133 Ill. App. 572 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the court.
The term “steam lump” as used in the contract refers to the coal as it was when loaded into cars at the mine. Steam lump includes all the coal except that which passes through a half inch screen at the time. That part which passes through such screen is called slack, dust, or screenings. Coal that is steam lump when put on board cars at the mine remains steam lump after transportation, although in transportation and in loading and unloading more or less lump coal is necessarily broken np and converted into slack or dust. Mine run coal includes the slack and dust, and is the grade next below steam lump. Lump, three quarter lump, domestic lump and Milwaukee lump are all grades better than steam lump.
The question is, what was the kind or grade of the coal in question when it left the mines. The coal was shipped from the mines to Sandusky by the C. S. & H. R. R., consigned to the National Fuel Company, and was unloaded from the cars into the vessel by the superintendent of the docks at Sandusky. To show the kind and grade of the coal in question when shipped at the mines, it was proper to prove what cars were unloaded into the vessel at Sandusky, from what mines such cars were shipped, and then to show with what kind and grade of coal such cars were loaded at the mines.
Plaintiff took in Ohio, upon oral interrogatories, the depositions of the superintendent of the dock at Sandusky and of persons connected with the mining and shipping of the coal at the mines. Defendants did not attend upon the taking of the depositions, nor move to suppress any part thereof, but at the trial, objected to parts of such depositions, and the overruling of such objections is assigned for error here.
The rule of law in such cases is well settled. Statements in a deposition which are not legitimate evidence may be objected to at the trial, but all objections to evidence contained in a deposition which could have been cured had they been made in apt time before the trial are deemed waived.
In C. & N. W. R. R. Co. v. Ingersoll, 65 Ill., 399, a railroad company was sued for the non-delivery of grain to the consignee of the plaintiff, and the defense of the company was that by order of the consignee, it had delivered the grain tó a certain elevator which was burned the following day. The defendant offered in evidence an entry in the books of the elevator company made in the usual course of its business by its foreman, tending to show that the grain in question was received into the elevator the day before the fire, and it was held that such entry in the books of a third party was admissible as an entry, “contemporaneous with the principal fact done, forming a link' in the chain- of events and being a part of the res gestee1 Greenleaf on Ev., section 120.
In Fisher v. Greene, 95 Ill., 94, it was held that when an original paper is in the hands of a third person residing out of the State and he refuses to attach the same to his deposition, a sworn copy thereof, attached to his deposition, as an exhibit, is admissible in evidence.
Plaintiff read in evidence the deposition of Chester C. Hand, the superintendent of the docks at Sandusky. He testified that he superintended the loading of the coal in question at said dock from the cars into the Steamer Hew Orleans; that he made in a book a record of every car of coal that went into the vessel; that the book produced contained such entries in his handwriting; that he would not permit the book to be attached to his deposition; that the copy of such entries which he produced and which was attached to his deposition as an exhibit was a correct copy of the original.
We think the court did not err in admitting in evidence such exhibit. This exhibit contains the date and number of the way bills, the number of the car and weight of the coal of the 73 cars of coal that made up the cargo. Hand further testified that he inspected said 73 cars of coal by looking at the coal before it was unloaded; that the coal that went into said cargo was run of mine, lump and nut; that no car of slack or screenings went into the cargo.
J. H. Gray testified in his deposition that he was the superintendent of Hational Fuel Company’s mine 34, in Perry county, Ohio, in 1902; that he kept in his own handwriting a record of the cars of coal shipped to Sandusky by said company from June 10 to August 15, 1902; that said record contained the date of shipment, number of the car, weight and kind of coal; that he would not permit such record to be taken out of the State, but produced a true copy thereof which was attached to his deposition as an exhibit. This exhibit was, we think, properly admitted in evidence. From this exhibit it appears that said company shipped to its own order at Sandusky, within the dates above mentioned, 59 cars of coal, nearly all of which cars, from a comparison of the exhibit attached to his deposition with that attached to Hand’s deposition, appear to have gone into the cargo in question.
According to said exhibit, 16 of said cars contained run of mine coal, the others steam lump or better, viz.: 19 steam lump, 3 domestic lump, and the remainder of the 59 cars Milwaukee lump. He further, after refreshing his memory by an examination of said sheet, testified that 16 of said cars were loaded with run of mine coal, 19 with steam lump, 2 with domestic lump and the remainder with Milwaukee lump. John Carding testified that he shipped car 9422 June 13, and car 3643 August 8, 1902, to said Fuel Company at Sandusky, and that both cars were steam lump. Both of said cars appear from the exhibit attached to Hand’s deposition to have gone into the cargo of the Hew Orleans.
M. L. Swingle testified by deposition that he was the station agent of the C. S. & H. R. R. Co. at Canelsville, Ohio, in August, 1902, and was also employed by Maynard Brothers to make up their mine reports and do their billing; that he made up such reports from slips furnished him by Mauk, the superintendent of the mine of Maynard Brothers; that the book produced contained the report of the shipments made in August, 1902; that he would not permit the book to be taken out of the State, but would furnish a copy of said report to be attached to his deposition, and a copy thereof is attached to his deposition as an exhibit. Swingle further stated, after refreshing his memory by an examination of said report, the number of each car so shipped, which numbers correspond with the numbers contained in the report. Mauk testified that he was the superintendent of the Maynard mine in August, 1902; that during that month he superintended the loading of ten cars of coal consigned to the Hational Fuel Company at Sandusky; that he made an inspection of each car to ascertain the kind of coal in it, put the name and number of the car and the kind of coal in it on a slip and gave such slip to Swingle.
We think the exhibit attached to the deposition of Swingle was admissible in evidence, although his original report was made from slips furnished him by Mauk. The entries so made were still contemporaneous entries, made in the usual course of business, forming a link in the chain of events and being a part of the res gestee. I Greenleaf’s Ev., section 120. Erom said exhibit it appears that said ten cars contained run of mine coal, and from a comparison of said exhibit with the Hand exhibit, it appears that five of said cars went into the cargo of the Hew Orleans.
The testimony contained in said deposition and the exhibits thereto attached show, with reasonable certainty, from what mines the coal that made up the cargo of the Hew Orleans came; when each car was shipped, and tends to show that the coal in 21 of the ears that went into said cargo, viz.: 16 of those from mine 34 of the Hational Fuel Company and 5 shipped from the mine of Maynard Brothers, was run of mine coal, and that the coal in the other cars that went into said cargo was steam lump or better.
The testimony of the defendants’ witnesses relates to the condition of the coal and the amount of dust or slack therein after it had been unloaded upon the dock at Chicago. Hone of the witnesses had had experience in shipping Hocking coal by rail and lake, but only in shipping it by rail.
The testimony was competent only so far as evidence of the condition of the coal in Chicago tended to show its condition when shipped from the mine.
The evidence tends to show that the coal dropped 20 to 22 feet in loading at Sandusky, and 22 feet in unloading at Chicago when unloading began. The evidence also shows that in shipping Hocking coal by lake and rail a very much larger percentage of the coal is broken up and converted into slack or dust than is so broken up and converted in shipping by rail alone.
We do not think that the evidence given for defendants as to the condition of the coal in Chicago is sufficient to overcome the evidence on the part of the plaintiff as to the kind and grade of the coal when it was shipped from the mines.
Upon the question whether H. C. Adams, an officer of the plaintiff company, admitted to Mr. Dreiske, one of the defendants, that the coal was inferior to that specified in the contráct, the evidence is conflicting.
The finding cannot, in our opinion, be held to be against the evidence, and we find in the rulings of the court upon evidence no reversible error.
The judgment of the Circuit Court will he affirmed.
Affirmed.