08-000382 A.D. Andrews Nursery, Inc. vs. L.M.I East, Incorporated, D/B/A L.M.I. Landscapes, Inc., And Western Surety Company, As Surety
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, June 3, 2008.


View Dockets  
Summary: Without a brokerage agreement, he who has complete control of the product has bought same and is responsible to pay for it. Substantial evidence of sale at the point of transfer of product is not the final arrival point.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8A.D. ANDREWS NURSERY, INC., )

13)

14Petitioner, )

16)

17vs. ) Case No. 08-0382

22)

23L.M.I. EAST, INCORPORATED, )

27d/b/a L.M.I. LANDSCAPERS, INC., )

32AND WESTERN SURETY COMPANY, AS ) )

39SURETY, )

41)

42Respondent. )

44RECOMMENDED ORDER

46Upon due notice, a disputed-fact hearing was held in this

56case on April 16, 2008, by video teleconferencing between

65Jacksonville, Florida, and Tallahassee, Florida, before

71Ella Jane P. Davis, a duly-assigned Administrative Law Judge of

81the Division of Administrative Hearings.

86APPEARANCES

87For Petitioner A.D. Andrews Nursery, Inc:

93Teal Pomeroy

95Qualified Representative

97A.D. Andrews Nursery, Inc.

101Post Office Box 1126

105Chiefland, Florida 32644-1126

108For Respondent L.M.I. East, Incorporated d/b/a L.M.I.

115Landscapers, Inc.:

117Pat Tronzano

119Qualified Representative

1211437 Halsey Way

124Carrollton, Texas 75007-4410

127For Respondent Western Surety Company:

132(No appearance)

134STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

138Whether Respondent, L.M.I. East, Incorporated d/b/a L.M.I.

145Landscapers, Inc. and its surety, Western Surety Company owes

154Petitioner $4,210.00 for East Palatka Holly Trees.

162PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

164This cause was referred to the Division of Administrative

173Hearings on or about January 23, 2008. On February 26, 2008, a

185Notice of Hearing by Video Teleconference for April 16, 2008, was

196entered, together with an Order of Pre-Hearing Instructions.

204At the time set for hearing, Teal Pomeroy appeared at the

215Tallahassee site for Petitioner. Pat Tronzano on behalf of

224Respondent and the court reporter appeared at the Jacksonville,

233Florida, site. Upon examination by the undersigned and by oral

243authorization by Petitioner corporation’s principal, A.D.

249Andrews, Mr. Pomeroy was accepted to act as Petitioner's

258Qualified Representative. Mronzano was examined and

264conditionally accepted to act as Respondent's Qualified

271Representative, subject to Respondent's written corporate

277approval being filed within 10 days of hearing. That approval

287was timely filed.

290Respondent's surety did not appear.

295Petitioner presented the oral testimony of Pomeroy Teal,

303Mary Andrews, and A.D. Andrews, and had five exhibits admitted in

314evidence. Mronzano testified on behalf of Respondent and had

323seven exhibits admitted in evidence, several of which were

332composites.

333No transcript was provided.

337Pursuant to their oral stipulation at the close of hearing,

347each of the parties timely filed its Proposed Recommended Order

357on April 24, 2008, and May 5, 2008, respectively.

366FINDINGS OF FACT

3691. Petitioner A.D. Andrews, Inc. is a producer of

378agricultural products, pursuant to Section 604.15 (9), Florida

386Statutes.

3872. Respondent L.M.I. East, Incorporated d/b/a L.M.I.

394Landscapes, Inc. is a dealer in agricultural products pursuant

403to Section 604.15 (2), Florida Statutes. Respondent’s surety is

412Western Surety Company

4153. Teal Pomeroy, a salesman for Petitioner, and Pat

424Tronzano, Purchasing Manager for Respondent, have a business

432history representing their respective principals. All previous

439dealings have been satisfactory, and they share a mutual respect.

4494. While at a trade show in Orlando, Florida, Teal and

460Tronzano entered into an oral agreement for the sale of 31 East

472Palatka Holly bushes/trees (30 at the rate of $135.00 each, and

483one for $160.00) at a total price of $4,210.00, due from

495Respondent to Petitioner. Neither participant in this

502arrangement testified to any oral terms covering “point of sale”

512or a guarantee of any condition of the hollies at a final

524destination. Neither participant testified that a standard

531course of business on these issues had arisen between them as a

543result of their prior transactions.

5485. On October 9, 2007, Mronzano sent a third party

558freighter (trucker) to pick-up the hollies at Petitioner's

566nursery in Chiefland, Florida, and transport them, at

574Respondent’s expense, to Selena, Texas, for planting and

582landscaping by Respondent.

5856. Mronzano did not accompany the third party freighter

594to Petitioner's nursery or on the subsequent trip to Texas. He

605never saw the hollies in question prior to loading or while they

617were still on the truck after loading.

6247. The trucker selected by Respondent was one specially

633skilled in the transport of landscape plants, and Respondent has

643successfully used him for prior purchases and transports.

6518. The third party freight truck arrived at Petitioner’s

660Chiefland, Florida, nursery at approximately 11:00 a.m. on

668October 9, 2007, before all the hollies had been dug up.

679However, the trees that were ready to load and those that had to

692be dug up were loaded by Petitioner, and by 2:00 p.m., the truck,

705fully loaded, left Petitioner’s property.

7109. Petitioner’s invoice clearly states:

715ATTENTION: If these trees are not in

722satisfactory condition when received, do not

728accept them. We do not replace trees.

735Please note any discrepancies or problems

741with materials.

74310. The invoice does not show the trucker noted any

753problems with the hollies.

75711. The trucker also signed the delivery ticket under the

767statement, “I acknowledge that trees were received in good

776condition.”

77712. Approximately 48 hours later, Mronzano received a

785report from Texas that when the freighter delivered the hollies

795to the Selena, Texas site, some hollies were dead and other were

807dying. Mronzano did not personally witness anything at the

816final destination. Respondent's photographs in evidence, the

823date of which has not been automatically printed on them, show

834some trees which had already been unloaded in Texas with dried-

845out root balls. They show no trees with dried-out root balls

856still on the truck. All photographs show intact root balls,

866although they are dusty and some trees are clearly dead or dying.

878One tree is dead in a pot.

88513. Although it had taken Respondent’s trucker

892approximately 48 hours to get the hollies to their ultimate

902destination in Texas, the normal driving time is 16-20 hours.

912Because federal regulations require a period of rest for

921commercial drivers every eight hours, Respondent put forth the

930theory that because there had been a delay of three hours at

942Petitioner’s nursery while some hollies were dug up and loaded,

952the delaying effect of three hours snowballed to a total delay of

964as much as 22-28 hours for the truck’s arrival time at the final

977destination. This theory is speculative and unsubstantiated by

985the evidence.

98714. Despite some earlier attempts, Respondent did not

995notify Petitioner of the condition of the hollies at the final

1006destination until October 15, 2007.

101115. Respondent concedes that 11 of the 131 hollies were

1021accepted in good condition. Whether one of the survivors was the

1032single holly tree sold for $160.00, is not in evidence.

1042Respondent has not paid Petitioner for any of the hollies.

105216. Mronzano has not had a dry-out problem like this

1062one in ten years. Respondent's second theory of why the hollies

1073arrived at the Texas destination in poor shape is an assertion

1084that the way Petitioner processed and handled the harvesting of

1094the hollies adversely affected their health. Respondent

1101speculates that Petitioner’s digging and immediately loading the

1109just-dug hollies onto the truck sent by Respondent resulted in

1119shock to the hollies’ root systems so that the root systems dried

1131out.

113217. Mr. Teal and Mronzano agree that previous trees

1141(not necessarily East Palatka hollies) sold by Petitioner to

1150Respondent had been "pre-dug" and "staged" by Petitioner in

1159anticipation of the arrival of the freighter. “Staging” means

1168that Petitioner dug up the trees, put them on a trailer, and took

1181them to a centralized loading area at the nursery for

1191Respondent’s pick-up.

119318. According to Mr. Teal, the foregoing “pre-dig and

1202stage” method prevents "double-handling" of trees, but many trees

1211are dug up only when a truck arrives at the nursery to take them

1225away. Mr. Teal was not present at the nursery on October 9,

12372007, but opined that if the hollies on this occasion had been

1249pre-watered, they would be unlikely to die of shock, despite

1259being dug up and loaded right away. Moreover, the particular

1269trees sold to Respondent came out of a field that Petitioner

1280irrigates, so "dry out" should not have been a problem.

129019. Mary Andrews works in Petitioner's business office.

1298She did not know about Respondent's order until the truck arrived

1309on October 9, 2007, but she managed the "dig and load" within

1321three hours of the truck’s arrival. She testified that

1330Petitioner digs trees throughout the year so that when a truck

1341arrives, the trees have not been sitting dry in a field for

1353lengthy periods of time.

135720. Petitioner sold 3500 similar trees in the previous year

1367without any dry-out problems.

137121. Petitioner had admitted in evidence, without objection,

1379Florida Division of Forestry rainfall records for three locations

1388near Petitioner's nursery. All three official records show six

1397inches of rainfall for the week immediately preceding October 9,

14072007.

140822. Petitioner maintains that the trucker should have

1416watered the hollies en route . Respondent believes the trucker

1426did water them, but the trucker did not testify, so there is no

1439direct evidence that the trucker watered the hollies en route .

145023. The parties have tried to work this situation out, but

1461their respective offers of compromise are not admissible herein,

1470pursuant to Section 90.408, Florida Statutes.

1476CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

147924. The Division of Administrative Hearings has

1486jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of this cause,

1496pursuant to Sections 120.569 and 120.57(1), Florida Statutes,

1504(2007).

150525. Petitioner is a producer of "agricultural products,"

1513as defined in Section 604.15(1), Florida Statutes.

152026. Petitioner has the burden of presenting evidence that

1529Respondent has defaulted on paying the agreed amount pursuant to

1539the oral agreement as stated by them. Thereafter, Respondent

1548has the burden of presenting evidence that Petitioner violated

1557their agreement by failing to furnish hollies of the agreed-upon

1567quality standard. Dept. of Banking and Finance v. Osborne Stern

1577and Company , 670 So. 2d 932 (Fla. 1995).

158527. Respondent was acting in the capacity of a buyer when

1596Mronzano negotiated the sale of Petitioner’s hollies and as

1605a buyer, Respondent is responsible for payment to Petitioner

1614unless Petitioner can be shown to have breached the contract.

162428. The parties agree that there was an oral agreement.

1634Because there was no clear specification of a different "point

1644of sale," the point of sale herein occurred when care, custody,

1655and control of the hollies passed to Respondent. The freighter,

1665who was selected and paid solely by Respondent, was, in effect,

1676Respondent's agent when he assumed custody and responsibility

1684for the hollies.

168729. There is no evidence herein that an up-front agreement

1697was reached for the parties to share transportation costs or for

1708Respondent to "broker" a sale to some other entity.

1717Respondent's agent signed for the hollies and took sole

1726possession of them. By signing and taking possession of the

1736hollies for Respondent without noting any problem with the

1745hollies on the invoice and/or delivery ticket, and without any

1755other “point of sale” arrangement, the trucker acknowledged that

1764the hollies were satisfactory, pursuant the printed disclaimer

1772on Petitioner’s invoice and delivery ticket. Thereafter, only

1780Respondent's agent (not Petitioner) had complete control of the

1789hollies.

179030. Absent some other understanding (such as a clear

1799brokerage agreement, an agreement to share freight costs, mutual

1808control of the third party freighter, an agreement on guaranteed

1818quality of the product at the final destination, or something

1828similar), he who has complete control of the product bears any

1839loss to that product. In this case, that would be Respondent.

185030. Even so, Petitioner presented sufficient evidence to

1858demonstrate that Respondent's mere speculations (concerning

1864shock from harvesting, the cause of the inordinate delay in

1874Respondent's trucker's travel time, and selection of products

1882with dried-out root balls) were reasonably unlikely, and

1890therefore these conjectures cannot shift responsibility for the

1898dead and dying hollies back to Petitioner.

1905RECOMMENDATION

1906Based on the foregoing Findings of Facts and Conclusions of

1916Law, it is

1919RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered that Respondent

1928L.M.I. East, Incorporated d/b/a L.M.I. Landscapers, Inc., shall

1936pay Petitioner, A.D. Andrews Nursery, Inc., the sum of

1945$4,210.00, and that if L.M.I. East, Incorporated d/b/a L.M.I.

1955Landscapers, Inc., fails to pay Petitioner, A.D. Andrews

1963Nursery, Inc., within 30 days of the final order, then

1973Respondent, Western Surety Company, shall pay the Department as

1982required by Section 604.21, Florida Statutes, and that the

1991Department reimburse Petitioner in accordance with Section

1998604.21, Florida Statutes.

2001DONE AND ENTERED this 3rd day of June, 2008, in

2011Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

2015S

2016___________________________________

2017ELLA JANE P. DAVIS

2021Administrative Law Judge

2024Division of Administrative Hearings

2028The DeSoto Building

20311230 Apalachee Parkway

2034Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060

2037(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675

2041Fax Filing (850) 921-6847

2045www.doah.state.fl.us

2046Filed with the Clerk of the

2052Division of Administrative Hearings

2056this 3rd day of June, 2008.

2062COPIES FURNISHED:

2064Teal Pomeroy

2066Qualified Representative

2068A.D. Andrews Nursery, Inc.

2072Post Office Box 1126

2076Chiefland, Florida 32644-1126

2079Pat Tronzano

2081Qualified Representative

2083L.M.I. East, Incorporated d/b/a

2087L.M.I. Landscapers, Inc.

20901437 Halsey Way

2093Carrollton, Texas 75007-4410

2096Richard Ditschler, General Counsel

2100Department of Agriculture and

2104Consumer Services

2106407 South Calhoun Street, Suite 520

2112Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0800

2115Honorable Charles H. Bronson

2119Commissioner of Agriculture

2122Department of Agriculture and

2126Consumer Services

2128The Capitol, Plaza Level 10

2133Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0810

2136Western Surety Company

2139Post Office Box 5077

2143Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57117-5077

2148NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

2154All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within

216415 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions

2175to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that

2186will issue the final order in this case.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
PDF:
Date: 09/30/2008
Proceedings: (Agency) Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 09/29/2008
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 06/03/2008
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 06/03/2008
Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
PDF:
Date: 06/03/2008
Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held April 16, 2008). CASE CLOSED.
PDF:
Date: 05/05/2008
Proceedings: Respondent`s Proposed Resommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/24/2008
Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from T. Pomeroy regarding enclosing reasons Petitioner holds firmly to the opinion that no fault was proven in hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/17/2008
Proceedings: Post-hearing Order.
PDF:
Date: 04/17/2008
Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from J. O`Donnell regarding authorization to be represented by P. Tronzano filed.
Date: 04/16/2008
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 04/07/2008
Proceedings: Proposed Exhibit (exhibit not available for viewing) filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/26/2008
Proceedings: Order Pre-Hearing Video Instructions.
PDF:
Date: 02/26/2008
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for April 16, 2008; 9:30 a.m.; Jacksonville and Tallahassee, FL).
PDF:
Date: 02/19/2008
Proceedings: Letter response to the Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/30/2008
Proceedings: Letter response to the Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Initial Order.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Dealer Claim Form filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Amended Claim filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Notice of Filing of an Amended Claim filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Letter to Western Surety Company from C. Green regarding enclosed Notice of Filing of an Amended Claim filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Letter to Mr. Stricklen from C. Green regarding enclosed Notice of Filing of an Amended Claim filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Answer of Respondent filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/23/2008
Proceedings: Agency referral filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/28/1990
Proceedings: Agency`s court reporter confirmation letter filed with the Judge.

Case Information

Judge:
ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
Date Filed:
01/23/2008
Date Assignment:
01/23/2008
Last Docket Entry:
09/30/2008
Location:
Jacksonville, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED
 

Counsels

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Related Florida Statute(s) (5):