35 Mich. 515 | Mich. | 1877
Complainants in 1873 were and had been engaged in the busines.s of getting out logs and timber, and in running the same down the Au Sable river into a general boom. The timber was used in rafting the logs at this boom, from *whence they were towed to East Tawas and there manufactured at their mill into lumber. The timber used in rafting the logs was put into their boom at East Tawas, and there sold to parties dealing therein, as complainants, except for the purpose of rafting their logs as stated, did not get out or deal in timber.
Complainants resided in the city of New York, and while engaged in this business they became indebted to various parties, and among others to the Merchants’ and 'Manufacturers’ Bank, during the year of 1873, in the sum of about eighteen thousand dollars, which was represented by past due drafts and acceptances held by the bank.
The bank, during the fall of that year, had been making efforts to collect or secure this indebtedness. Letters had been written by the bank to complainants, and Mr. Hinchman, president of the bank, when in New York on business, had called upon complainants, at which time terms of settlement were
At this time complainant had a large quantity of-logs and timber in the Au Sable boom, and also a quantity of timber, supposed and represented to be over one million feet, in their mill-boom at East Tawas. Such were the existing circumstances at the time the agreement was entered into as already stated. A copy of this agreement is given in the margin.
“Stanley G. Wight, trustee for M. & M. B’k, Detroit:
Dear Sir: — Mr. J. S. Kloppenburg is hereby authorized to carry out the terms of the contract between us and the M. & M. B’k of Detroit, dated December 24th, 1873, *and to execute and deliver over to you all the necessary papers proper in the matter, and to put you in full possession of the logs and long timber mentioned in the contract, and to act in every respect as our attorney in the matter.
“Yours, etc.,
“(Signed) We G. Grant & Son.”
Upon the 20th day of January, 1874, Messrs. Hinchman and Wight left Detroit for Tawas, and arrived there on the 21st or 22d. They met Kloppenburg, who informed them that an
“Mr. Stanley G. Wight, Trustee, bought of Iosco Mills, Manufacturers of Gang and Sawed Lumber—
“Dec. 24, 1873.
“To One million feet of long timber now in our boom,
at $10.50 per M.,.....$10,500
“ One and one-half million feet short logs, marked W. G. G., in the Au Sable River, . . 12,000
$22,500”
“February 6, 1874.
“Au Sable Boom Co., Au Sable, Mich.:
“Please deliver to Stanley G. Wight, Trustee, or order, fifteen hundred thousand (1,500,000) feet from our short logs, marked W. G. G., etc., and oblige,
“Tours truly,
“(Signed) Julius Kloppenburg.”
*Endorsed: “Accepted, provided a sufficient numher of logs are in the river. (Signed) A. F. Gat, Treasurer Au Sable River Boom Co.”
The delivery of this order was delayed on account of a difficulty between the boom company and complainants about an unpaid account.
As early in the season of 1874 as the ice and weather would permit, complainants, by their agents, commenced rafting the timber in their mill boom. Some time in June, about the middle, they discovered that there would not be white pine enough in the boom to make up the contract quantity, and some white-pine was received after this from the Au Sable boom and added to the raft, but not enough to complete it. The raft as made up was scaled, and on the 4th of July a tug took it in charge, which had been sent there for that purpose by Wight, and started with it for Detroit. The scale bill showed four hundred and ninty-three thousand four hundred and seventeen feet of white pine and two hundred and thirty-three thousand eight hundred and forty-six feet of Norway in the raft. There is a dispute between the parties as to Wight’s knowledge of the contents of the raft before the tug started with it, and of an offer on the part of complainants to take out the excess of Norway pine over two hundred thousand feet, and of their ability and willingness to supply during the season, and attach to some other raft going to Detroit, enough white pine to make up the contract quantity. This will be noticed further on.
Early in the season of 1874 the logs were rafted by the boom company, and complainants’ agents at East Tawas notified by
Complainants file their bill for an accounting, claiming a balance due them of seven thousand five hundred dollars and upwards, and also asking that the drafts and acceptances held by defendants be canceled and delivered up to them. It is not necessary to set forth a full abstract of defendants’ answer. They admit the execution of the agreement, but allege that it was but a preliminary agreement, a mere memorandum or basis of a parol agreement between the parties, which remained in full force; they deny any indebtedness to complainants, and claim a balance due the bank of about sixteen hundred dollars.
A decree was rendered in favor of complainants, in which the court specified and charged complainants with the original indebtedness and interest thereon, with cash paid complainants since the date of the contract, and with certain expenditures made by the trustee in the execution of the trust, with interest thereon from July, 1874. It then credits complainants with the contract price of the timber delivered, less thirty-three thousand eight hundred and forty-six feet considered as the excess of Norway in the raft, with the contract price for the logs at eight dollars per thousand, with the difference between the price paid for the logs and the contract price of the lumber, for sawing, with interest thereon from July 21, 1874; and strikes a balance, resulting in a decree in favor of complainants for four thousand five hundred and sixty-three dollars and eighty-eight cents, from which defendants appealed.
We are satisfied that the written contract must be held to include the entire agreement between the parties. The rights of the parties must be ascertained from a construction of that instrument, in the light of the circumstances existing, and known to both parties at the time it was entered into, and we must endeavor to carry out the *evident intent of both parties in making it, so far as the language
The principal object which defendants had in view was the collection of the debt due the bank. Complainants were in embarrassed circumstances; proceedings in bankruptcy were not only feared, but had actually been commenced against them. Under this state of things, it is very evident that nothing short of an absolute sale and change of possession of sufficient property to satisfy this debt would accomplish what, defendants desired. True, any sale then made might be defeated by the bankruptcy proceedings, or by the creditors of complainants, but subject to these contingencies, and in order to guard against and to prevent so far as possible any interference by complainants’ creditors, the parties evidently intended to make an absolute sale and transfer of the property. With this object in view, the written agreement was entered into. It provided that complainants were to convey to Wight, in trust for the bank, one million feet of merchantable long timber, not to exceed twenty per cent, of Norway, in the boom at East Tawas, and enough more to make up the quantity, at ten dollars and fifty cents per thousand feet, the sale and delivery in the boom to be made as soon as possible. They also agreed to make and deliver to the trustee an order on the Au Sable boom company, to be accepted by them, for one million and a half of good merchantable white pine logs at eight dollars per thousand, the same to be the property of said S. Gr. Wight, in trust for the Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Bank. The bank, in return for the sale and delivery to Wight, in trust, of said logs and timber, agreed to place complainants’ acceptances in Wight’s hands, to be canceled and delivered as soon as the title should be perfected and become the lawful property of said Wight, and they agreed that in case of failure to carry out the agreement, by reason of action being taken by other creditors so *that the property “ hereby transferred ” shall not be held legally by said trustee, then the agreement is to be void, etc.
All this contemplated an immediate change of title, so soon as the trustee could obtain a formal conveyance and delivery
In reference to the logs, they agreed to deliver an order on the boom company. This, when accepted, would remove the logs from all further control of complainants, and would *bind the boom company to deliver them to the trustee, and the parties must have so understood it. Upon the delivery of this order, the logs “ were to be the property -of said Stanley G-. Wight.” And in return for sale and delivery to Wight, in trust, of said logs and timber, the notes and acceptances were to be placed in his hands to be cancelled and delivered to complainants, “as soon as title to said logs and timber is perfected, and becomes the lawful property of said
It was but a method adopted of giving them certain advantages growing out of the sawing of them, and of fixing a saw bill, notwithstanding the fact that they had parted with the title, as it was evidently considered dangerous to permit the title to remain in them until the logs should be sawed.
The subsequent acts of the parties tend clearly in the same direction, and show such to have been their construction at the time the trustee went to Tawas and received a ^formal bill of sale of the logs and timber, and a delivery of the timber in the boom. But on account of an unsettled difficulty between complainants and the boom company, and in consequence thereof their refusal to accept, the order upon the company was not delivered until February. We have no doubt from an examination of the entire agreement, in the light of the then existing and well known facts, but that the title to the timber in the boom, so far as covered by the contract, passed upon receipt of the bill of sale in January, and that the title to the logs passed upon receipt of the order of complainants upon the boom company, accepted by
.This conclusion settles the question as to whom the amount paid for towing the logs from the Au Sable boom to the mill should be charged. In the absence of custom, or any thing to the contrary in the contract, the amount should be charged to the owner of the logs. Such also is the fair construction of the contract. It provides that the timber shall be rafted and delivered to the trustee free from charges, so that in case it became necessary to tow timber from the Au Sable to complete the raft, the expense of such towing must have been borne by complainants. There is no clause, however, requiring complainants to be at any expense whatever in reference to the logs. They are delivered in the Au Sable boom by an accepted order, and it clearly was not the' intention that in case the trustee concluded to have them sawed, either at complainants’ mill or some more distant point, that they should be at the expense of towing them to such place of manufacture.
The next question is in reference to the quantity of Norway contained in the raft. Complainants insist that they had a right to put into that raft two hundred thousand feet of Norway and all the merchantable white pine then in the boom, not exceeding in all one million feet, and in case there was not sufficient white pine in the boom, then that *they had a reasonable time in which to deliver the balance, and they also claim that Wight accepted the raft, knowing the quantity of Norway then in it, and thus made it his own. This, defendants deny, and insist that not to exceed twenty per cent, of the quantity contained in the raft should have been Norway, and that all over this was at the risk and expense of complainants, and so understood at the time.
The contract is clear that it is only in case one million feet of timber is not in the boom that other is to be added. In taking what was in the boom, complainants had an undoubted right to put in two hundred thousand feet of Norway, and to complete the contract quantity of white pine from some other source, and they had a reasonable time in which to thus complete it.
The next most important question relates to the charges made by the trustee in executing the trust; as to whether any part thereof, and if so how. much, could properly be charged to complainants.
This also must be determined from the contract. The intension, as already adverted to, could not well have been carried out had Mr. Wight been acting as the agent of both parties. The object was to pass the title and possession to some person in trust for the bank in such manner as to place it beyond the reach of complainants’ creditors. The contract in its several parts shows that Wight was not the trustee of complainants. If the title passed, as already stated, the duty of paying all expenses thereafter connected therewith would fall upon him as owner, unless a contrary intention could be gathered from the agreement. Complainants were to raft and deliver the
We are of opinion that Mr. Wight was trustee of the bank alone, and that the only expenses which could properly be charged to complainants, were those provided for in the agreement, or which, according to custom, in the rafting and delivery of logs or timber, and in the scaling and inspection of logs, timber or lumber and the sawing of logs into • lumber, would properly be chargeable to complainants, without reference to the ’trusteeship.
Other questions were discussed upon the argument, but enough has been said already, from which it is apparent that the decree of the court below was even more favorable to the defendants than the above views would warrant. We need not, therefore, consider the other questions in the case.
The decree must be afSrmed, with costs.
William G. Grant & Son to convey to Stanley G. Wight, in trust for the Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Bank, all the merchantable long timber, not to exceed twenty per cent, of Norway, in the boom at East Tawas, and enough more to make up the quantity to one million of feet, at ten and a half dollars (810.50-100) per thousand feet; the same to be rafted and delivered
William G. Grant & Son will also make and deliver to S. G. Wight, trustee, an order on the Au Sable Boom Co., to be accepted by them, for one million five hundred thousand feet of good merchantable white pine logs, at eight dollars ($8.00) per thousand, the same to be the property of said S. G. Wight, in trust for the Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Bank.
On the part of said Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Bank, in return for sale and delivery to S. G. Wight, in trust, of said logs and timber, they are to place in the hands of S. G. Wight the notes or acceptances of said W. G. Grant & Son, amounting to eighteen thousand dollars and interest, the same to be cancelled and delivered to W. G. Grant & Son, as soon as the title to said logs and timber is perfected, and become the lawful property of said S. G. Wight, trustee.
The Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Bank further agree that said S. G. Wight shall employ said Grant & Son to cut the one and a half million feet of logs into such lumber as he may direct, providing it can be done by them without unusual delay, such as might be caused by any accident, breakage of the mill, by fire, or by stoppage of the mill, or by its changing hands, or in any way by which the said Grant & Son could not perform the work with reasonable dispatch; in such an event the said S. G. Wight, trustee, may employ any one else tq cut said logs, or sell them in the log, as may suit him best.
But should Grant & Son cut said logs in lumber as contemplated, then they shall receive credit at the rate of six dollars ($6.00), twelve dollars ($12.00) and thirty-five dollars ($35.00) per thousand feet, according to quality of the lumber cut from said logs and delivered on the rail of vessel
The money to be paid from time to time on the delivery of said lumber to S. G. Wight, trustee, free from any legal restraint, or from any jeopardy from creditors, or from any bankruptcy proceedings, by which he may be restrained from paying the said Grant & Son for cutting said logs into lumber, or pay the amount to said Michigan creditors of Grant & Son as may have furnished them with supplies, purchased in the fall of 1873, as directed by said Grant & Son or their agent, provided such payments shall not exceed the amounts due them for cutting said logs into lumber, as stated, and any balance that may be due them on this agreement.
In case of failure to carry out this agreement, by reason of action being taken by other creditors, so that the property hereby transferred shall not be legally held by such trustee, then this agreement shall be null and void, and their notes or acceptances shall be in full force and effect, and payable at once, the same as they are now.
In witness of the above agreement, the said parties have hereunto affixed their signatures to two copies of the above agreement.
24th December, 1873.
(Signed) WM. G. GRANT & SON.
T. H. HINCHMAN,
President Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Panic, Detroit.
I, Stanley G. Wight, being the person mentioned in the foregoing agreement between Wm. G. Grant & Son, of New York, and the Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Bank of Detroit, do hereby accept the trusteeship mentioned, and agree to carry out the agreement as set forth between the parties.
(Signed) STANLEY G. WIGHT.