying all the freight. Indeed, Petitioner was not charged for freight when Kelly Marinaro d/b/a Sunny Fresh provided the trucks. It is also clear from the evidence as a whole that Petitioner was informed on or about the date that each load arrived at its ultimate destination that he was going to be charged for at least some freight charges out of the ultimate price received for the melons. Bill Ward has acted as a broker of watermelons for many years. I accept his testimony that there can be varying grades of watermelon within one field or one harvest. The several "Watermelon Reports" admitted without objection show that the demand for Florida watermelons was light or fairly light in June 1996, that the price was down or to be established, and that all quotations were for stock of generally good quality and condition. There had been a lot of rain in Florida during the 1996 watermelon season and rain unfavorably affects the quality of melons. Melons from further north where there had been less rain were able to be shipped to northern and northeastern buyers in less time than were Florida melons. Northern and northeastern buyers did not have to select from inferior melons that year. Petitioner's testimony and supporting documentation that he sold to other purchasers two truckloads of good quality, top price melons from the same field between June 17 and June 21, 1996 does not overcome all the evidence that the majority of melons he sold through Sunny Fresh were of the poor quality reported by the ultimate buyers and federal inspectors or that the melons sold to Sunny Fresh deteriorated due to slow transport.

Recommendation Upon the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Agriculture enter a final order dismissing Petitioner's complaint.RECOMMENDED this 26th day of March, 1997, at Tallahassee, Florida. ELLA JANE P. DAVIS Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax FILING (904) 921-6847 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 26th day of March, 1997. COPIES FURNISHED: Ronald Bass 32510 Sumter Line Road Leesburg, FL 34748 Arthur C. Fulmer, Esquire Post Office Box 2958 Lakeland, FL 33806 Mr. Robert Waldman American Bankers Insurance Company Claims Management Services 11222 Quail Roost Drive Miami, FL 33157-6596 Honorable Bob Crawford Commissioner of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Richard Tritschler General Counsel The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 508 Mayo Building Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800

Florida Laws (3) 120.57440.21604.15
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CURTIS SANDERS, WILEY GARLAND, AND JOE TOWNSEND vs. GREAT LAKES PRODUCE OF FLORIDA, INC., 77-001826 (1977)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 77-001826 Latest Update: Apr. 13, 1978

Findings Of Fact The case is being considered in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 604, Florida Statutes, which establishes the apparatus for settling disputes between Florida produce farmers and dealers who are involved with the farmers' products. Curtis Sanders, Wiley Garland and Joe Townsend, Florida farmers, contend by their complaint that two loads of watermelons grown and harvested in Florida, were sold directly to Great Lakes Produce of Florida, Inc. on the following dates, by the; following types, in the following weight amounts; at the following price per pound, and for the following total price per load: July 11, 1977, Crimson Sweet Watermelons, 42,990 lbs. at .02, totaling $859.80 July 12, 1977, Crimson Sweet Watermelons, 46,620 lbs. at .02, totaling $932.40 Total for all loads $1,792.20 An examination of the testimony offered in the course of the Petitioners' contention. The Repondent has not paid the $1,792.20 which it agreed to pay to the Petitioners and under the facts of the agreement it is obligated to pay the Petitioners.

Recommendation It is recommended that the Respondent be required to pay the Petitioner $1,792.20 for the watermelons it purchased from the Petitioners. DONE AND ENTERED this 21st day of February, 1978, in Tallahassee, Florida. CHARLES C. ADAMS Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings Room 530 Carlton Building Tallahassee, Florida 32304 (904) 488-9675 COPIES FURNISHED: L. Earl Peterson, Chief Bureau of License and Bond Division of Marketing Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Mayo Building Tallahassee, Florida 32304 Curtis Sanders 630 Colonial Street Live Oak, Florida Wiley Garland 632 Colonial Street Live Oak, Florida Joe Townsend Post Office Box 1505 Live Oak, Florida Roger Serzen c/o Great Lakes Produce of Florida, Inc. Post Office Box 11931 Tampa, Florida 33680

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BERTHA MANCIL AND THOMAS H. MANCIL vs. EASTERN MARKETING SERVICE, INC., 78-002432 (1978)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 78-002432 Latest Update: Apr. 26, 1979

Findings Of Fact The Petitioners and the Respondent had a business relationship under which the Respondent purchased watermelons from the Petitioners during the 1978 harvest season. Watermelons are at times sold on a "cash basis", which means that a buyer purchases the melons at the field for a set price per pound. At other times watermelons are sold on a "handle basis" or a "brokerage basis". Under these arrangements a buyer picks up a load of melons, sells it at the best obtainable price, and a portion of the sale price goes to the producer and a portion to the buyer. Prior to the 1978 harvest season, the Petitioners had had some unhappy experiences selling watermelons on a "handle" or "brokerage" basis. They decided to sell melons during the 1978 season only on a cash basis. The Respondent purchased several loads from the Petitioners during 1978 on a cash basis. A dispute arose as to four loads of melons which the Respondent purchased from the Petitioners late in the 1978 harvest season. The Petitioners understood that the transactions would continue to be on a cash basis. The Respondent, who was represented by W.B. Stevens in the transactions, appears to have had the honest belief that the transactions would be on a brokerage basis. Mr. Stevens did not, however, reduce the brokerage arrangement to writing, and he did not adequately advise the Petitioners that the terms of the transactions would be different from previous transactions that year. The four transactions were as follows: On May 30, 1978, the Respondent purchased 2,000 Grey watermelons which weighed 44,650 pounds at a quoted price of 4.75 cents per pound. On June 2, 1978, the Respondent purchased 1,330 Jubilee watermelons which weighed 45,470 pounds at 5.25 cents per pound. On June 5, 1978, the Respondent purchased 1,560 Grey watermelons which weighed 40,080 pounds at a quoted price of 4.50 cents per pound, and 1,550 Jubilee watermelons which weighed 44,100 pounds at a quoted price of 5.00 cents per pound. The total amount the Respondent owed the Petitioners for these four loads was $8,516.66. The Respondent issued the Petitioners a check for the loads in the amount of $5,453.72. The Petitioners are thus owed an additional $3,062.94. The Respondent offered several affidavits into evidence. These were identified for the record as Respondent's Exhibits 1-5, but they were rejected. Even if the affidavits had been admissible, they would not serve to alter the findings of fact set out herein. The affidavits identified as Respondent's Exhibits 1, 3 and 4 relate to the quality of the watermelons. Since it has been found that the melons were sold on a cash basis, the Respondent took ownership of the melons when they were loaded onto the Respondent's trucks. The quality of the melons would not, therefore, affect the amount the Respondent owed the Petitioners. If the Respondent were going to reject the melons, it should have done so when they were loaded onto the trucks. The affidavit which was identified as Respondent's Exhibit 2 relates to a truck shortage that existed in Florida at the time that the Petitioners' melons were harvested. While this affidavit may tend to support the Respondent's contention that it intended these loads to be sold on a brokerage basis, it does not alter the fact that the Respondent did not adequately communicate this understanding to the Petitioners. The affidavit which was marked as Respondent's Exhibit 5 is unsigned. Furthermore, it relates only that Mr. Stevens believed that the transactions would be handled on a brokerage basis. The affidavits are hearsay and are not cumulative of other evidence in this case. They are therefore inadmissible. Even if the affidavits were admissible, however, they would have no relevance to the issues. The Respondent is licensed with the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services as an agricultural commodity dealer. The Respondent has a $20,000 bond on file with the Department.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is, hereby RECOMMENDED: That a final order be entered by the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services finding that the Petitioners are entitled to $3,062.94 in additional compensation for agricultural commodities which they sold to the Respondent, and requiring the Respondent to pay this sum to the Petitioners. RECOMMENDED this 7th day of March, 1979, in Tallahassee, Florida. G. STEVEN PFEIFFER Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings Room 530, Carlton Building Tallahassee, Florida 32304 904/488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 15th day of June. COPIES FURNISHED: Mr. W. B. Stevens President Eastern Marketing Services, Inc. P.O. Box 2156 Bartow, Florida 33830 Mr. Thomas H. Mancil P.O. Box 303 Clewiston, Florida 33840 L. Earl Peterson, Chief Bureau of License & Bond Department of Agriculture Mayo Building Tallahassee, Florida 32304 Honorable Doyle Conner Commissioner of Agriculture The Capitol Tallahassee, Florida 32304 Robert A. Chastain General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Mayo Building Tallahassee, Florida 32304

Florida Laws (3) 120.57604.20604.21
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ROBIN AND VERA SHIVER vs F. H. DICKS, III, AND F. H. DICKS, IV, D/B/A F. H. DICKS COMPANY; AND SOUTH CAROLINA INSURANCE COMPANY, 92-000533 (1992)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Live Oak, Florida Jan. 29, 1992 Number: 92-000533 Latest Update: Jan. 05, 1993

Findings Of Fact The Respondents, F. H. Dicks, III; F. H. Dicks, IV; and F. H. Dicks Company, are wholesale dealers in watermelons which they purchase and sell interstate. The Respondents' agents during the 1991 melon season in the Lake City area were Harold Harmon and his son, Tommy Harmon. The Harmons had purchased watermelons in the Lake City area for several year prior to 1991, and the Petitioner had sold melons through them to the Respondents for two or three seasons. The terms of purchase in these prior transactions had always been Freight on Board (FOB) the purchaser's truck at the seller's field with the farmer bearing the cost of picking. The terms of purchase of the melons sold by Petitioner to Respondents prior to the loads in question had been FOB the purchaser's truck at the seller's field with the farmer bearing the cost of picking. One of the Harmons would inspect the load being purchased during the loading and at the scale when the truck was weighed out. After the Harmons left the area, their work was carried on by Jim Coffee, who the Harmons introduced to Mr. Shiver as their representative. Once the melons were weighed and inspected, the melons belonged to the Respondents. Price would vary over the season, but price was agree upon before the melons were loaded. Settlement had always been prompt, and the Harmons enjoyed the confidence of the local farmers. On July 8, 1991, load F 276 of 45,840 pounds of watermelons was sold by Petitioner to Respondents for 4 per pound. They were weighed and inspected by Coffee. These melons were shipped to West Virginia where they were refused by the buyer. The melons were inspected in Charleston, WV, on July 12, 1991. This inspection revealed 10% transit rubs, 12% decay, and 22% checksom. These melons were subsequently shipped to Indianapolis, IN, for disposal. The Respondents deducted the freight on this load in the amount of $2,459.76 from moneys owed the Petitioner on other transactions. On July 9, 1991, two loads of watermelons, F 277 and F 278, were sold to the Respondents. Load F 277 weighed 46,200 pounds and Load F 278 weighed 45,830 pounds. Both loads were inspected by Coffee. Mr. Shiver had negotiated a price of 4 per pound for F 278 and 3.5 per pound for F 277. Load F 278 was received by the Respondents at their facility in Yamassee, SC, where it was government inspected on July 11, 1991. It was found to be in very bad shape. It was bartered to the trucking company by the Respondents in exchange for the freight charges. Load F 277 was also received by the Respondents, who accepted 38,000 pounds of 45,830 pounds of melons shipped. On July 10, 1991, load F 279 of 42,180 pounds was sold for 3.5 per pound, and shipped to the Respondents in Yamassee, SC, for repacking and shipment to Baltimore, MD. They were weighed and inspected by Coffee before shipment. This load was rejected without any inspection by the Respondents. The Petitioners received $1,330 for load F 277, nothing for loads F and 279, and Respondents retained $2,459.76 from prior transactions for freight charges on load F 276. Under the terms of the sale, FOB purchaser's truck at grower's field, the Respondents bore the cost of transportation. The Respondents also bore the risk of loss on sales which they made and which were rejected. On the two loads which were not inspected by government inspectors, F and F 277, the Petitioner is entitled to the sales price for the melons. Although there is evidence to support the Respondents' contention that the produce was not within grade specifications, the Respondent had accepted the produce. Contrary to Respondents' assertion that the produce coming from the same field on the same day would all be bad, these loads were not loaded on the same day. Further, most of one of the loads received on the same day from the same field was accepted. Lastly, as stated above, all the loads were inspected by Respondent prior to acceptance. The Respondents owe the Petitioners $1,833.60 on load F 276, $1,570.80 on load F 277, 1833.20 on load F 278, and 1476.30 on load F 279. This is a total of $6,713.90. The Respondents improperly retained $2,359.76 for freight charges, but did pay the Petitioners $1,330 for load F 277. The total owed by the Respondents to the Petitioners is $9,073.66, of which Respondents have already paid $1,330.00. The Respondents still owe the Petitioners $7,743.66 less $32 for the watermelon assessment.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is, RECOMMENDED: Respondent be given 30 days to settle with the Petitioner in the amount of $7,711.66 and the Petitioner be paid $7,711.66 from Respondent's agricultural bond if the account is not settled. DONE and ENTERED this 6th day of October, 1992, in Tallahassee, Florida. STEPHEN F. DEAN, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, FL 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 6th day of October, 1992. COPIES FURNISHED: Terry McDavid, Esquire 128 South Hernando Street Lake City, FL 32055 F. H. Dicks, III c/o F. H. Dicks Company P.O. Box 175 Barnwell, SC 29812 Bob Crawford, Commissioner Department of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Department of Agriculture Division of Marketing, Bureau of Licensure and Bond 508 Mayo Building Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800 South Carolina Insurance Company Legal Department 1501 Lady Street Columbia, SC 29202 Victoria I. Freeman Seibels Bruce Insurance Companies Post Office Box One Columbia, SC 29202 Richard Tritschler, Esquire Department of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810

Florida Laws (7) 120.57120.68604.15604.20604.21604.34672.606
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GREG RUSHTON vs JAMES R. SMITH AND D. RANDALL SMITH, D/B/A MIDWEST MARKETING COMPANY AND SOUTH CAROLINA INSURANCE COMPANY, 93-001223 (1993)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Dunnellon, Florida Mar. 02, 1993 Number: 93-001223 Latest Update: Oct. 06, 1993

Findings Of Fact Petitioner Rushton is a grower of watermelons and qualifies as a "producer" under Section 604.15(5) F.S. Respondents Smith are broker-shippers of watermelons and qualify as dealers" under Section 604.15(1) F.S. Respondent South Carolina Insurance Company is surety for Respondents Smith. The amount and period of the bond have not been established. Petitioner's complaint sets out the amounts owed as follows: DATE OF SALE QUANTITY, AND PRICE PRODUCTS PER UNIT GRADE 6/7/92 Inv.#2051 43,200 lbs. AMOUNT Crimson Sweet Melons @.04 lb. $1,728.00 NWPB - 8.64 Adv. - 700.00 $1,019.36 6/10/92 Inv.#2053 43,900 lbs. Crimson Sweet Melons @3.5 lb. $1,536.50 NWPB - 8.78 Adv. - 700.00 $ 827.72 6/10/92 Inv.#2056 46,180 lbs. Crimson Sweet Melons @3.5 lb. $1,616.30 NWPB - 9.24 Adv. - 700.00 Less Payment of - 933.18 $ 907.06 $2,754.14 TOTAL $1,820.96 Regardless of the form of the complaint, Petitioner acknowledged at formal hearing that his claim relates only to Load 2051, that he did not dispute the deductions made by Respondents for NwPB or the advances paid him by the Dealer. Petitioner's complaint lumped the three loads together only because Respondent chose to cut a single check for all three loads and pay his accounts that way nearly three months after Load 2051 was shipped. With regard to Load 2051, it is not disputed that 43,200 pounds of watermelons were loaded by Dealers in Petitioner's field on June 7, 1992. The 1992 season was Petitioner's initial endeavor at growing watermelons. He was "in a bind" from the beginning of the growing season. Petitioner had originally intended to sell his watermelons to another buyer- dealer, but that person failed to send trucks to Petitioner's field. Petitioner was approached by Bobby Patton who put him in contact with Respondent Jim Smith on Saturday, June 6, 1992. Petitioner testified that Bobby Patton cut into and inspected sample melons and accepted most of his field of melons on Friday, June 5, 1992. After speaking with Petitioner by telephone on Saturday, June 6, 1992, Jim Smith went to Petitioner's field on Sunday, June 7, 1992. Petitioner and Respondents had no prior business dealings before their June 6 phone call. Jim Smith did not arrive at Petitioner's field on June 7, 1992 until the open-topped truck he had sent was half-loaded with Petitioner's melons. At that time, Smith and his employee, Dale Hires, inspected the melons on the truck and found some hollow hearts. At that time, Mr. Smith thought that the melons on the truck had been picked since Friday, but the undersigned accepts Petitioner's testimony and finds as fact that all the melons loaded into Load 2051 had been picked only since Saturday. Petitioner admitted that the melons were, "a little overripe and should have been loaded on Thursday or Friday and moved." Petitioner admitted that he and Smith then discussed that the melons were a little overripe and that they were "close" and had to be moved. Respondent Jim Smith told Petitioner there was a "potential problem," and he would let him know if a problem actually developed. Smith also said that they would try to work together and move the melons and try not to get Respondents "hurt." However, Petitioner did not specifically agree to "help" Respondent on melon loss. Petitioner later thought he was "helping" by putting a trucker up overnight in a motel at Petitioner's own expense. Smith used the phrases, "help each other" "help us" and "not hurt" to mean, "help Respondents so that Respondents would not show a loss." Petitioner testified that he had understood on June 7 that he was "not going to ride no freight" on the load. Smith concurred that this phrase he had used was mutually understood to mean that Respondents agreed to pick up the cost of freight. Respondent Smith considered the arrangement reached on June 7 to be a brokeraged deal wherein Respondent Dealers would "ride the freight" and Petitioner would "ride the melons," that is, Respondents expected Petitioner to absorb any loss occasioned by bad melons. Petitioner, on the other hand, considered all the watermelons accepted without reservation by Hires and Smith when they stepped off the half-loaded truck on June 7, 1992 and continued to load the truck with melons of questionable ripeness. Despite Petitioner's first assertion that he considered Bobby Patton's acceptance of the melons on Friday, June 5 to have been made on behalf of Respondents, that testimony is found to be contrary to his subsequent and more credible testimony that he considered Dale Hires to be acting for Respondents on June 7 and that he personally negotiated with Jim Smith on June 6 and June 7, after Bobby Patton was out of the picture. Respondents did nothing to cloak Bobby Patton, an independent contractor who "finds" melon fields, with apparent agency to negotiate the final "deal" for them with Petitioner. The "deal" between Petitioner and Respondents, such as it was, was finally and fully negotiated on June 7 between Petitioner and Respondent Jim Smith. The "deal" applied only to a certain specified segment of Petitioner's watermelon crop. Respondent Dealers thereafter handled a total of ten loads of watermelons. Respondent Dealers paid Petitioner satisfactorily on nine of the ten loads Only Load 2051, the first load, presented any problems. No agreement as to Respondents accepting all of Petitioner's field of watermelons was ever reached between the parties. Petitioner lost money with regard to the rest of his field, but that loss is in no way attributable to Respondents, despite Petitioner's expressed frustration in that regard. Petitioner heard nothing from Respondents until he requested payment and to "settle up" concerning all ten loads, approximately June 17, 1992. At that time, Jim Smith gave Petitioner settlement documents, including weight tickets and invoices for all ten loads at one time in a large envelope. Petitioner termed these documents "confirmations." At the time Smith handed Petitioner the envelope, Smith mentioned to Petitioner that one load had a problem with it. He did not give Petitioner any further information about which load had the problem. Before putting the confirmations in the envelope, Jim Smith had written across them, " * protect shipper on quality (ripe)." Petitioner testified that if this phrase had been on the documents, he did not see it, and if he had seen the phrase, he would not have understood it. Jim Smith had originally been promised $3,564.00 on Load 2051 in a telephone conversation with the ultimate recipient/receiver. He had based his June 6 offer and "deal" on June 7 with Petitioner for an expected gross to Petitioner of $1,734.04 in anticipation of the Respondents realizing the full amount of $3,564.00 from the receiver. Smith testified that when Load 2051 reached the receiver, it was rejected by the receiver due to the melons being overripe and hollow-hearted and that a federal inspection paid for by the receiver showed 15 percent to 40 percent of the samples were hollow hearted and the overall samples in the load was 25 percent, with bruising throughout but with the highest percentage in the lower layer of the piled watermelons, and some sunburn. He produced a federal inspection sheet dated June 10, 1992 (three days after the melons left Petitioner's field), covering an estimated sixteen hundred melons to the same effect. Respondent Smith had mailed this inspection sheet to Petitioner only in August 1992, with the final settlement documents and Respondents' check covering three loads, including Load 2051. The inspection sheet indicates "Midwest Marketing 2051" and "North Coast Brokerage, Cleveland, Ohio and carrier 39TR337-AL." The settlement sheets show the same trailer license number for Load 2051. (P-2) Smith also produced a bill of lading showing that North Coast Produce received carrier 39TR337 and rejected 15 melons cut for inspection, 238 melons bruised and racked, and seven decayed melons on June 10, 1992. The bill of lading shows 260 out of 1568 melons or roughly 17 percent of the load were rejected by the receiver. (R-5) Smith also produced a Norman's Brokerage invoice for shipping that trailer, for which shipping he says he paid $1,676.16, (R-4) and an invoice showing he was paid only $1,700.00 by the receiver for this load (R-2). Neither the receiver, the federal inspector, nor any trucker testified. Smith testified that after the receiver rejected some or all of Load 2051, he thought he would get at least $1,743.04 from the receiver but the receiver's check to him was rounded to only $1,700.00. The foregoing shows that Respondent Smith ultimately accepted, without dispute, the $1,700.00 paid him by the receiver which amount was less than 50 percent of the originally promised amount and which amount did not comport with a load that was at the worst only 15 percent to 40 percent bad as per the inspection report and which the bill of lading shows contained only 260 or 17 percent rejected melons. When Jim Smith totalled out the final settlement sheets for Petitioner in August 1992, Smith intended to deduct $1,676.16 for shipping and $108.00 as a "finder's fee" he had paid to independent contractor Bobby Patton from the $1,700.00 that he had actually been paid by the receiver, thus showing a net loss to Respondents on Load 2051 of $84.16. Instead, he explained Respondents' loss to Petitioner in the final August 1992 settlement documents as "original invoice $3,564.00, (meaning the originally anticipated revenues to Respondents) less actual receipts $1,743.04, (meaning the amount Smith had expected to receive after federal inspection and rejection of part of Load 2051 by the receiver, and not what Smith actually received from the receiver) for a balance of $1,820.96." Smith labelled that figure of $1,743.04 as "customer deducts" meaning it was Respondents' net loss due to actions of the receiver. He then deducted the $1,820.96 figure from the total amount owed by Respondents to Petitioner for three loads. Mr. Smith admitted he had no authority or justification per his agreement with Petitioner for deducting the finder's fee of $108.00 he paid to Bobby Patton or his additional loss of $43.04, which occurred when the recipient promised $1743.04 and paid $1700.00. He also admitted he had no authority per Respondents' agreement with Petitioner to deduct anything attributable to freight charges.

Recommendation Upon the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is recommended that the Department of Agriculture enter a Final Order awarding Petitioner $1,820.96 on Load 2051 only and binding Respondents to pay the full amount, but which in South Carolina Insurance Company's case shall be only to the extent of its bond. RECOMMENDED this 5th day of August, 1993, at Tallahassee, Florida. ELLA JANE P. DAVIS Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The De Soto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 5th day of August, 1993. COPIES FURNISHED: Honorable Bob Crawford Commissioner of Agriculture Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Richard Tritschler, Esquire General Counsel Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Bureau of Licensing & Bond Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services 508 Mayo Building Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800 Greg Rushton 10940 N. Circle M Avenue Dunnellon, Florida 32630 James R. Smith Randall Smith Midwest Marketing Company Post Office Box 193 Vincennes, IN 47591 South Carolina Insurance Company 1501 Lady Street Columbia, SC 29201

Florida Laws (8) 120.57120.68604.15604.20604.21604.34743.04933.18
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KYE BISHOP, D/B/A BISHOP FARMS vs GROWERS MARKETING SERVICE, INC., AND PREFERRED NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, 93-004851 (1993)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Arcadia, Florida Aug. 24, 1993 Number: 93-004851 Latest Update: Mar. 04, 1994

The Issue The issue in this case is whether Petitioner is entitled to additional payment for a shipment of watermelons that he delivered to Respondent in May, 1993.

Findings Of Fact Growers Marketing Services, Inc. (Respondent) is a broker of watermelons and other agricultural produce. Preferred National Insurance Company, Inc. is the surety for Respondent. Petitioner has grown watermelons for about six years. In 1993, as in past years, Petitioner sold watermelons to Respondent and other brokers. Late on the afternoon of May 5, 1993, and continuing past darkness, Petitioner loaded a trailer full of watermelons for C & C, which is another agricultural broker to which Petitioner sells watermelons. Because Petitioner lacks sufficient lighting at the place of loading, the crew could not sufficiently determine the quality of the watermelons that they were loading. Many misshapen and substandard watermelons were loaded, but the trailer was not quite full. The conformance of the shipment, which was supposed to be all large watermelons, suffered further when a C&C representative told Petitioner to complete the load with smaller melons. Petitioner did so. The C & C shipment was taken to the scales, weighed, and trucked that night to Miami, where the recipient rejected the shipment due to poor quality and small size. On the morning of May 6, Petitioner learned that C & C was returning the shipment to him and would not pay for it. A field representative of Respondent learned of the rejected shipment and offered to try to sell it for whatever he could. Petitioner agreed. When the melons returned to the area on May 6, they were immediately taken to Respondent's packing house in Plant City. The packer immediately recognized that the melons were quite distressed. Misshapen, flat, and leaking, the melons needed to be sold fast. The packer so informed representatives of Respondent, who directed the packer to place the melons in large bins, rather than boxes, so they could be more easily marketed. A representative of Respondent immediately informed Petitioner of this development, and he said that they should get whatever they could for the melons. Respondent called a customer in Jacksonville, explained the situation, and agreed to sell them on consignment to the customer. The customer successfully remarketed a large number of the melons and, on May 25, 1993, remitted to Respondent a check in the amount of $5000, representing full payment for the melons. Respondent deducted from the $5000 its normal binning charge of $1260 and its normal sales charge of $420, leaving $3320. After a small mandatory deduction for National Watermelon Promotion Board, Respondent remitted to Petitioner, by draft dated June 10, 1993, the net of $3311.60. With the above-described payment, Petitioner has been paid in full for the watermelons.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is hereby RECOMMENDED that the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services enter a final order dismissing the Complaint. ENTERED on January 10, 1994, in Tallahassee, Florida. ROBERT E. MEALE Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, FL 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings on January 10, 1994. COPIES FURNISHED: Hon. Bob Crawford Commissioner of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Richard Tritschler, General Counsel Department of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Bureau of Licensing and Bond Department of Agriculture 508 Mayo Building Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800 Kye Bishop, pro se 145 N. Osceola Arcadia, FL 33821 Arthur C. Fulmer P.O. Box 2958 Lakeland, FL 33806 Preferred National Insurance P.O. Box 40-7003 Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33340-7003

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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DEAN HENDRICK vs F. H. DICKS, III, AND F. H. DICKS, IV, D/B/A F. H. DICKS COMPANY; AND SOUTH CAROLINA INSURANCE COMPANY, 92-000549 (1992)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Live Oak, Florida Jan. 29, 1992 Number: 92-000549 Latest Update: Aug. 03, 1995

Findings Of Fact The Respondents, F. H. Dicks, III; F. H. Dicks, IV; and F. H. Dicks Company, are wholesale dealers in watermelons which they purchase and sell interstate. The Respondents' agents during the 1991 melon season in the Lake City area were Harold Harmon and his son, Tommy Harmon. The Harmons had purchased watermelons in the Lake City area for several year prior to 1991, and the Petitioner had sold melons through them to the Respondents for two or three seasons. The terms of purchase in these prior transactions had always been Freight on Board (FOB) the purchaser's truck at the seller's field with the farmer bearing the cost of picking. The terms of purchase of the melons sold by Petitioner to Respondents prior to the loads in question had been FOB the purchaser's truck at the seller's field with the farmer bearing the cost of picking. One of the Harmons would inspect the load being purchased during the loading and at the scale when the truck was weighed out. After this inspection, the melons accepted by Harmon were Respondents'. Price would vary over the season, but price was agreed upon before the melons were loaded. Settlement had always been prompt, and the Harmons enjoyed the confidence of the local farmers. On June 11, 1991, Petitioner was unable to fill out a load of regular size melons being sold to Respondent. Tommy Harmon was present and instructed Petitioner to finish the load with Pee Wee (smaller) melons. There were 10,602 pounds of Pee Wee melons loaded which Tommy Harmon agreed to purchase at 10 per pound. On June 18, 1991, a load of 49,330 pounds of Mirage melons was loaded for the Respondents. It is controverted by F. H. Dicks whether Harold Harmon was present when these melons were loaded; however, Dicks was uncertain and Harmon testified he could not remember. Petitioner testified Harmon was present, and inspected and accepted the melons under the same terms as all prior loads for a price of 6 per pound. Petitioner's testimony is uncontroverted, and there is no indication that the terms for this load were different from the other transactions, that is, FOB the purchaser's truck at the seller's field with the farmer bearing the cost of picking. Under the terms of sale, FOB purchaser's truck at seller's field, the Respondent bore the costs of transportation and the risk of refusal of the produce. Respondent's recourse was against the purchaser who refused delivery. If there was a problem with the grade, the Respondents also bore the risk of loss on sales which they made and which were rejected. The Respondents owe the Petitioner $1,060.20 for the Pee Wee melons, and $2,959.80 for the Mirage melons.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is, RECOMMENDED: Respondents be given 30 days to settle with the Petitioner in the amount of $4,020, and the Petitioner be paid $4,020 from Respondents' agricultural bond if the account is not settled. DONE and ENTERED this 6th day of October, 1992, in Tallahassee, Florida. STEPHEN F. DEAN Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, FL 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 6th day of October, 1992. COPIES FURNISHED: Terry McDavid, Esquire 128 South Hernando Street Lake City, FL 32055 F. H. Dicks, III c/o F. H. Dicks Company P.O. Box 175 Barnwell, SC 29812 Bob Crawford, Commissioner Department of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Department of Agriculture Division of Marketing, Bureau of Licensure and Bond 508 Mayo Building Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800 South Carolina Insurance Company Legal Department 1501 Lady Street Columbia, SC 29202 Victoria I. Freeman Seibels Bruce Insurance Companies Post Office Box One Columbia, SC 29202 Richard Tritschler, Esquire Department of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810

Florida Laws (2) 120.57672.606
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CURTIS SANDERS vs. GREAT LAKES PRODUCE OF FLORIDA, INC., 77-001825 (1977)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 77-001825 Latest Update: Apr. 13, 1978

The Issue The dispute here involves the alleged non-payment for watermelons that the Petitioner claims to have sold to the Respondent.

Findings Of Fact The case is being considered in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 604, Florida Statutes, with establishes the apparatus for settling disputes between Florida produce farmers and dealers who are involved with the farmers' products. Curtis Sanders, a Florida farmer, contends by his complaint that two loads of watermelons grown and harvested in Florida, were sold directly to Great Lakes Produce of Florida, Inc. as set forth below: July 6, 1977, Jubilee Watermelons, 27,440 lbs., at .02 totaling $548.80 July 6, 1977, Jubilee Watermelons, 50,980 lbs., at .02 totaling $1,019.80 Total for all loads $1,568.40 An examination of the testimony offered in the course of the hearing, supports the Petitioner's contention. The Respondent has paid $1,176.30, leaving a balance of $392.10. The Respondent has not paid the $392.10 which it agreed to pay to' the Petitioner and under the facts of the agreement it is obligated to pay the Petitioner.

Recommendation It is recommended that the Respondent be required to pay the Petitioner $392.10 for the watermelons it purchased from the Petitioner. DONE AND ENTERED this 21th day of February, 1978, in Tallahassee, Florida. CHARLES C. ADAMS Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings Room 530 Carlton Building Tallahassee, Florida 32304 (904) 488-9675 COPIES FURNISHED: Curtis Sanders 630 Colonial Street Live Oak, Florida Roger Serzen c/o Great Lakes Produce of Florida, Inc. Post Office Box 11931 Tampa, Florida 33680

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F. D. (SONNY) CHESNUT vs JIM RASH, INC., AND FIDELITY AND DEPOSIT COMPANY OF MARYLAND, 92-006075 (1992)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Lake Wales, Florida Oct. 08, 1992 Number: 92-006075 Latest Update: May 07, 1993

The Issue The issue in this case is whether Petitioner is entitled to payment in connection with the sale of watermelons in June, 1992.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner grows watermelons. He has only done business with Respondent Jim Rash, Inc. (Respondent) in 1991 and 1992. In both of those years, Petitioner was responsible for the hiring of the crews to pick the melons and load the trailers. Respondent obtained receivers who supplied the trailers and then drove them to the markets, which are typically up north. In 1991, Respondent paid for two of the seven loads at the weighing scales and the remainder a few days later. It is unclear whether the latter payment was made before the shipments were received by the wholesalers and retailers from the shippers or receivers. In 1991, as in 1992, the parties maintained no documentation indicating when Respondent became liable for payment to Petitioner. The parties agree that the subject sale was not a sale on consignment. The price of the watermelons was fixed. Petitioner testified that the sale was to Respondent and complete once the weighing was completed and the final price could be calculated. Petitioner might allow a few days to pass before payment, but this, according to Petitioner, was only a convenience to Respondent. Respondent's representative testified that the role of Respondent was to find receivers who shipped the melons to wholesale or retail markets. If the melons were rejected there, then Petitioner was not due payment for the rejected melons. Perhaps the major problem for the parties is that 1992, unlike 1991, was a poor year for watermelon sellers. Unfortunately, the parties did not document which of them was to bear the risk of loss due to poor market conditions, or even due to substandard watermelons in terms of size or quality. Although the loading was performed by persons hired by Petitioner, Jim Rash, who died in December, 1992, supervised the loading of the melons at Petitioner's farm. He could note size discrepancies relatively easily. Although Respondent's representative testified that his late brother accepted the melons under protest, this testimony is not credited. Without Petitioner's consent, Mr. Rash evidently decided to market the melons as a premium, relatively small variety known as Sangrias, which they are not. However, Petitioner admitted that he should not be paid for watermelons that are of substandard quality. He did so when he admitted that Respondent's claim on spoiled or overripe watermelons would be a different matter if he had had a USDA inspector certify that the melons were bad. Although Mr. Rash took some field samples, he could not have as readily determined the condition of the watermelons as he could have determined their size. Petitioner has proved that Respondent was liable for payment of all melons loaded on the trailers except for those that were of deficient quality. In this case, between June 22 and 28, 1992, Petitioner sold nine loads to Respondent under the above-described terms. The total due Petitioner was $18,802.20, of which Respondent paid all but $5175.80. The only load that was rejected due to the watermelons' condition, rather than size, was the one in which Petitioner was underpaid by $2240.80. The purchaser in Chicago rejected these watermelons on June 26, 1992--two days after Petitioner sold them--because they were overripe and bruised.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is hereby RECOMMENDED that the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services enter a final order determining that Respondent owes Petitioner the sum of $2935. ENTERED on March 30, 1993, in Tallahassee, Florida. ROBERT E. MEALE Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 30th day of March, 1993. COPIES FURNISHED: Hon. Bob Crawford Commissioner of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Richard Tritschler, General Counsel Department of Agriculture The Capitol, PL-10 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810 Brenda Hyatt, Chief Bureau of Licensing and Bond Department of Agriculture 508 Mayo Building Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800 Sonny Chesnut, pro se Route 1, Box 658 Bonifay, FL 32421 Earl M. Rash Post Office Box 1180 Dundee, FL 33838 Legal Department Fidelity & Deposit of Maryland Post Office Box 1227 Baltimore, MD 21203

Florida Laws (6) 120.57120.68604.15604.20604.21604.34
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