Plaintiff domiciled in Beaumont, Tex., sold to defendant 1,160 pockets of rice for tbe sum of $3,839.63, sight draft bill of lading attached.
The rice had been bought on samples sent defendant by their agent at Beaumont. Before the arrival of the rice the defendants had in turn sold the rice on the samples in hand— upon the arrival of the rice it was found to be not up to sample, and defendant notified plaintiff of this condition, and refusing to accept the consignment unless an allowance of one-fourth of a cent per pound was made. Plaintiff accepted this proposition as the basis of a compromise, but instead of sending a new draft, handed defendant’s agent $290 as stipulated by defendants, this being the aggregate of the one-fourth cent per pound allowance.
Plaintiff now seeks to recover from the defendant this amount, plus certain items for weighing and storage aggregating $354.35.
*146Plaintiff avers that the allowance was accepted by it in order to avoid serious financial loss and trouble, and that its acceptance was made under protest, that it was coerced into making the concession.
We cannot appreciate the position thus assumed by plaintiff.
The acceptance of defendant’s conditions was by telegram in which plaintiff made no reservations or protest.
From our view of this controversy the question for deter-minatign is purely and simply, whether or not plaintiff agreed to accept for their goods a less price than that originally agreed upon and whether its action was voluntary. This, the record affirmatively indicates. Fraud is nei ther charged nor shown.
The record establishes that defendant’s agent at Beaumont was without authority to buy outright at that point, but the sale was contingent on and to be consummated only upon delivery of the rice, and its comparison with the samples sent by the agent. The rice, not being up to sample, was weighed and stored at plaintiff’s expense.
Plaintiff’s conception of a “compromise” as suggested in the telegram to defendants, appears to be that it was an agreement which left the controversy open for further adjustment. Under this record we cannot look upon the transaction in that light. Plaintiff may have intended such a condition, but if so, it was unfortunate in its selection of the method adopted.
The compromise in this case was exactly what the word imports, a, settlement of diff erences by mutual consent, and such a settlement as made in this ease makes the transaction a closed one.
It is idle for plaintiff, under -the circumstances, to term defendant’s demand for a reduction on the price of the rice, “a hold-up.”
Their action impresses us as being open, business-like, and not at all unusual.
The correspondence found in the record is shown to have been carried on after the differences between the parties had been definitely closed by the compromise.
Piad plaintiff’s position been invulnerable originally it could have maintained its right of action against the defendants to recover every farthing to which it was entitled under its contract, but when it choose to make certain concessions to the other *147party and these without reservation, though perhaps not legally estopped, this Court will be prone to disturb or change such voluntary conventions. The defendants say that had any reservations been made they would not have taken thc^rice, and plaintiff, we must assume, accepted with that knowledge.
February 8, 1909. Rehearing refused March 8, 1909. Writ refused by Supreme Court, April 14, 1909.The authorities cited by plaintiff are not applicable to this case..
The judgment of the District Court was in favor of defendants, dismissing plaintiff’s demand. We find no reason to disturb it, and it is accordingly affirmed.