
    Hayes Grain & Commission Company v. Federal Grain Company.
    Opinion delivered December 7, 1925.
    CONTRACT — PERFORMANCE—FINALITY OF INSPECTION. — Where parties ■ to a contract of sale agreed that inspection of a grain inspector at Kansas .City should be final in case of dispute, his inspection was final, in the absence of fraud'or gross, mistake, and the fact that several inspections by competent inspectors.elsewhere differed from, that of the inspector named did not tend to show bad faith on the latter’s part.
    Appeal from Pulaski Circuit Court, Second Division; Richard M. Mann, Judge;
    affirmed.
    
      .Price Shofner, for appellant.
    
      Gray, .Burrow & McDoimell, for appellee.
   Humphreys, J.

This is the second appeal in this case. Since the pleadings and evidence .reflected by this record are identical with the pleafiings and evidence reflected by the record .on the first appeal, reference is made to the case of Federal Grain Company v. Hayes Grain & Commission Co., 161 Ark. 51, for a statement herein. By-reference to that case it will he seen that the judgment was reversed- and the cause remanded for a new trial because the trial court erroneously instructed the jury to the effect that the inspection of the grain inspector at Kansas City that parties had agreed should be final in case of a dispute arising between them might be disregarded if the inspection was the result of gross mistake. The 'Supreme Court announced the true rule to be that such an inspection could -not be disregarded unless it could be shown that it was either the result of actual fraud or such gross mistake as necessarily implied bad faith or a failure to exercise an honest judgment upon the part of the inspector. In remanding the case for a new trial the court specifically refrained from passing upon the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict in favor of the appellant herein. Upon the retrial of the case appellant herein requested an instruction embodying the rule announced by the court applicable in such cases, which the court refused to give because of an insufficiency of proof to meet the requirements o.f the rule, but instead peremptorily instructed a verdict in favor of appellee herein. A judgment was rendered in accordance with the instructed verdict, from which an appeal has been duly prosecuted to this court.' The only question presented by the appeal is whether or not there is any substantial testimony in the record tending to show that the result of the inspection in Kansas City was reached throug'h the fraud of the inspector or through such a gross mistake on his part as would necessarily imply bad faith or a failure to exercise an honest judgment. The record fails to disclose lany evidence- at 'all tending to show that the Kansas City inspector was guilty of actual fraud in making-the inspection. The only fact in the record from which appellant contends that fraud may be inferred is the fact that several inspections made in Little Rock by competent inspectors showed that the oat’s were grade No. 4, instead of grade No. 3, as shown by the Kansas City inspection. "We do not think this Was such a gross mistake that it tended to show bad faith on the part of the Kansas City inspector. Since there is a total failure of evidence tending to show fraud or such a gross mistake- in grading the oats that fraud might reasonably be inferred, the judgment must be affirmed. It is so ordered.  