79 Mich. 307 | Mich. | 1890
The plaintiff is a domestic corporation, and the defendant is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the state of Wisconsin.
On April 14, 1887, the parties entered into the following agreement:
“South Frankfort, Mich., April 14, 1887.
“We will furnish you two hun. thousand rock elm, delivered in Racine, from logs as cut in woods, to be 12 and 14 feet long, to be sawed to your order, as near as-may be, and to be measured straight measure, for the sum of $13.50 per thousand, during the months of June or July, to be paid for as delivered.
“The Crane Lumber Company.
“ By B. Brown, Secretary and Treasurer.
“Accepted: Otter Creek Lumber Co.
“By 0. T. Wright, Treasurer.'
The plaintiff claims to have delivered in Racine, Wis;, two cargoes of lumber under the above contract,- — -one in June, and the other in August, 1887. After the first cargo was delivered, and prior to the delivery of the second, the defendant paid to plaintiff, by draft at 10 days,
The first error assigned is to the ruling of the court in permitting a witness -to testify as to the quantity of lumber contained in the two cargoes. The witness had testified that he tallied the lumber on board the vessels, and kept the tally upon a shingle or piece of board, and then copied it into a certificate, when the shingle or board was thrown away. The objection was that the original tally made on the shingle or board was the best •evidence. The error is not well assigned. See Jaclcson v. Evans, 8 Mich. 482, and authorities there cited.
We cannot determine whether the second error alleged is well assigned or not, as the objection is to a question which was overruled, but the answer of the witness is not contained in tne record. If it be granted that the question was open to the objection stated, yet, if the answer was not prejudicial, the judgment would not be reversed for the error of permitting the question to be asked.
The third assignment of error reads as follows:
“The court erred in refusing to charge as requested by defendant in its request to charge No. 2, as follows: ‘By the contract mentioned, the plaintiff agrees to sell and deliver to defendant 200,000 feet rock elm in Hacine,
The court charged the jury, among other things, as-follows:
“It is an agreement that the plaintiff agrees to sell,, and the defendant to purchase, certain rock elm lumber, amounting to 200,000 feet, to be delivered at Racine, Wis., from logs as cut in the woods, and sawed to the order, as near as may be, of the defendant, to be measured straight measure, to be delivered during the months off June and July, to be paid for as delivered.”
This charge covers substantially the request of the-defendant. The only omission is the price per 1,000 feet, which was not disputed, for all lumber answering to the contract.
The fourth assignment -of error, based upon the refusal to give defendant’s third request to charge, is overruled. The request is based upon a fact assumed as proved,, when the testimony concerning it was conflicting.
The fifth assignment is as follows:
“The court erred in refusing „to charge defendant’s request to charge No. 4, as follows: ‘The term “straight measure” is a term of measurement, and would include only such lumber as by the trade would be accepted under that term. This term designates what amount and kind of lumber was to be shipped, and these parties are to be bound by the definition of that term as known to the lumber trade.’”
This assignment may be considered in connection with the sixth, which reads as follows:
“The court erred in charging the jury that ‘under this-agreement the plaintiff agrees to sell, and the defendant to buy, all of • the lumber cut from said logs, and delivered under its terms, except such, if any, as may, from the fact of the logs being rotten or worthless, or from being poorly or carelessly manufactured, be unmerchant
The main points in dispute between the parties relative to the lumber were (1) whether mill culls were included in the contract; and (2) whether the cargoes contained other than rock elm. Upon these two points testimony was introduced upon both sides as to whether the term, “measured straight measure,” used in the contract,, included or excluded mill culls. It is contended orn behalf of defendant that the words in the contract were used in a peculiar and technical sense known to the lumber • trade, and that the contract must be construed in that sense. The plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that there is nothing peculiar or ambiguous about the language used as applied to logs, and that the only and obvious meaning is that the measurement is to include all lumber sawed from logs, without regard to quality, which have a commercial value; that the language has no reference to the grade or quality of lumber, but excludes the idea of quality or inspection, and relates only to the quantity which the logs yield. The court evidently coincided with this view of the plaintiff’s counsel, as will be seen from that portion of his charge last above quoted, in the sixth assignment of error. The defendant had introduced testimony tending to show the quantity of rock elm, and of mill culls, and other lumber contained in the two cargoes, and it furnished to plaintifE a statement thereof, in which it charged itself with the rock elm at $13.50 per 1,000, and with the rock-elm mill culls and other lumber at $3 per 1,000 feet; and Mr. Wright, the treasurer of the defendant corporation, testified that mill culls and gray elm were worth only $3 per 1,000
“If you find that the measurement of Mr. Beck in Racine was correct, and that'the statement of the defendant is a correct statement therefrom, and the prices allowed for the cull lumber, and the other lumber, were what it was reasonably worth at that time and place, then you will find that at the commencement of this suit defendant owed the plaintiff the sum of one hundred and fifty-seven dollars and fifty-eight cents.”
The jury returned a verdict of $587.70, “and interest on the same,” so that it is evident that they not only included the mill culls in the lumber sold, but that they allowed $13.50 per 1,000 therefor. Therefore it becomes important to determine whether the term “ measured' straight measure” included or excluded mill culls.
Ordinarily, the measurement of lumber has reference to the superficial quantity, or the number of superficial feet there is contained in a given quantity; and we may regard the custom so universal that, unless the thickness of the several pieces was expressly mentioned, it would be considered as referring to lumber one inch in thickness, or board measure. A square foot of surface, and an inch in thickness, has become, by the custom of lumbermen, the unit of quantity in the measurement of lumber. The contract under consideration calls for 200,000 feet board measure, but the method of measurement is defined. That is, it is “ to be measured straight measure.” While this expression may be very clear to ■■those engaged in the lumbering trade, to an ordinary-individual, not so engaged, it is not so. Indeed, from 'the conflict of testimony upon the meaning of the expression given by those so engaged, it does not appear to be very clearly defined in the trade.
We think- the testimony introduced by both parties,
The jury, under the instructions given them by the court, returned a verdict 'in favor of the plaintiff for $587.70, and interest on the same, whereupon the court instructed them to return to the jury-room, and compute
The judgment must be reversed for not giving the defendant's fourth request, which was proper, and for not submitting to the jury the question of fact as to the meaning of the term to be “measured straight measure," under the conflicting testimony, and framing his instructions accordingly. A new trial is ordered.