41 Ind. App. 550 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1908
Appellee, plaintiff below, brought this action against appellants, doing, business under the firm name of Pletcher & Johnson, to recover for lumber alleged to have been sold to them.
The complaint is in three paragraphs. In the first it is alleged, in substance, that plaintiff sold and delivered to the defendants 11,269 feet of poplar lumber, at and for the price of $19 per thousand feet; that he delivered, at the special instance and request of the defendants at the town' of West Baden, Indiana, ■--feet of oak lumber, at the price of $14 per thousand, for commons, and $29 per thousand for firsts and 'seconds; that all of said lumber was contracted for by the agent of said partnership at Willow Valley, Indiana; that all of said lumber was of the value of $333.66; that the defendants paid to the plaintiff the sum of $119.55, leaving a balance of $214.11 due to the plaintiff; that said lumber was to be paid for when delivered to defendants at Willow Valley, Indiana; that said lumber was delivered at Willow Valley, Indiana, on September 1, 1904, and payment for the same demanded; that said sum of $214.11 is now due, and has been for a long time past. A' bill of particulars, marked exhibit A, is filed herewith and made a part hereof. Wherefore plaintiff demands judgment.
■ In the second paragraph of the complaint it is alleged that the defendants purchased of and from the plaintiff the goods, wares and personal property, a bill of particulars of which is filed herewith and made a part hereof, and marked
The third paragraph alleges that on-, 1904, plaintiff and the defendants, through and by their representative, William Johnson, entered into a verbal contract by which the defendants agreed to purchase from the plaintiff all the oak and poplar lumber that the plaintiff then had or might cut at his sawmill in Orange county, Indiana, at and for the following prices: Poplar lumber, $19 per thousand feet, log run, with the mill culls out of said lumber, to. be by the plaintiff delivered at Willow Valley, Indiana, and
Defendants’ demurrer to each of these paragraphs, for want of facts, was overruled, and the defendants answered in three paragraphs: (1) A general denial; (2) what is denominated a cross-answer; (3) that the lumber furnished was ■ not of the kind, quality, description or dimensions agreed upon. Plaintiff replied by general denial. The cause was submitted to a jury, and upon trial a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for $234, on which judgment was rendered.
The assignment of errors questions the action of the court in overruling defendants’ demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint and the overruling of their motion for a new trial.
Like the first paragraph, the second contains a direct averment of the quantity and value of certain lumber delivered. It was sufficient to withstand the objection as to the bill of particulars, for the reasons given in passing upon the first paragraph. But in addition it is claimed, in behalf of the defendants, that this paragraph shows that the contract was an executory one, if in fact it amounted to a contract, and that if the defendants failed to perform their part of it they would be liable only for plaintiff’s damages, if he sustained any; that the averment that the plaintiff had been ready for a year or more to deliver the goods is not sufficient to entitle him to recover the purchase price, if the defendants refused to accept the goods; that under the facts set out the plaintiff would only be entitled to recover the difference between the market value and the price of the goods or the lumber at the place and time agreed upon for the delivery, and as there is no averment showing the market value of the goods, such as would enable the jury to determine the damage, this paragraph is insufficient to entitle the plaintiff to any relief.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain appellants ’ motion for a new trial.