Green v. Lovejoy

155 Minn. 241 | Minn. | 1923

Taylor, C.

Plaintiff is a settler in the eastern part of Cook county. He possessed a small sawmill located about three miles from Lake Superior and had made a contract with the Lesure Lumber Company by which he had agreed to cut and remove the merchantable timber from 16 forty acre tracts of land belonging to that company by October 15, 1919, and to pay that company two dollars per thousand feet for the timber, so cut and removed. Defendant is engaged in the lumber business at Duluth, Minnesota, under the name of Duluth Lumber Company.

On December 31, 1918, plaintiff as party of the first part and defendant as party of the second part entered into a contract which, so far as here material, reads as follows:

“Party of the first part agrees to sell and the party of the second part agrees to buy all white pine lumber that party of the first [part] manufactures during the year 1919, not to exceed one million (1,000,000) feet.
“Party of the second part agrees to pay twenty-seven ($27.00) dollars per thousand for No. 4 and better and seventeen ($17.00) dollars per thousand for No. 5, f. o. b. vessel or barge at Reservation Bay, Minn.
“Party of the second part agrees to advance thirteen dollars fifty cents ($13.50) per thousand on No. 4 and better and eight dollars fifty cents ($8.50) per thousand for No. 5 when in pile on dock.”

Before the end of March, 1919, plaintiff had manufactured and placed in piles on the dock at Reservation Bay 110,000 feet of lumber and asked defendant for the stipulated advance. Plaintiff was in financial straits. His property was encumbered and he had no *243funds with which to pay for the timber or to pay his employes. Defendant refused to make the advance unless he gave a bond to secure her against liens. He was unable to give such a bond and defendant refused to proceed further and terminated the contract. Liens were filed and the lumber on the dock was seized and sold under them. For lack of means, plaintiff was unable to get out the remainder of the timber. He brought this action for damages for breach of the contract.

Defendant claimed that plaintiff had represented that he owned the timber and had sufficient capital to enable him to cut, haul and manufacture it and deliver the lumber at the dock, and that she had the right to terminate the contract because these representations were not true. She further claimed that the contract was without consideration and void because plaintiff had not agreed to manufacture any lumber whatever. Plaintiff denied making misrepresentations of any kind, and asserted that the contract was valid and binding. The court directed the jury to return a verdict for defendant if they found that plaintiff had made the misrepresentations charged, and, if they did not so find, to determine the amount of plaintiff’s damages. The court instructed the jury that, if plaintiff was entitled to recover, the amount to which he was entitled on account of the lumber manufactured and piled on the dock was the difference between the contract price and the market value of that lumber on board vessels at that place at the time the contract was broken, and that the amount to which he was entitled on account of the timber not manufactured was the difference between the contract price for the lumber and the cost of getting out the timber and manufacturing and delivering the lumber, including the purchase price of the timber. The jury returned a general verdict of $1,345.03 for plaintiff, and in a special verdict gave the market value of the lumber piled on the dock as $2,366.71.

Defendant made an alternative motion for judgment or for a new trial. On the ground that it had erred in permitting a recovery of damages for the cancelation of the unperformed part of the contract, the court granted a new trial unless plaintiff consented to reduce the verdict to the sum of $484.24, the amount allowed for loss on the *244lumber piled on tbe dock. Plaintiff appealed, and contends that tbe court erred in ruling that be was not entitled to' damages for tbe cancelation of tbe unperformed part of tbe contract.

Tbe verdict of tbe jury determined that defendant’s charges of fraudulent misrepresentations were unfounded, and that she bad renounced and canceled the contract without cause. It follows that she is liable in damages if tbe contract was valid. She contends that it was void, so far at least as it remained unperformed, for tbe reason that plaintiff was under no obligation to manufacture any more lumber. It is true that tbe contract did not bind plaintiff to manufacture any lumber whatever. But it gave him an option to manufacture any quantity be saw fit, not exceeding one million feet. Ilf there was a sufficient consideration for this option, it was valid. Plaintiff agreed to sell to defendant all tbe white pine lumber that be manufactured in 1919. He so bound himself that be lost tbe right to sell to any one else. He “tied bis bands” so that be could deal with no other. While be did not bind himself to manufacture, yet be did bind himself to sell to defendant at the stipulated price all tbe lumber that be did manufacture in that year. That such an obligation is a sufficient consideration to sustain an option has been determined by this court in two carefully considered cases decided since this appeal was taken. City of Marshall v. Kalman, 153 Minn. 320, 190 N. W. 597; Trainor v. Buchanan Coal Co. 154 Minn. 204, 191 N. W. 431.

Defendant insists that tbe court adopted an incorrect measure of damages in respect to tbe timber not manufactured. Not having appealed, defendant is not in position to raise this question, except as it may be urged as a ground for sustaining tbe order granting a new trial, although not tbe ground on which that order was based. We deem it sufficient to say that tbe rule applied by tbe court is in accord with tbe rule stated in Baessetti v. Shenango Furnace Co. 122 Minn. 335, 142 N. W. 322.

Order reversed.