62 Me. 168 | Me. | 1873
The plaintiff’s objection to the admission of the written contract between himself and the defendant for the cutting and hauling of the logs, for which he was claiming to recover on a general indebitatus assumpsit is untenable. The exceptions show that while he claimed it was rescinded, the defendant claimed that it was in force, except so far as it had been modified by a subsequent parol agreement, increasing the price and changing the mode of payment. Whichever party was right on the disputed point, the question was one which it became necessary for the jury to pass upon, and the contract was necessarily admissible. The whole course of proceedings between the parties, as exhibited by the evidence, shows that the defendant’s position in relation to it, was the correct one. The plaintiff’s counsel prudently avoids dwelling at much length on the exception. But he insists strenuously upon his objection to the admission of the scale-bill made and signed by the person agreed upon in the contract, to scale the logs — Joseph Treat, who is dead — contending that the scaler’s survey and conclusions upon the matter submitted to him by the-parties, can only be proved by his testimony under oath, in order that the party who deems himself aggrieved may have - an opportunity of cross-examining him.
The scale made by the person agreed upon by the parties to scale the logs, in a contract for the hauling or sale of them, is binding and conclusive upon the parties in the absence of fraud. Robinson v. Fiske, 25 Maine, 401; Berry v. Reed, 53 Maine, 487. Neither party is at liberty to set aside or impeach it, except upon such evidence as would avoid the award of an arbitrator mutually chosen — evidence which will satisfy the jury that the scaler acted corruptly, or that injustice is done by reason of some bias,
• It was competent for the plaintiff to show that a part of the logs referred to in his account were not included in the scale-bill of Treat, and he was allowed by the presiding judge to establish, if he could, the existence of such a discrepancy between the scale-bill and the actual amount of logs hauled, as would lead the jury to infer some corrupt or fraudulent practice, and he seems to have had the full benefit of his attempts in this direction, so far as the rulings and instructions of the presiding judge related thereto.
The jury were duly directed to ascertain the quantity of any logs not scaled by Treat, from the other evidence in the case ; but that Treat’s scale, as far as it went, “if not tainted by fraud,” was to be taken as the true scale. The plaintiff’s requested instructions upon that branch of the case received only such limitations and qualifications as were necessary to relieve the court from assuming to decide those questions of fact which properly belonged to the
The remark is as true and applicable in this case as in that, that “the parties in making their contract have not intimated an intention that the surveyor agreed upon, should proceed otherwise in reference to the timber, than had been customary in other cases.”
It was to this general course of the business there — not to any such imaginary rule, or improved usage, as the ingenuity of counsel conjures up — that the presiding judge referred in the instruction of which the plaintiff complains, which was appended to his third and fifth requests. It is simply impossible that the jury could have been misled by such a reference to the usual course of the business. The plaintiff’s counsel himself says in argument, that no such point was made by defendant’s counsel; and we think it equally plain that no such applications of the reference made by the court to the customary mode of scaling, could have entered the minds of either judge or jury. The jury were directly instructed that if Treat’s scale was made, giving twelve and fifteen hundred feet to a thousand, in order to make them hold out below, it would be fraudulent and void.
The plaintiff lays much stress upon the refusal of the presiding judge to rule in accordance with his first and second requests, that if the last scaling done by Treat was on the Lord’s Day, it was in violation of law, and void, and that as there was no legal scale by Treat of the whole of the logs, his scale must be set aside and disregarded.
•In support of his first request he cites a familiar line of cases respecting the effect of a breach of the law for the better observance of the Lord’s Day committed by parties litigant, upon their rights in controversy.
That which bears the closest analogy to the case at bar, is the case of True v. Plumley, 36 Maine, 466, and the conclusion there reached is not favorable to the plaintiff’s view. The verdict of a jury upon a case respecting which they had consulted, agreed, and
The measuring and casting up of some of these logs by Treat, and leaving a memorandum of them at the plaintiff’s camp on Sunday, cannot be held to vitiate his scale. So far as the scaling of those particular logs even was concerned, the act of the scaler was not complete until the scale-bill was delivered to the defendant, who was the party to be charged thereby, and that does not appear to have been done on Sunday.
The case falls within that line of cases in which some portion of the proceedings may have taken place on Sunday, but the transaction not being completed on that day, so as to become effective, is held not to be vitiated-by the illegal, and perhaps punishable, acts of those concerned in it. See Hilton v. Houghton, 35 Maine, 143, where the settlement of accounts between the plaintiff and principal promissor on the note in suit was made on the Lord’s Day, at the request of the plaintiff, and the note was then written and signed by the principal and his sureties, but not being delivered to the plaintiff until a secular day, was held not avoided by the illegality of the incipient acts of the parties.
The position that the acts of Treat, done under the contract, so far as they were completed, are not receivable and binding, because he ceased to scale before the hauling of the logs was entirely completed, or that his scale should be set aside upon evidence of error in his count or estimate of those which he did scale, cannot be maintained.' He was the scaler agreed upon by the parties. Mere mistakes of his are not to be revised here upon the strength of testimony equally liable to mistake. So far as he went under the contract, his doings are conclusive upon the parties in the absence of fraud. There is no controversy as to the number of logs hauled after Treat stopped scaling. The plaintiff’s count of them is accepted ; and if, as the plaintiff’s counsel supposes, the
Upon a careful review of the whole testimony, we see no great cause to question the substantial correctness of the verdict. Juries seldom err in the direction here suggested. Their sympathies are commonly with the party who has done the work, and they rarely fail to give him the benefit of as favorable a construction of the testimony as fair dealing will permit.
Motion and exceptions overruled.